No, passport requirements are not for domestic travels. Though passports can be used as a picture ID for boarding the plane.
Indeed.
Absolutely. Even if they are legal Resident Aliens.And I belive they need a passport issued by Mexico, and should keep one current as Permanent Resident Aliens, they are still Mexican Nationals.
The requirements are the same as for two citizens; they will depend on the state and county where the couple wants to marry.
You'll need a US PASSPORT to return to the US.
I was wondering about this also.Went to the Mexican Consulate in Toronto Website to find out more."Only Canadian nationals carrying diplomatic and official passports will require a visa when traveling to Mexico as tourists or in official matters.""This measure does not affect Canadians holding ordinary passports who wish to travel to Mexico as tourists."For more visit:http://www.consulmex.com/eng/vnews.asp?126
no you will still have to go through the immigration process. make sure you have money cause you will probably need the help of an attorney
Most foreigners can obtain a Mexican passport if they move to Mexico with an immigrant visa and live there for four years (2 years if married to a Mexican citizen). Then one can apply for Mexican citizenship and passport.
Only if you are Mexican.
You must move to Mexico with your spouse and live there for two years with an immigrant visa, then you can apply for Mexican citizenship. You can have both a Mexican and a US passport and be a dual citizen. If you were not married to a Mexican citizen, you would have to live there for four years.
Mexican passports can only be acquired legally by people who are Mexican citizens. If the person who left the US to go to Mexico was already a Mexican citizen, he need only go to the Secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores website (in the Related Links below) to have the necessary meeting to acquire his passport. If the person who left the US to go to Mexico was not a Mexican citizen, he would have to naturalize as a Mexican prior to receiving his passport (which would then proceed to the SRE meeting mentioned above. Naturalization usually takes a bit of time. To read more about the Naturalization process, please read the Wikipedia article in the Related Links.
Mexican citizens moving to Mexico do not need a passport. Some evidence of citizenship will be helpful, however. Foreign citizens (such as those from the U.S.) need to secure permission from the Instituto Nacional de Migración, which will ask you to prove your identity and your nationality before issuing you an FM3 or FM2. The passport does both; alternatively, INM might accept your driver's license (identity) and your birth certificate (nationality) if dulytranslated into Spanish. Details at the related link or at the Mexican consulate or embassy nearest you.
Yes. FYRMacedonian people need to acquire a visa on the Mexican embassy at Serbia.