Moving to Mexico from Canada

Moving to Mexico from Canada: Your Essential 2026 Relocation Guide

Planning note: Moving from Canada to Mexico involves more than choosing a destination. Residency, taxes, healthcare coverage, banking, driving, pets, and housing all require current information and professional guidance where needed. This guide is general information, not immigration, tax, healthcare, legal, financial, or pension advice. Confirm your situation with official sources and qualified professionals.

TL;DR

  • Moving to Mexico from Canada takes planning.
  • Long-term residency usually starts at a Mexican consulate in Canada.
  • Healthcare, taxes, banking, and pensions need early attention.
  • Rent first before making permanent decisions.
  • Verify current requirements before acting.

Moving to Mexico from Canada: What to Plan First

Moving to Mexico from Canada is exciting, but it is not just an extended vacation. A successful move requires planning around residency, money, healthcare, taxes, housing, and daily life.

Use this as a practical starting checklist, then verify current requirements with the relevant consulate, government office, and professional advisors.

1. Decide Whether Mexico Fits Your Lifestyle

Mexico offers beach towns, colonial cities, mountain climates, large urban centers, and quiet retirement communities. Each option has different costs, healthcare access, safety considerations, and social environments.

If possible, visit your top locations before committing. Test ordinary life: groceries, transportation, banking, medical appointments, heat, noise, internet, and neighborhood comfort.

2. Understand Residency Options

Canadians can usually visit Mexico as tourists for short stays, but long-term relocation typically requires Temporary Residency or Permanent Residency. See the full Mexico residency guide for current requirements and income thresholds.

The process usually starts at a Mexican consulate in Canada. Financial requirements and document rules can vary by consulate — always confirm current rules before applying.

Documents to prepare

  • Valid Canadian passport
  • Bank, pension, or investment statements
  • Consulate application forms
  • Passport-style photos
  • Marriage or birth certificates if applying through family
  • Any consulate-specific documents requested

3. Plan Your Finances

Before leaving Canada, review your bank accounts, credit cards, investment platforms, currency exchange options, and transfer methods.

Confirm whether your financial institutions can continue serving you if you become a non-resident or spend extended time abroad.

A Mexican bank account can also help with rent, utilities, SPEI transfers, and daily expenses. See the guide to opening a bank account in Mexico for current options.

4. Prepare for Healthcare

Healthcare planning is essential for Canadians moving to Mexico. Your access, costs, and comfort level will depend on your location, age, health history, insurance, and residency status. See the full guide to healthcare in Mexico for expats.

  • Review provincial health coverage rules while abroad — coverage typically ends after extended absence
  • Get quotes for private expat insurance
  • Research clinics and hospitals in your target city
  • Bring prescriptions and medical records
  • Plan for routine care, emergencies, dental care, and medications

5. Understand Taxes and Pensions

Moving to Mexico has tax implications for Canadians. See the guide to taxes in Mexico for Canadian expats for an overview — then confirm your specific situation with a qualified tax professional.

  • CRA residency status affects your tax obligations — confirm before you leave
  • CPP and OAS can often continue while abroad, but tax treaty rules apply
  • Exchange rates, RRSP rules, and investment accounts may be affected
  • Get professional advice before making pension or investment decisions

6. Plan for Driving and Pets

If you plan to bring your vehicle or pets, both require advance planning. See the guide to driving in Mexico for vehicle import rules and licence requirements, and the guide to bringing pets to Mexico for current import requirements.

7. Housing: Rent Before You Buy

Test your target city before committing to a long-term lease or property purchase. Short-term rentals let you evaluate the neighbourhood, climate, noise, internet, and daily logistics before making any permanent decisions.

Ready to Plan?

Before you move, compare your residency path, tax questions, healthcare needs, banking setup, and monthly budget.

Related guides: See also our guides to healthcare in Mexico (IMSS vs private insurance), best cities to retire in Mexico, construction costs in Mexico.

Ken Gardner

About the Author

Ken Gardner

Ken Gardner is the founder of Mexpat Guide. He writes practical, experience-based guides for Canadians and Americans relocating to or retiring in Mexico.