Mexican citizens are part of the Schengen Area's Visa Waiver Program. This means that if you have a
Mexican citizens do not require a visa to visit the European Union (EU) for a period of up to three months.
No, Mexican citizens do not need a visa to enter Europe for short trips for tourism, business, transit, family visits, or medical treatment. Europe's Schengen Zone consists of 27 countries, that function as one joint area when it comes to travel, to which Mexican passport holders have visa-free access.
For any stay in France exceeding 90 days, you are required to apply in advance for a long-stay vis. In this instance your nationality does not exempt you from requirements. Whatever the duration of your planned stay, the duration of your long-stay visa must be between three months and one year.
Your total stay in the Schengen area must be no more than 90 days in every 180 days. It does not matter how many countries you visit. The 180-day period keeps 'rolling'. To work out if your stay is within the 90 day limit, use the following steps.
Australians don't need a visa to travel to countries in the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any 180-day period.
If you hold an Australian passport, you will not require a visa to enter the EU as long as your stay is no longer than 90 days within any 180 day period. If you are not an Australian passport holder you may need to obtain a "Schengen Visa".
The 90-day rule states that visitors who are not citizens of an EU country can only spend 90 days out of every 180 within the EU or Schengen zone. If they want to spend longer than that, they will need a visa.
Staying for 90 days— means that as soon as you enter any country within the Schengen area, your 90-days clock starts. This counts for every country in the zone. For example, let's say you spend 30 days in Germany, then 30 days in France, and 30 days in Austria; you've spent 90 days in the Schengen zone.
If you spend more than 6 months a year in France, you are then considered as a French resident and must apply for a Long Stay visitor visa (visa de long séjour valant titre de séjour VLS-TS « visiteur »).
If you are an Australian or New Zealand Passport holder, you do NOT require a visa to enter Mexico as a tourist for a period of up to 180 days.
In accordance with the existing agreements, Australian citizens may enter and stay in France without any visa for a period up to 90 days.
For Mexicans wishing to travel to the United Kingdom, they can stay a maximum of 180 days without visa. For more information, please click here.
Italian visa for Mexican citizens. A visa is NOT required for Mexican passport holders visiting Italy for a short-term stay: 90 days.
You will need to apply for a study permit only in case you intend to undertake studies exceeding 90 days of stay in the Schengen area within a period of 180 days. For longer studies you have to apply for a study permit and the rules vary from country to country.
You can stay up to 90 days within a 180-day period, which people consider a “six-month” period, but your visa is still valid for only 90 days. You will need a long-stay visa or residence permit to stay in Europe for more than six months.
What is the Schengen 90/180 rule? Under the terms of Schengen, non-EEA nationals cannot spend more than a total of 90 days within a total period of 180 days without a visa. Furthermore, once you've used up your quota of 90 days, you cannot return to Schengen until 90 more days have passed.
Short-stay visa requirement
For all stays of up to 3 months in France, unless you are exempt, you must apply for a short-stay visa. This type of visa is granted for the following reasons: Tourist visits. Pleasure, family or personal visits.
You must apply for a short-stay visa if your work trip lasts less (or exactly) 90 days in a 180-day (six months) period in total. You must apply for a long-stay visa if you stay longer, between three months and one year maximum. This is a Type D or a “national” visa.
The 180 days are counted backwards from your latest entry or exit date. This means it's counted from the first day you entered (if you have not left yet) or the final day you visited the Schengen Area (the date of exit).
You must notify the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) if you plan to move overseas for six months (183 days) or more in a twelve-month period. You must do this within 7 days from the date of leaving Australia. Update your contact details via myGov. If you already live overseas, you must notify the ATO.
Some foreign governments require visitors to carry passports with at least six months validity beyond their planned stay. You may be refused entry if you do not comply. Well before you travel, you should check the entry requirements of the countries you plan to visit or transit.
Travel for three months or longer
The Statutory Declaration must state you are making an application for travel exemption on the basis that you intend to be absent from Australia for more than three months. Evidence may include: confirmed flight itinerary, with return date of at least three months after departure date.