Mexican Citizenship

By Descent vs Naturalization: Which Path Is Yours?

Two routes to Mexican citizenship, governed by very different rules. One confirms a nationality you may already hold. The other grants you a new one. Here is how they truly compare under Mexican law.

Most people who look into Mexican citizenship assume there is one process. There are actually two, and they work very differently. Which one is yours comes down to a single question: were you already born Mexican, or are you a foreign national hoping to become one?

Here is the difference that changes everything: with citizenship by descent you do not become Mexican, you already are. The process simply confirms and documents it. With naturalization, you start as a foreign national and earn Mexican nationality after meeting residency and legal requirements.

The Mexican Constitution draws this line in Article 30. Section A defines nationality by birth. Section B defines nationality by naturalization. Everything that follows, the documents, the authority, the cost, and the timeline, depends on which section applies to you.

Side by Side

 By Descent (by birth)By Naturalization
Legal basisConstitution Art. 30(A); Nationality LawConstitution Art. 30(B); Nationality Law
Core ideaYou are already a Mexican citizen; you confirm and register itYou are a foreign national who acquires Mexican nationality
Who qualifiesPeople born abroad to a parent who was born in Mexico, and certain cases through a Mexican grandparentForeign nationals through residency, marriage to a Mexican, or Latin American or Iberian origin
Residency in MexicoNot requiredRequired, generally five years, or two years by marriage, Latin American or Iberian nationality, or direct descent
AuthoritySecretariat of Foreign Affairs (SRE), through a consulate or the DGAJSRE, with a prior favorable opinion from the National Migration Institute (INM)
Key documentConsular registration of birth, or a Declaratoria de Nacionalidad; a Certificado de Nacionalidad for public officeCarta de Naturalización
Government feeA modest official fee, paid to the SREA higher official fee, paid to the SRE
Typical timelineOften days once the file is complete and correctSeveral months, after the required residency and the INM opinion
Keep U.S. citizenshipYes, Mexico recognizes dual nationalityYes, Mexico recognizes dual nationality
Best forAmericans with a Mexican-born parent or grandparentSpouses of Mexican citizens and long-term residents

Government fees are set by the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs and are separate from any professional service fee. We confirm the current fees and your complete cost during your consultation, so there are no surprises.

Path 1: Citizenship by Descent

Nationality by birth, Article 30(A)

If one of your parents was born in Mexico, the Constitution recognizes you as Mexican from the moment you were born, no matter where you were born or whether you have ever held a single Mexican document. This is the path most Americans of Mexican descent qualify for, and the one most of them never realize is open to them.

Because you are already a citizen, you are not applying for something new. You are confirming and documenting what is already yours. In practice that usually means registering your birth through a Mexican consulate, which produces a Mexican birth certificate, the foundation for your passport and every right that comes after it.

Document

Declaratoria de Nacionalidad

  • Confirms Mexican nationality by birth
  • Often used by people who acquired or used another nationality before March 20, 1998, to keep their Mexican nationality
  • Resolved quickly once the file is complete
  • An official government fee applies
Document

Certificado de Nacionalidad

  • For Mexicans by birth who also hold another nationality
  • Required to hold a public office reserved to those with only Mexican nationality by birth
  • Resolved quickly once the file is complete
  • An official government fee applies

The hard part is rarely the law, and rarely the consulate. It is almost always the documents. The names on your parent’s Mexican records have to match, exactly, the names on your foreign birth certificate and the rest of your file. One accent, one compound surname written two different ways, one missing apostille, and everything stops. This is where most people who try it alone get stuck.

Path 2: Naturalization

Nationality by naturalization, Article 30(B)

Naturalization is for foreign nationals who do not qualify by birth but who build a real connection to Mexico. It is granted by the SRE through a Carta de Naturalización, and it requires lawful residency plus a favorable opinion from the National Migration Institute (INM).

How long you need to live in Mexico depends on your situation. The ordinary route generally asks for five years of legal residence. A shorter two-year period applies in specific cases, such as marriage to a Mexican citizen, being a national of a Latin American or Iberian country, or being a direct descendant of a Mexican by birth. The full requirements live in the Nationality Law.

Carta de Naturalización

The document that grants Mexican nationality to a foreign national. The process runs through the SRE after the INM issues its opinion, and it typically takes several months from that point. An official government fee applies, and it is higher than the fees for the by-birth documents.

Related Documents You May Need

Certified Copies of Nationality Documents

Certified copies of a Carta de Naturalización, Certificado de Nacionalidad, or Declaratoria de Nacionalidad. Useful when a record is lost, or when a family member needs to prove a parent’s nationality. An official government fee applies per certified copy.

Renunciation of Mexican Nationality

A formal procedure handled by the SRE. It is relevant only in specific circumstances and is rarely necessary for dual nationals. An official government fee applies.

So, Which Path Is Yours?

If a parent or grandparent was born in Mexico, you almost certainly belong on the descent path. It is faster, far less costly, and does not require living in Mexico. If you have no Mexican-born ancestor but you are married to a Mexican citizen or have lived in Mexico for years, naturalization is your route.

For a lot of families, the honest answer is "I am not sure," because eligibility hinges on records from decades ago, in two countries, that do not always agree. That is exactly the question we settle for you before anything is filed.

Frequently Asked Questions

If my parent was born in Mexico, do I need to naturalize?
No. Under Article 30(A) of the Constitution, a person born abroad to a Mexican-born parent is Mexican by birth. You do not naturalize. You confirm and register a nationality you already hold, which is faster and less expensive than naturalization.
Do I have to give up my U.S. citizenship?
No. Mexico recognizes dual nationality. Confirming Mexican nationality by descent, or acquiring it by naturalization, does not require you to renounce your U.S. citizenship.
How long does each path take?
The descent path can move quickly once your file is complete and your documents are consistent. Naturalization takes several months after the INM issues its favorable opinion, on top of the residency period you need to meet first.
What does each path cost?
Both paths involve official Mexican government fees set by the SRE, plus your professional service cost. Descent is generally the lower-cost path. We give you a clear, complete quote in your consultation, so you know your full cost upfront with no surprises.
What is the difference between the Declaratoria and the Certificado de Nacionalidad?
Both confirm Mexican nationality by birth. The Declaratoria is commonly used to preserve nationality for those who acquired or used another nationality before March 20, 1998. The Certificado is required when a dual national needs to hold a public office reserved to those with only Mexican nationality by birth.
Can I qualify through a Mexican grandparent?
It depends on your family’s specific nationality history. Some grandparent cases are recognized, and the analysis turns on the records that exist for your parent and grandparent. We evaluate eligibility individually before any filing.
Why do most people get stuck?
Almost always on documents, not the law. Names, dates, and surnames have to match across records from two countries, and any inconsistency stops the process. Correcting those records before filing is the single most important step.

Not sure which path is yours?

Most cases come down to documents from decades ago, in two countries. We confirm your eligibility before anything is filed, so you move forward with certainty. Your first consultation is free.

Check Your Eligibility
Disclaimer. This page is general information, not legal, immigration, or tax advice, and does not create a professional relationship. Krear Consultancy is not a law firm and is not affiliated with the Government of Mexico, the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs, or any Mexican consulate. Eligibility, documents, fees, and timelines are set by Mexican law and official authorities and can change. Government fees are paid directly to the issuing authority and are separate from professional service fees. For a determination about your specific situation, please contact us.