Mexico Travel Hub

Plan the journey. Keep the proof.

Explore heritage routes, cenotes, airports, pueblos, and future proof-badge concepts across Mexico. This page is travel information and prototype storytelling, not an investment page.

Interactive Map

Mexico as a route network.

Filter the map by heritage, cenotes, cities, airports, and Project Mexica proof-badge routes.

Map tiles are loaded from OpenStreetMap contributors through public tile infrastructure. Apple Maps and Google Maps buttons open third-party map services in a new tab or app.

Traveler Admin

Passports, entry cards, and official links.

Useful starting points for U.S.-based travelers, Mexican citizens abroad, and dual citizens planning Mexico trips. Always verify current requirements with official sources before travel.

Mexican citizens in the U.S.

Mexican passport appointments

Mexican passports are for Mexican nationals, including eligible dual citizens. U.S.-based applicants generally schedule passport and consular document appointments through SRE's Mi Consulado system or their nearest Mexican consulate.

Open Mi Consulado
Land entry

FMM visitor permit

INM's official FMM portal covers the Forma Migratoria Múltiple for eligible travelers entering Mexico by land. Requirements can vary by nationality, route, and travel purpose.

Open official FMM portal
U.S. residents and citizens

Travel advisories

Use the U.S. State Department advisory page for security notes, entry reminders, and state-by-state travel guidance before building an itinerary.

Open Mexico advisory
Fast-reference checklist

Before you go

Confirm passport validity, entry permit needs, airline requirements, car insurance, mobile data, emergency contacts, and whether your route crosses interior checkpoints.

Open INM
Trusted traveler

Quick border programs

Frequent U.S.-Mexico border travelers can review official DHS Trusted Traveler programs such as SENTRI or Global Entry. Eligibility, interviews, and lane access are handled by government agencies.

Open Trusted Traveler Programs

This section is general travel information, not legal advice or immigration advice. Project Mexica is not affiliated with SRE, INM, the U.S. State Department, or any government agency.

Route Ideas

Travel stories that make the prototype feel real.

These are editorial travel concepts. They can later become sponsored guides, itinerary pages, or affiliate-supported travel tools.

MIC

Lake Pátzcuaro Weekend

Morelia, Pátzcuaro, Janitzio, El Estribo Grande, lake views, local food, and a route badge concept built around repeatable proof stops.

  • Best fit: culture, photography, family travel
  • Nearest major airport: Morelia
  • Proof concept: MIC badge
CEN

Cancún Cenote Circuit

Cancún, Puerto Morelos, Ruta de los Cenotes, Tulum, Cobá, Valladolid, and a multi-trip CEN badge path.

  • Best fit: cenotes, beach, jungle roads
  • Nearest major airport: Cancún
  • Proof concept: CEN mega badge
SUN

Teotihuacán Sunrise

Mexico City, Tenochtitlán context, Teotihuacán, Pyramid of the Sun, Pyramid of the Moon, and a future medallion route concept.

  • Best fit: first-time Mexico travelers
  • Nearest major airport: Mexico City
  • Proof concept: Sun and Moon medallions

Visitor Planning

Useful travel information we can keep expanding.

Airport anchors

Start with Mexico City, Cancún, Guadalajara, Monterrey, Morelia, Mérida, Oaxaca, and Tijuana as flight-planning anchors.

Seasonality

Cenote and beach routes are strongest in dry, clear-weather windows. Heritage city routes can work year-round with better heat planning.

Affiliate-ready later

Hotel, bus, tour, insurance, eSIM, guide, and car-rental links can be added as travel resources with clear disclosure.

Document planning

Passport, FMM, consular appointment, and trusted-traveler links make the page useful before someone is ready to think about badges.

Legal framing

Travel pages can inspire curiosity around TOM, TEO, and badges while staying clearly educational, editorial, and prototype-focused.

Travel Money

Banks, remittances, and digital dollars without overclaiming.

Mexican banks

BBVA, Banorte, Santander, and other banks may be useful for accounts, cards, and ATMs, but we need written approval before using logos or claiming partnership.

Fintech and remittances

Bitso, Airtm, MoneyGram, Félix, and similar services are better candidates for cross-border payment, remittance, or digital-dollar exploration.

Stellar / Lumens

Stellar appears more relevant through fintech rails, USDC, and remittance use cases than through traditional Mexican banks. Fintech outreach comes first.

Disclosure

Any sponsored or affiliate links should be clearly marked. Project Mexica is not a bank, exchange, financial adviser, or custodian.

Important

Travel content is not token promotion.

This travel hub is informational and editorial. Project Mexica remains a prototype/testnet demonstration. TOM, TEO, MIC, and CEN are product concepts and demo assets, not legal tender, not securities, not travel rewards currently redeemable for cash, and not promises of returns.