Travel to Mexico during Covid-19: What you need to know before you go

Travel to Mexico during Covid-19: What you need to know before you go

The basics

Mexico is open to travelers. There is no need to provide a negative PCR test or quarantine for 14 days on arrival, though most resorts ask guests to complete health questionnaires. The land border between Mexico and the US is closed until January 21, and nonessential land travel is banned. However, air travel is allowed.

What’s on offer

Incredible food, sensational beaches, buzzing towns and historical remains. While the beach resorts around Cancun attract the bulk of visitors, those who want more than a fly and flop go for Mexico City’s cultural heft, the coastline of Baja California and traditional towns such as Oaxaca.

Who can go

Mexico has some of the loosest border restrictions, currently, with anyone allowed to travel by air for business or leisure.

What are the restrictions?

Travelers into the country must complete a health declaration form and scan the QR code it generates on arrival. There is no need to take a test before departure or undertake any form of quarantine. Those concerned that they may have symptoms should ask for the Sanidad Internacional health organization.

The land border with the United States remains shut to all but essential travel until January 21, while the southern border with Guatemala has also been subject to periodic closures.

What’s the Covid situation?

Mexico had reported more than 1.5 million cases of Covid-19 and more than 132,000 deaths as of January 9 (although some believe the figure is higher). President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has come under fire for taking a laissez-faire approach to the virus. Restrictions have not been far reaching and life has gone as normal for many, which critics say has led to such high death and infection rates.

Daily reported Covid-19 cases

What can visitors expect?

Mexico has a four-tier traffic light system of restrictions, with red signifying maximum restrictions, orange limiting capacity in public spaces and at work down to 30%, yellow allowing for all work to resume and public gatherings to take place, and green meaning there are no restrictions in place. See a color-coded map here.

As of January 9, most states are categorized as orange, or high alert. Cancun’s state, Quintana Roo, was yellow.

Mexico City has taken more stringent measures, shutting all bars for two weeks in November in a bid to crush a growing wave of infections. Visitors are likely to find the situation different depending on where in the country they travel, with local restrictions varying.

Useful links

Mexico health questionnaire
Sanidad Internacional
Covid-19 government page