Take it to a body chop. They can smooth out the scratches, sand it down and repaint it.
One body shop is near La Zona Norte at the North end of Revolution before it dead ends, in the same building as Kali Kustom and the Hand Job car detailing.
I -bent- a wheel, not scratched it. Body shops don't do wheel repair. Its specialized.
The guy was mostly talking about how this will affect "long-stay" tourists. Technically, nobody is supposed to be staying longer than 180 days. People were abusing it, making quick border runs to get a renewed FMM, etc, etc, and living in Mexico for years. Much like guys would do in Thailand. The government obviously is tired of it, and wants to make some changes. I seriously don't think this will have much impact on Tijuana. There is far too much cross-border traffic to implement anything too strict.
This new Mexican visa law is probably for residents who live in Mexico without valid papers. For example, Mexico is home to about 1. 5 million Americans from the USA, about 10,000 Canadians, and expats from Europe and South America. Many of them live without a valid visa because no one has ever checked their visa. In the case of Tijuana, here are mainly US tourists for a day or weekend visit and leave a lot of money. Tourists from the US mainly visit Zona Norte, Zona Rio, Av Revolucion, Rosarito, Ensenada, Valle de Guadalupe and the region Baja California needs those American dollars and it is probably easy to get a visa. Just for example, 500 US guys visit Zona Norte / week and spend about US $ 200 / person. This is a profit of US $ 100,000 in Zona Norte only per week. And now profit for the year US $ 100,000 x 52 weeks = US $ 5,200,000 (only Zona Norte)! That's why they need tourists from the USA because US $.
I flew into CDMX and the immigration officer asked how long I'd be in MX. I told him 1 day, but I asked if I could pay for the 6 months. He checked off the 180 day box and I didn't have to pay a dime. Not sure how legit it is since he checked the box, but wrote some weird cursive in the amount of days which my other one clearly shows 180 days. I drive into Tijuana, so I've never been asked to present it and also been pulled over twice and they never asked about the FMM.
It's possible that the cost of the visa gets added to your plane ticket. I remember seeing the breakdown in fees for a ticket from LAX to GDL and the actual cost of the plane fare was like half of the actual cost of the ticket. The rest were a bunch of US and Mexican Government fees and taxes.
The USA By law can't prevent a USA Citizen from entering the country. You could even flat out tell them you just tested positive for the most contagious form of COVID-19 and they would still be required by law to let you in LOL.
For foot we can enter USA without covid test.
But, by air. US citizens are now required to get a test before the airline is allowed to let you fly to USA.
All air passengers two years of age and over entering the United States (including USA citizens and Legal Permanent Residents) to present a negative COVID-19 test result a negative taken no more than 1 day before departure.
All citizens of the United States must present a valid passport when entering Mexican territory by any means of transportation. There are no exceptions for minors. Stays less than 72 hours within the border area, do not require an Official Entry Immigration Form (FMM).
And we need to waste another stamp every time we walk in. For myself I will need a passport card because I can't fill my book just for 20 hour stays in Mexico 4 times a week.
I always tell them to stamp in the middle two pages of my passport and they always oblige. So the stamp on entry to Mexico can be limited in the amount of pages it takes on your passport.
I flew into CDMX and the immigration officer asked how long I'd be in MX. I told him 1 day, but I asked if I could pay for the 6 months. He checked off the 180 day box and I didn't have to pay a dime. Not sure how legit it is since he checked the box, but wrote some weird cursive in the amount of days which my other one clearly shows 180 days. I drive into Tijuana, so I've never been asked to present it and also been pulled over twice and they never asked about the FMM.
Take it to a body chop. They can smooth out the scratches, sand it down and repaint it.
One body shop is near La Zona Norte at the North end of Revolution before it dead ends, in the same building as Kali Kustom and the Hand Job car detailing.
Wow this is a big deal. Going to have ramifications all over Mexico especially cities not near border. I suppose what this means for gringos, is, the days of paying 30 dollars for 6 month pass to walk in on the Mexican line are now over. Because that pass will just be for a couple days or so. So there's no point in buying it. We will need the free pass. The problem with that is we need to waste time in line each time we go. We need to hope they don't tell us our reason is not valid. And we need to waste another stamp every time we walk in. For myself I will need a passport card because I can't fill my book just for 20 hour stays in Mexico 4 times a week.
Can the 6 month's FMM be used for multiple entries over the period? Or one time only?
If its multiple entry do the card holder have the liberty to use it in different borders?
The UTube guy doesn't quote the source of his information, so how do I judge the accuracy of some UTube guy trying to drive traffic to his web site? I will be interested to read about the experiences by others. It just plain doesn't make sense. Much of Mexico's economy is through tourism; why would they make it more difficult to enter the country? Mexican border cities are going to lose some of their revenue stream if this is accurate.
I have not traveled further south than Ensenada in the past five years, but I am in Mexico monthly for a few days at a time. Once I have crossed the border (always the pedestrian crossings), I have never been asked for my visa. About 30 percent of the time they just waive me through. (I am clearly White, Middle European, so it isn't because they have mistaken me for a Mexican national.).
The guy was mostly talking about how this will affect "long-stay" tourists. Technically, nobody is supposed to be staying longer than 180 days. People were abusing it, making quick border runs to get a renewed FMM, etc, etc, and living in Mexico for years. Much like guys would do in Thailand. The government obviously is tired of it, and wants to make some changes. I seriously don't think this will have much impact on Tijuana. There is far too much cross-border traffic to implement anything too strict.