LatAm Expat & Nomad Daily Guide — Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Good morning. Your LatAm expat nomad daily guide opens on a record-breaking World Cup night, a Colombian result a day from official, and a Bolivia whose highways are moving again.
The hard news sits in Bogotá’s count and La Paz’s cleared roads; for residency-watchers, Mexico’s fast lane to permanent residency is now open only to retirees.

Key Points
- Messi makes history. A brace against Austria made him the World Cup’s all-time top scorer and sent Argentina into the last 32.
- Colombia’s result goes official Wednesday. The electoral authority is set to confirm De la Espriella’s narrow win, which the count has all but settled.
- Bolivia’s roads nearly clear. Blockades are down to nine, and Morales has paused the Chapare holdout.
- Mexico’s PR shortcut is closed. Only retirees can apply for permanent residency from abroad; others need four years of temporary status first.
- Uruguay’s tax clock. The 12% foreign-income rules start collecting on July 1, about eight days out.
- FX is live. The dollar was mixed on Monday, firming most against the Uruguayan peso.
00Status Changes Since Monday
| Story | Yesterday | Today | Next |
|---|---|---|---|
| World Cup (LatAm) | Argentina face Austria | Argentina win 2-0; Messi all-time top scorer; qualified | Brazil v Scotland & Czechia v Mexico Wed |
| Colombia runoff | De la Espriella wins pre-count; protests | Scrutiny over 99.6% done; official result expected Wed | CNE declaration; inauguration Aug 7 |
| Bolivia unrest | Decree ratified; roads reopening | Nine blockades left; Morales pauses Chapare | Forces may enter Chapare; road repairs |
| Mexico residency | 2026 fees doubled | PR shortcut now limited to retirees from abroad | Four-year temporary route for the rest |
| Uruguay 12% tax | Countdown shipped | About eight days to July collection | Withholding begins in July |
01Visas & Residency
| Where | What changed | What it means for you |
|---|---|---|
| Mexico | Under the July 2025 solvency guidelines, only retirees and pensioners can now apply for permanent residency directly from abroad, atop the January fee doubling. Working-age applicants must run through temporary residency first. | Nomads and pre-retirees should plan for at least four years of temporary status before permanent residency, and budget higher fees. |
| Colombia | The official runoff result is expected Wednesday, with De la Espriella’s lead all but settled and no rule changes due before the August 7 inauguration. | Keep visa and residency appointments; the October 31 switch deadline for some holders is unrelated to the vote. |
| Uruguay | The 12% tax on foreign capital income starts collecting on July 1, with new residents able to elect a tax holiday or a reduced 7% rate. | If you became a tax resident this year, make the one-time election now rather than later. |
| Peru | The electoral court has rejected the annulment bids, with the official proclamation expected around mid-July. | No practical change for residents; keep documents current through the July 28 handover. |
| Bolivia | The 90-day state of emergency remains in force as the army reopens roads, with movement limits possible in declared conflict zones. | Fly rather than drive where Chapare and Cochabamba cuts persist, and confirm local rules first. |
02Cost of Living & Money
The dollar was mixed in Monday’s session — easing against the Colombian and Brazilian pesos while firming against the Uruguayan peso, the day’s biggest mover. Markets are watching the Colombian peso into Wednesday’s official result.
| Currency | Per US$ | Read |
|---|---|---|
| Brazilian real | 5.14 | firmed slightly |
| Mexican peso | 17.40 | a touch softer |
| Colombian peso | 3,430 | firmest; eyes the count |
| Chilean peso | 906 | slightly softer |
| Peruvian sol | 3.38 | flat, as usual |
| Argentine peso | 1,461 | steady |
| Uruguayan peso | 40.10 | the day’s weakest |
Apartment-hunting season runs all winter, so here is the rent check across all 13 hubs — a furnished one-bedroom in the neighbourhoods expats actually pick.
| City | Furnished 1-BR | Comfortable month |
|---|---|---|
| Mexico City | US$800–1,500 (Roma Norte) | US$1,800–3,500 |
| Playa del Carmen | US$900–1,400 near the beach | US$1,700–3,600 |
| Mérida | US$500–800, bills often in | US$1,100–1,500 |
| Oaxaca | US$400–750 | US$1,600–2,400 |
| Medellín | US$500–1,200 (El Poblado) | US$1,200–1,800 |
| Bogotá | US$550–1,300 furnished | US$1,200–2,850 |
| Buenos Aires | US$800–1,300 (Palermo) | US$1,500–2,000 |
| São Paulo | US$950–1,900, condo fees in | US$1,800–2,500 |
| Rio de Janeiro | US$690–1,190 (Botafogo) | about US$2,000 |
| Florianópolis | US$700–1,400 | US$1,250–2,000 |
| Lima | US$600–900 (Barranco) | US$1,300–1,600 |
| Santiago | US$550–900 (Providencia) | US$1,200–2,000 |
| Montevideo | US$600–1,000 (Pocitos) | US$1,500–2,200 |
03What’s On
Today (Tuesday). There are no Latin American sides in World Cup action today, so the calendar leans cultural as Brazil’s São João season builds toward St. John’s Day tomorrow. Buenos Aires keeps the post-qualification buzz going after Monday’s Fan Fest.
Midweek. Wednesday is the big one, with Brazil v Scotland and Czechia v Mexico deciding groups, alongside the St. John’s Day festas. Manuel Medrano plays Medellín on Thursday.
Week ahead. Ricardo Arjona reaches Lima on Friday and Bogotá Comic Con opens the same day, while Medellín’s Dreaming Festival lands on Saturday.
04Art & Culture
Brazil’s festas juninas reach their peak at St. John’s Day on Wednesday, with arraiás, forró and Northeastern food across the country. Rio’s cultural centres host the biggest free parties.
Further out, Rio’s World Press Photo exhibition closes on June 28 and Bogotá Comic Con runs June 26 to 29. Mérida opens its Distrito Mejorada cultural corridor on June 25.
05Food & Coffee
São João is the season’s table, and it peaks this week — canjica, pamonha, quentão and grilled corn at arraiás across Brazil. The free parties at Rio and São Paulo’s cultural centres are the easiest way in.
Beyond the festas, the region’s specialty-coffee scene keeps growing, from Montevideo’s cafés to Oaxaca’s roasters. Wherever you land this week, a good cup is rarely far.
06Community & Safety
Colombia. Post-result protests are easing but can still flare in cities such as Cali while the count finishes. Expat districts in Medellín and Bogotá are largely unaffected; avoid demonstrations and use ride apps on flashpoint days.
Bolivia. Most highways are open again, but fly rather than drive where Chapare and Cochabamba cuts persist. La Paz and El Alto are close to normal, with only lingering supply gaps.
Mexico City. The Centro and Reforma corridor is back to normal after the teachers’ strike ended. The emergency number is 911 and the tap water is not safe to drink.
07What to Watch — June 23–28
Frequently Asked Questions
Did Messi break the World Cup scoring record?
Yes. His brace against Austria took him to 18 World Cup goals, past Miroslav Klose’s 16, making him the men’s all-time top scorer as Argentina qualified for the Round of 32.
When is Colombia’s result official?
The electoral authority is expected to declare the definitive count on Wednesday, June 24. De la Espriella’s narrow lead is all but settled, though Cepeda is still challenging some 33,000 tables.
Are Bolivia’s roads open now?
Mostly. Active blockades are down to about nine and Morales has paused the Chapare holdout, but fly rather than drive where Chapare and Cochabamba cuts persist.
Did Mexico change permanent residency?
Yes. Direct-from-abroad permanent residency is now open only to retirees and pensioners, so other applicants must complete at least four years of temporary residency first.
What are the latest exchange rates?
The dollar buys roughly 5.14 Brazilian reais, 17.40 Mexican pesos and 3,430 Colombian pesos. It was mixed on Monday, firming most against the Uruguayan peso.