Why I Don't Like Passport Bros: A Critique of Transactional Dating in the Expat Community
Community
Mexico City

Why I Don't Like Passport Bros: A Critique of Transactional Dating in the Expat Community

Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell
December 20, 2025 5 min read 26

"Passport Bros", men who travel to less wealthy countries specifically to use economic disparity in dating, represent a transactional, spreadsheet-driven approach to relationships that damages both the individuals involved and the broader expat community's reputation. This critique matters because their behavior creates skepticism toward all foreign residents, makes authentic cross-cultural dating more difficult, and reduces human connection to cost-benefit analysis. Here's why this phenomenon is fundamentally problematic and what genuine expats can do differently.

The Spreadsheet Mentality

The core problem with the Passport Bro philosophy is that it reduces human relationships to economics. These guys create literal spreadsheets comparing the cost of living, the typical salary of local women, and the "return on investment" of dating across different countries. "In Mexico, I can date prettier women for cheaper." "In Southeast Asia, I have 10x more dating power."

This might sound like efficient resource allocation in a business context, but we're talking about other human beings, not commodities. When you approach dating this way, you're not looking for connection, you're looking for a transaction. And everyone involved knows it, even if they don't explicitly acknowledge it.

The Psychological Cost

What Passport Bros don't understand is that this approach is psychologically exhausting for everyone. The local women they date often feel used and disposable. The guys themselves never develop genuine social skills or emotional intelligence because they're gaming the system. And the entire expat community suffers because we all get lumped together as creepy, predatory foreigners taking advantage of economic disparity.

I've seen Passport Bros in Mexico City clubs, and they're always the same, low-effort, transactional, visibly uncomfortable in actual conversation. They rely on their foreignness and their relative wealth to short-circuit the normal process of building attraction and trust. It's lazy dating.

The Reputation Problem

Here's what really bothers me: the Passport Bro culture makes life harder for everyone else. When I'm dating as an expat in Mexico City, I have to work twice as hard to demonstrate that I'm not just here to exploit the economic disparity. Local women are rightfully skeptical. Why wouldn't they be?

The Passport Bros are poisoning the well for genuine expats who are looking for real connection. They're the reason some neighborhoods have started charging foreigners more, why there's an undercurrent of resentment in certain social circles, and why dating across the economic divide has become so complicated.

The Alternative: Actual Personal Development

What if, instead of moving to countries where you automatically have "higher value," you worked on becoming the kind of person who has high value everywhere? What if you developed real interests, became genuinely interesting, learned the language fluently, and integrated into the local culture?

Yes, it's harder. Yes, it takes longer. Yes, you might still be rejected. But you'll actually build genuine relationships, you'll develop as a person, and you won't spend your nights feeling empty despite being surrounded by dates. Consider connecting with the authentic expat community through shared interests rather than transactional dating.

Final Thoughts

The Passport Bro movement is a symptom of a larger problem: the idea that geography can solve personal problems. You can't run away from yourself, and you can't buy genuine connection. Whether you're doing it in Mexico City, Southeast Asia, or Eastern Europe, the formula doesn't work. It just makes everyone involved, especially yourself, feel worse.

If you're moving to Mexico City or anywhere else as an expat, I'd encourage you to do it for the right reasons: the culture, the cost of living, the opportunities. Build real friendships. Learn the language. Contribute to the community. And if you're interested in dating, approach it the way you would in your home country, with respect, genuine interest, and the understanding that the other person is a whole human being, not a calculation.

Related Mexico City Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly are "Passport Bros"?
"Passport Bros" are men from wealthier countries who travel to less economically developed nations specifically to date local women, leveraging economic disparity as their primary dating advantage. They often create spreadsheets comparing costs and dating "value" across countries, treating relationships as transactions rather than genuine human connections.
Why does the Passport Bro mentality harm the expat community?
Passport Bros create widespread skepticism toward all foreign residents, making authentic cross-cultural friendships and relationships more difficult for genuine expats. Their transactional behavior leads to resentment in local communities, differential pricing for foreigners, and a toxic reputation that all expats must work to overcome.
How can expats date authentically in Mexico City?
Approach dating with the same respect and genuine interest you would in your home country—focus on shared values, common interests, and real connection rather than economic advantage. Learn Spanish fluently, integrate into the local culture, develop meaningful friendships first, and treat potential partners as whole human beings rather than calculations.
What should I do instead of following the Passport Bro approach?
Focus on genuine personal development: learn the local language fluently, develop real interests and hobbies, contribute meaningfully to the community, and build authentic friendships before pursuing romantic relationships. Move to Mexico City for the right reasons rather than dating advantages.
Written by
Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell
United States From Austin, United States | Mexico Living in Mexico City, Mexico

Austin tech refugee. Mexico City resident since 2014. Decade in CDMX. Working toward citizenship. UX consultant. I write about food, culture, and the invisible rules nobody tells you about.

View Full Profile

Found this helpful?

Join the conversation. Share your own tips, experiences, or questions with the expat community.

Write Your Own Blog
26
People Read This

Your blog could reach thousands too

Back to Mexico City Blogs