New Mexico · NM

How to check a contractor license in New Mexico (2026)

New Mexico contractor licensing records are published by the New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID). New Mexico does not expose a clean public data feed we can search in-tool yet, so Trust Check takes you straight to the official lookup and walks you through it step by step — never estimated or third-party data.

Public-record snapshot only. Not a background check, consumer report, employment screening report, credit report, insurance report, tenant screening report, or safety certification. May not be used for any FCRA purpose. TrustConstruct does not endorse, guarantee, certify, insure, bond, supervise, or warrant any contractor or their work.

How to check New Mexico yourself (takes a minute)

  1. Open the official New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID) lookup (button below).
  2. Search by the contractor’s business name or license number.
  3. Confirm the license shows as active, the name/address match the contractor you’re hiring, and note the license number and expiration date.
  4. If you can’t find them, that doesn’t always mean unlicensed — try a different spelling, or the license number. Some states license only certain trades (electrical, plumbing, HVAC) at the state level.

Pick New Mexico below and we send you straight to the official lookup, with these steps beside the result:

Official source

New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID).

Open the official New Mexico lookup ↗

What records you can check for New Mexico

  • License status: current status, license number, and expiration, looked up directly on the official New Mexico lookup site.
  • Building-permit activity: free official city/county open data is indexed for Albuquerque, Bernalillo County. Searching a contractor by name also shows their public permit records in those areas.

New Mexico contractor license FAQ

How do I check a contractor license in New Mexico?

Use the official New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID) lookup. Search by the contractor’s business name or license number, confirm the license is active and the name matches, and note the license number and expiration date.

Who issues contractor licenses in New Mexico?

New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID). It is the official source for New Mexico contractor license records, and every Trust Check result links back to it.

What does it mean if I can’t find a contractor in New Mexico?

Not finding a match does not automatically mean the contractor is unlicensed. Try a different spelling of the business name, or search by the license number instead. Some work is licensed by individual trade or at the local level — when in doubt, confirm with the New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID).

Can I see building-permit records for a New Mexico contractor?

Yes — Trust Check indexes free official permit open data for Albuquerque, Bernalillo County. Search the contractor by name and their public permit activity in those areas appears with the license result. Coverage is limited to the indexed areas, so a low count is never a negative signal.

Is Trust Check an official government source?

No — Trust Check surfaces public records as reported by the official source (the New Mexico Regulation & Licensing Dept. (CID)) and links the official record on every result so you can confirm it there. It is free, requires no signup, and is not an endorsement of any contractor.

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