Skip to content

Taxes In New Mexico

2026 New Mexico Tax Rates, Collections, and Burdens

How Do New Mexico Taxes Compare to Other States?

New Mexico has a graduated state individual income tax, with rates ranging from 1.50 percent to 5.90 percent. New Mexico has a flat 5.90 percent corporate income tax rate, a 4.88 percent state gross receipts tax rate, and an average combined state and local rate of 7.67 percent. New Mexico has a 0.63 percent effective property tax rate on owner-occupied housing value. New Mexico does not have an estate tax or inheritance tax. New Mexico’s gas tax is 18.88 cents per gallon, and its cigarette excise tax is $2.00 per pack of 20 cigarettes.

New Mexico Tax Rankings, Debt, and Tax Revenue

New Mexico raises tax revenue primarily through other taxes (37.4 percent of total state and local tax revenue), general sales taxes (32.5 percent), and individual income taxes (14.0 percent). New Mexico collects $8,953 in state and local tax collections per capita, carries $6,281 in state and local debt per capita, and has a 68 percent funded ratio of public pension plans. New Mexico’s tax system ranks 28th overall on the 2026 State Tax Competitiveness Index.

Understanding New Mexico’s Tax System

Each state’s tax code is a multifaceted system with many moving parts, and New Mexico is no exception. Use the tabs below to compare New Mexico taxes with other states and to see how New Mexico raises tax revenue. You can also browse our tax maps, which are compiled from our annual publication, Facts & Figures 2026: How Does Your State Compare?

See Related Articles

Tax Data by State

Get facts about taxes in your state and around the US

Explore Data

How Do Taxes in New Mexico Compare?

How Does New Mexico Collect Revenue?

How Does New Mexico's Tax System Rank?


All Related Articles

2024 sales taxes including 2024 sales tax rates 2024 state and local sales tax rates

State and Local Sales Tax Rates, 2024

Retail sales taxes are an essential part of most states’ revenue toolkits, responsible for 32 percent of state tax collections and 13 percent of local tax collections (24 percent of combined collections).

9 min read
State population changes in 2023 low-tax states and high-tax states United Van Lines U-Haul and Census data

Americans Moved to Low-Tax States in 2023

The pandemic has accelerated changes to the way we live and work, making it far easier for people to move—and they have. As states work to maintain their competitive advantage, they should pay attention to where people are moving, and try to understand why.

5 min read
State and local tax collections per capita by state FY 2021

State and Local Tax Collections by State, 2023

Contrary to initial expectations, the pandemic years were good for state and local tax collections, and while the surges of 2021 and 2022 have not continued into calendar year 2023, revenues remain robust in most states and well above pre-pandemic levels even after accounting for inflation.

5 min read
Do taxes affect where people move? Do taxes affect interstate migration?

Taxes and Interstate Migration: 2023 Update

The latest IRS and Census data show that people and businesses favor states with low and structurally sound tax systems, which can impact the state’s economic growth and governmental coffers.

8 min read
Wireless taxes cell phone tax rates by state 2022 taxes, fees, and surcharges on wireless service 2023 wireless excise tax rates on cellular service

Excise Taxes and Fees on Wireless Services Drop Slightly in 2023

To alleviate the regressive impact on wireless consumers, states should examine their existing communications tax structures and consider policies that transition their tax systems away from narrowly based wireless taxes and toward broad-based tax sources.

18 min read
do people really move because of taxes

Do People Really Move Because of Taxes?

What do The Rolling Stones, NFL star Tyreek Hill, and Maryland millionaires have in common? They all moved because of taxes.

4 min read
2024 State Business Tax Climate Index

2024 State Business Tax Climate Index

In recognition of the fact that there are better and worse ways to raise revenue, our Index focuses on how state tax revenue is raised, not how much. The rankings, therefore, reflect how well states structure their tax systems.

111 min read