Do I Need a Permit to Pour Concrete in New Mexico?
Quick Answer
Only if it connects to the street, modifies drainage, or is a structural element.
When You Don't Need a Permit
Simple concrete flatwork on your own property — a backyard patio, a walkway, or a small pad — typically does not require a building permit in most cities, as long as it doesn't alter drainage patterns or connect to the public right-of-way.
When You Do Need a Permit
A permit is required for: new driveways or driveway widenings (curb cut modification), sidewalk work in the public right-of-way, any concrete that changes drainage patterns, and structural concrete (retaining walls, foundations). Driveway permits may also require a refundable right-of-way bond ($500-$2,000).
Drainage Is Key
The biggest issue with concrete work isn't the concrete itself — it's drainage. Most cities prohibit directing water runoff onto neighboring properties. If your new concrete changes how water flows on your lot, you may need a drainage plan even for otherwise exempt work.
ADA at the Sidewalk
If your driveway crosses a public sidewalk, the approach must meet ADA slope requirements. This is enforced during the permit process and is a common reason driveway permits are revised.
Bottom Line
Backyard patio? Probably no permit. Driveway or anything touching the street? Yes. Always check drainage impact.
Permit fees by city in New Mexico
Verified from each city’s published fee schedule. Where a city has no separate fee listed for this project, open the city page for the current requirements and amount.
| City | Permit fee | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Alamogordo | $85Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Albuquerque | $23.50 minimum for valuation $1–$2,000; then $23.50 for the first $500 plus $3.05 per additional $100 (to $2,000); $69.25 for the first $2,000 plus $14.00 per additional $1,000 (to $25,000); $391.75 for the first $25,000 plus $10.10 per additional $1,000 (to $50,000); $643.75 for the first $50,000 plus $7.00 per additional $1,000 (to $100,000); $993.75 for the first $100,000 plus $5.60 per additional $1,000 thereafter — modifier of 0.50 applied to the resulting valuation for one- and two-family dwellingsVerifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Clovis | $28.00 + $5.60 per $1,000 of valuationVerifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Farmington | See city page for the current Residential Building Permit (New Construction) fee | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Hobbs | $20.00Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Las Cruces | $0.20 per square foot of gross floor area measured to the outside walls; minimum permit fee $50Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Rio Rancho | 65% of the Building Permit Fee (non-refundable)Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Roswell | $24.00Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit | Residential Building Permit → |
| Santa Fe | $40.00Verifiedvia Residential Building Permit (New Construction) | Residential Building Permit (New Construction) → |
| Unincorporated Bernalillo County | $30.00 plus $4.00 per $1,000.00 of valuationVerifiedvia Residential Building Permit | Residential Building Permit → |