Alamogordo building permits
VerifiedDepartment contacts, adopted codes, permit types, fees, and gotchas for Alamogordo, New Mexico.
Last verified 2026-07-02 · Source
Building department
- Address
- CID Las Cruces Office: 505 S. Main St., Ste. 103, Loretto Town Center, Las Cruces, NM 88001. City of Alamogordo Planning & Zoning: 1376 E. Ninth Street, Alamogordo, NM 88310
- Phone
- CID Las Cruces: (575) 524-6320; City of Alamogordo Planning & Zoning: (575) 439-4220
- Office hours
- City of Alamogordo Planning & Zoning: Mon-Fri 8:00 AM-5:00 PM (closed for lunch 12:00-1:00 PM)
- Website
- Official site
Codes adopted
New Mexico sets construction codes statewide by rule, not through home-rule discretion. Under the Construction Industries Licensing Act (NMSA 1978 §§ 60-13-1 et seq.), the state's Construction Industries Commission and Division (CID, within the Regulation & Licensing Department) adopt the technical construction codes codified at New Mexico Administrative Code (NMAC) Title 14 — including the state's own Building, Residential, Existing Building, Mechanical, Fuel Gas, Plumbing, Solar Energy, and Swimming Pool codes, and the National Electrical Code (14.10.4 NMAC currently adopts the 2020 NEC; the CID Commission periodically updates individual code chapters, so confirm the current edition with the applicable authority). Per NMSA 1978 § 60-13-44(E), these state codes "constitute a minimum requirement" binding every political subdivision in New Mexico — no city or county may adopt anything less stringent, though a jurisdiction may adopt stricter local amendments. Enforcement authority runs through whichever entity is the project's Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ, defined at NMAC 14.5.1.7.B): under NMSA 1978 § 60-13-41(D)-(F), a municipality or county that employs its own full-time certified building official may self-administer permitting, plan review, and inspection locally (Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Rio Rancho, Farmington, and Roswell all operate this way); jurisdictions without a certified building official default to direct enforcement by a CID field office (e.g., Hobbs, Alamogordo). Some jurisdictions run a hybrid — locally certified for some trades while CID directly enforces others (Roswell's electrical permitting, for example, reverted to direct CID administration as of January 1, 2026). Always confirm with the specific jurisdiction whether it or the state CID is the acting AHJ for a given trade before submitting plans.
Permit types & fees
Residential Building Permit (New Construction)
Required for new single-family residential construction in Alamogordo. Because the City of Alamogordo has no building department of its own, the actual building permit is issued by the New Mexico Construction Industries Division (CID) using the statewide Multi-Purpose State Building Application. Before CID will accept the application, the applicant must first obtain City of Alamogordo Planning & Zoning sign-off for zoning compliance and a FEMA floodplain determination.
Residential Addition / Alteration Permit
Required for additions, alterations, and repairs to existing single-family residences in Alamogordo. Follows the same City zoning/FEMA prerequisite plus CID state building-permit process as new construction, with reduced plan-submission requirements for non-structural alteration/repair work.
Electrical Permit
Required for electrical installation, alteration, and repair work in Alamogordo. Issued directly by the New Mexico Construction Industries Division (CID) under the 2020 New Mexico Electrical Code (based on the 2020 NEC, NMAC 14.10.4). Homeowners may obtain their own electrical permit for their primary residence only after passing a CID homeowner electrical exam.
Plumbing Permit
Required for plumbing installation, alteration, and repair work in Alamogordo, including water heater replacement. Issued directly by CID under the 2021 New Mexico Plumbing Code (NMAC 14.8.2). A per-fixture fee schedule applies statewide.
Mechanical / HVAC Permit
Required for heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and fuel-gas equipment installations in Alamogordo. Issued directly by CID under the 2021 New Mexico Mechanical Code (NMAC 14.9.2). Unlike electrical and plumbing work, HVAC/mechanical and natural/LP gas installations are explicitly NOT eligible for a homeowner's permit and always require a licensed contractor.
Roofing Permit (Reroof)
Required for all new roof installations, re-roofs, and applications of roof coating systems in Alamogordo. Issued directly by CID under N.M. Admin. Code 14.5.2.8(E), which applies statewide regardless of roof area or repair percentage — there is no minimum-area exemption.
Solar Photovoltaic (PV) Permit
Required for installation of rooftop or ground-mounted solar photovoltaic systems in Alamogordo. Issued directly by CID under N.M. Admin. Code 14.5.2.8(F), which sets detailed statewide licensing and submittal requirements for solar PV installers.
New residential construction activity
New privately-owned residential construction onlyHousing units authorized by building permits for new privately-owned residential construction — this is not total permit volume (no commercial permits or remodels).
- Latest month (2026-05)
- No data reported
- Trailing 12 months
- No data reported
- Year to date
- No data reported
- Latest full year
- No data reported
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Building Permits Survey (BPS), 2026-05 vintage. Census survey data — separate from the permit-requirements verification above. All New Mexico building activity
Tips & gotchas
- Alamogordo has NO city building department — 'The City of Alamogordo no longer has Building Inspectors' and 'no longer issues building permits.' All actual building, electrical, mechanical, and plumbing permits are issued by the State of New Mexico Construction Industries Division (CID), with the City's Planning & Zoning Department handling only the mandatory prerequisite zoning-compliance review and FEMA floodplain determination.
- Expect to pay two separate sets of fees on any project requiring both steps: the City of Alamogordo's zoning/FEMA fee (paid at City Hall, Planning & Zoning) and CID's own permit/plan-review/inspection fee (paid to the CID office handling your application, typically the Las Cruces office for Otero County).
- City fees for residential projects: $85 FEMA determination + $75 zoning review. For commercial projects: $85 FEMA determination + $600 zoning review. One check payable to the City of Alamogordo covers both.
- Homeowners can self-permit their own primary residence for building, electrical (after passing a CID exam), and plumbing (after demonstrating competency to CID) work — but NEVER for HVAC, natural gas, or LP gas work, which always requires a licensed contractor (N.M. Admin. Code 14.5.2.18(O)).
- All re-roofs and roof-coating applications require a CID permit and inspection in New Mexico — there is no minimum-area exemption.
- For CID inspection requests, email CID.Inspection@state.nm.us or call 505-222-9813 / 877-243-0979. For general CID permit questions, email CID.PERMITHELP@rld.nm.gov.
- The CID office nearest Alamogordo/Otero County is the Las Cruces office: 505 S. Main St., Ste. 103, Loretto Town Center, Las Cruces, NM 88001, (575) 524-6320.
- Verify any contractor's New Mexico CID license before hiring at public.psiexams.com.
- New Mexico's currently CID-enforced codes (per CID's own Building Permit Guide for Residential Construction, revised October 2024) are the 2021-cycle International Codes as adapted into the NM Commercial & Residential Building Codes (NMAC 14.7.2/14.7.3), 2021 NM Plumbing Code, 2021 NM Mechanical Code, 2020 NM Electrical Code (2020 NEC), and 2021 NM Energy Conservation Code (effective 7/30/2024).