New Mexico Contractor Services Listings
The listings assembled under New Mexico Contractor Authority cover licensed contractor businesses and professionals operating under the regulatory jurisdiction of the New Mexico Construction Industries Division (CID). Each entry in this directory maps to a specific license category, trade classification, or service area recognized under New Mexico state law. The scope spans residential, commercial, and specialty trades across all 33 counties, providing a structured reference for property owners, project managers, procurement officers, and industry professionals verifying credentials or identifying qualified contractors.
How listings are organized
Listings are structured along two primary axes: license classification and geographic service area. The New Mexico CID issues licenses under a tiered classification system that distinguishes general contractors from specialty trade contractors — a distinction that determines which scopes of work a licensee may legally perform. Within this directory, entries are grouped first by trade category and then subdivided by city or region.
The top-level trade categories reflected in this directory's organization include:
- General contracting (residential and commercial)
- Electrical contracting
- Plumbing contracting
- HVAC/mechanical contracting
- Roofing contracting
- Solar installation contracting
- Concrete and masonry contracting
- Painting and finishing contracting
- Landscape contracting
- Specialty trades (including adobe construction and home improvement)
Within each trade category, listings are further segmented by whether the contractor holds a Class A (general, unlimited), Class B (general, limited to $500,000 per project under New Mexico CID thresholds), or Class C specialty license. This matters because a Class C electrical licensee, for instance, cannot legally perform the general coordination work that falls under a Class A or B general contractor's scope. Understanding the New Mexico contractor license types is prerequisite to interpreting any entry in this directory.
What each listing covers
A standard listing entry contains the following structured data fields:
- Business name — the legal trade name as registered with the New Mexico CID
- License number — the CID-issued identifier used for verification through the state's public license lookup
- License classification — Class A, B, or C, with the relevant trade subcategory code
- License status — active, expired, suspended, or revoked, as reflected in CID records
- Primary service area — the county or metro region the contractor has designated as their primary operating zone
- Bond and insurance status — whether the contractor's required surety bond and general liability coverage are current, cross-referenced against New Mexico contractor bond requirements and insurance requirements
- Specialty endorsements — additional CID endorsements such as solar PV, manufactured housing, or public works eligibility
Listings do not include contractor pricing, customer reviews, or project portfolios. This directory functions as a regulatory reference, not a marketplace. For exam and continuing education status, cross-reference New Mexico contractor exam requirements and the CID's public records directly.
A key contrast worth noting: verified listings reflect a confirmed active license at the time of last data synchronization, while unverified legacy entries may reflect historical CID records that have not been updated following license expiration or disciplinary action. Readers should always confirm current status through the New Mexico contractor verification license lookup before engaging any contractor for permitted work.
Geographic distribution
New Mexico's contractor population is concentrated in four metropolitan statistical areas. Albuquerque (Bernalillo County) holds the largest single concentration, with the metro area accounting for approximately 40% of all active CID licensees statewide. Santa Fe, Las Cruces, and Rio Rancho represent the next largest clusters.
Listings in this directory are accessible by city-level landing pages for Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Rio Rancho, and Roswell. Coverage of contractors operating outside these urban centers — including those serving Taos, Farmington, Clovis, and the Four Corners region — is addressed through New Mexico contractor services in rural areas.
Rural counties present a structurally different service landscape. In counties such as Catron, Harding, and De Baca, the density of licensed contractors per 10,000 residents drops significantly compared to Bernalillo County, which affects permit timelines, project scheduling, and subcontractor availability. The geographic distribution data in this directory reflects CID license records and does not indicate contractor availability or capacity at any given time.
How to read an entry
Each listing entry is designed to answer a specific verification question, not to serve as a comprehensive contractor profile. The license number field is the operative identifier — all regulatory history, disciplinary actions, and bond claims associated with a contractor flow through that CID number. Cross-referencing a license number against CID disciplinary records surfaces any complaints, citations, or license conditions that would not appear in the listing itself. For that lookup pathway, see New Mexico contractor disciplinary actions and the complaint process.
The license classification code adjacent to each entry name indicates both the tier and the trade scope. A listing coded EE-98 identifies an electrical contractor under the CID's electrical classification, while MM-98 identifies a mechanical/HVAC licensee. These codes correspond directly to the New Mexico CID's published trade classification schedule.
Scope and coverage limitations: This directory covers contractors licensed under New Mexico CID jurisdiction. It does not cover contractors licensed exclusively in Texas, Arizona, Colorado, or other adjacent states unless those contractors hold a current New Mexico CID license. Federal contractors operating solely on tribal lands or federal installations within New Mexico's geographic boundaries may not appear in CID records and fall outside this directory's scope. Contractors operating in New Mexico without a required CID license — a condition addressed in detail at unlicensed contractor risks — will not have a verifiable entry in this directory. The directory also does not address municipal-level business licensing, which operates independently of state CID licensure and varies across Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and other incorporated municipalities.