Quick Answer
New Mexico employers manage SUI (0.33%–5.4% on first $31,700, new employer 1.0%), graduated state income tax (1.7%–5.9%), a statewide minimum wage of $12.00/hr (Albuquerque is higher), and mandatory paid sick leave under the Healthy Workplaces Act (1 hour per 30 worked, up to 64 hours, all employers). Final paychecks are due by the next regular payday; discharged employees are due payment within 5 days per NMDOL guidance. No state paid family leave insurance program.
Table of Contents
- New Mexico Payroll Obligations at a Glance
- State Unemployment Insurance (SUI)
- State Income Tax Withholding
- Healthy Workplaces Act: Paid Sick Leave
- Minimum Wage 2026
- Pay Frequency and Final Paycheck
- New Hire Reporting
- Employer Registration
- Filing Schedules and Deadlines
- Federal Payroll Taxes
- Frequently Asked Questions
New Mexico payroll has a few elements that catch employers off guard. The Healthy Workplaces Act applies to every employer regardless of size — a one-person operation with a single part-time employee must track and provide paid sick leave. Local minimum wages in cities like Albuquerque exceed the $12.00 statewide floor. And the income tax withholding form is a state-specific document that needs to be on file before the first paycheck. This guide covers all of it.
New Mexico Payroll Obligations at a Glance
| Obligation | Who Pays | Rate / Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| SUI | Employer | 0.33%–5.4% (new: 1.0%) | $31,700 per employee wage base |
| State Income Tax | Employee (employer withholds) | 1.7%–5.9% graduated | No wage cap |
| Paid Sick Leave | Employer obligation (employee benefit) | 1 hr per 30 hrs worked; max 64 hrs/yr | All employers, all employees |
| Minimum Wage | Employer obligation | $12.00/hr statewide; higher locally | Albuquerque and other cities may be higher |
State Unemployment Insurance (SUI)
New Mexico's unemployment insurance program is administered by the New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions (NMDWS). SUI is an employer-only tax; employees do not contribute.
SUI Rates for 2026
- New employer rate: 1.0% (applies during the experience rating qualification period)
- Experienced employer range: 0.33% to 5.4%
- Taxable wage base: $31,700 per employee per calendar year
- Maximum annual SUI cost per employee: $1,711.80 (at 5.4%)
- New employer annual cost per employee: $317 (at 1.0%)
New Mexico's $31,700 wage base is well above the national median. Even at the low new employer rate of 1.0%, the wage base means meaningful SUI costs per employee compared to states with $9,000–$15,000 wage bases. Employers with higher experience rates face over $1,700 per employee annually at the maximum rate. NMDWS assigns experience rates annually.
NMDWS Experience Rating
New Mexico uses a benefit ratio method to determine experience rates. Your benefit ratio equals total benefits charged to your account divided by your average annual taxable payroll. Lower ratios earn lower rates. Monitor your NMDWS account regularly and contest questionable UI claims promptly — each benefit dollar charged against your account raises your future rate.
State Income Tax Withholding
New Mexico uses a graduated income tax administered by the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD). Rates range from 1.7% to 5.9% depending on taxable income and filing status.
2026 New Mexico Income Tax Brackets
| Taxable Income (Single) | Rate |
|---|---|
| $0 – $5,500 | 1.7% |
| $5,501 – $11,000 | 3.2% |
| $11,001 – $16,000 | 4.7% |
| $16,001 – $210,000 | 4.9% |
| Over $210,000 | 5.9% |
Married filing jointly brackets are approximately double the single brackets. Withholding is calculated from TRD withholding tables, which employers access through the TRD website (tax.newmexico.gov). Use the current year's tables — New Mexico updates these periodically.
Employee Withholding Certificate
New Mexico uses Form RPD-41195 (Employee's Withholding Exemption Certificate) for state withholding. Employees who do not submit a state form may use the federal W-4 as a substitute. If no form is on file, withhold as single with zero exemptions. Employees claiming exemption from NM withholding must file a new certificate each year.
New Mexico Healthy Workplaces Act: Paid Sick Leave
The New Mexico Healthy Workplaces Act took effect on July 1, 2022. It is one of the broadest paid sick leave laws in the country because it applies to every employer — there is no minimum employee count. A sole proprietor with one part-time employee is covered. No employer is exempt based on size.
Accrual Rate and Cap
- Accrual: 1 hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked
- Annual cap: 64 hours per year
- Carryover: Accrued but unused sick leave carries over year to year, up to the 64-hour cap
- Frontloading: Employers may frontload 64 hours at the start of the year instead of tracking hourly accrual
Covered Employees
The Healthy Workplaces Act covers all employees who work in New Mexico, including part-time and temporary workers. Independent contractors are not covered. Employees begin accruing leave on their first day of work, though employers may require a 90-day waiting period before employees can actually use leave.
Permissible Uses
- The employee's own illness, injury, or medical care
- A family member's illness, injury, or medical care
- Public health emergency closures affecting the employee or their child's school/care provider
- Safe leave (domestic violence, sexual assault, harassment, or stalking — for the employee or a family member)
Documentation and Record-Keeping
The Healthy Workplaces Act does not allow employers to require documentation for absences of fewer than three consecutive days. For longer absences, you may request documentation but cannot delay leave pending its receipt. Maintain records of hours worked and sick leave balances for all employees for at least three years. The New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions enforces the Act and can audit employer records.
Interaction With Existing Paid Leave Policies
If your existing PTO or vacation policy provides at least 64 hours of paid leave per year usable for the same purposes covered by the Healthy Workplaces Act, you do not need to track a separate sick leave bucket. The existing policy satisfies the Act's requirements. If your policy is more restrictive — for example, PTO that cannot be used for medical leave until after six months — you likely need a supplemental sick leave policy.
Minimum Wage 2026
Statewide Rate
New Mexico's statewide minimum wage is $12.00 per hour. Tipped employees may be paid a lower cash wage of $3.00/hr, provided tips bring total compensation to at least $12.00/hr per workweek. If tips fall short, the employer makes up the difference.
Albuquerque's Higher Local Minimum Wage
Albuquerque sets its own minimum wage above the state floor through voter-approved ordinances. As of 2026, Albuquerque's minimum wage is approximately $12.50/hr or above. Albuquerque's rate is tied to the Consumer Price Index and adjusts annually each January 1. Employers in Albuquerque must check the current Albuquerque minimum wage before the start of each year. Santa Fe has historically maintained its own higher minimum wage as well — confirm the current Santa Fe rate with the city directly.
Check Local Rates Before Each Year
New Mexico permits municipalities to set their own minimum wages above the state floor. Before January 1 of each year, confirm the minimum wage for every city or county where your employees work. Using the statewide $12.00 rate in a municipality with a higher local rate exposes you to back-pay liability and penalties. Albuquerque's city website and Santa Fe's city website both publish current minimum wage schedules.
Pay Frequency and Final Paycheck Rules
Pay Frequency
New Mexico requires employers to designate regular paydays and pay wages at least twice per month (semi-monthly). Weekly and bi-weekly pay schedules are also permissible. Paydays must be posted in a conspicuous location. No deviation from the posted schedule is allowed without advance notice.
Final Paycheck
New Mexico's final paycheck rules have a distinction based on how the separation occurred:
- Resignation: Final wages are due by the next regular payday following the last day of work
- Discharge (termination by employer): NMDOLS guidance calls for payment within 5 days of the discharge date, even if the next regular payday is further out
Employers who discharge employees should process final pay quickly — within 5 days — to comply with NMDOLS guidance and avoid wage claims. For resignations, the next regular payday deadline is typically sufficient.
New Hire Reporting
New Mexico employers must report all new hires and rehires to the New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions within 20 days of the hire date. Required data includes employee name, address, Social Security number, date of hire, and employer name, address, and EIN. Reports are submitted through the NMDWS employer portal at dws.state.nm.us. Multistate employers may report through the federal new hire portal.
Employer Registration in New Mexico
New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department — Withholding Account
Register with TRD through the New Mexico Taxpayer Access Point (TAP) at tap.state.nm.us for your state withholding account. Upon registration, you receive a New Mexico CRS (Combined Reporting System) number used for all state tax filings including income tax withholding. Registration is required before your first payroll.
New Mexico Department of Workforce Solutions — SUI Account
Register with NMDWS at dws.state.nm.us for your unemployment insurance account. Online registration is available. Upon approval, you receive your employer account number for quarterly SUI reports and payments.
Filing Schedules and Deadlines
State Withholding
| Filing Frequency | Threshold | Due Date |
|---|---|---|
| Quarterly | Annual withholding under $500 | Last day of month following quarter |
| Monthly | Annual withholding $500–$4,999 | 25th of the following month |
| Semi-monthly | Annual withholding $5,000 or more | Within 3 banking days of withholding |
SUI Quarterly Deadlines
| Quarter | Period | Due Date |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | Jan 1 – Mar 31 | April 30 |
| Q2 | Apr 1 – Jun 30 | July 31 |
| Q3 | Jul 1 – Sep 30 | October 31 |
| Q4 | Oct 1 – Dec 31 | January 31 |
Annual W-2 Filing
New Mexico W-2s must be submitted to TRD by February 28. Electronic filing is required for employers with 25 or more employees. W-2s must reflect New Mexico withholding in the appropriate boxes and include your New Mexico CRS number.
Federal Payroll Taxes
All standard federal obligations apply to New Mexico employers in addition to state requirements:
- Social Security (OASDI): 6.2% employer + 6.2% employee on wages up to $176,100 (2026)
- Medicare: 1.45% employer + 1.45% employee on all wages; 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax on wages over $200,000
- FUTA: 6.0% on first $7,000 per employee, reduced to 0.6% with the full NM SUI credit
- Federal income tax withholding: Based on each employee's W-4
- Form 941: Quarterly federal payroll tax return, due April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the New Mexico Healthy Workplaces Act apply to small employers?
Yes. The Healthy Workplaces Act applies to all employers in New Mexico regardless of size. There is no minimum employee count for coverage. Even a one-person employer with a single part-time worker must provide paid sick leave at the rate of 1 hour per 30 hours worked, up to 64 hours per year.
What is New Mexico's SUI new employer rate?
New Mexico new employers pay 1.0% on the first $31,700 in wages per employee. Maximum annual SUI per employee at the new employer rate is $317. The relatively low 1.0% rate is offset by the higher-than-average $31,700 wage base.
Is Albuquerque's minimum wage higher than New Mexico's state minimum?
Yes. Albuquerque sets its own minimum wage above the $12.00 statewide floor. The Albuquerque rate is indexed to the CPI and adjusts each January 1. As of 2026, the Albuquerque rate is above $12.50/hr. Employers in Albuquerque must pay the higher local rate. Santa Fe also historically sets a higher local minimum; verify current rates with each city directly.
What is the final paycheck deadline for discharged employees in New Mexico?
NMDOLS guidance calls for discharged employees to be paid within 5 days of their termination date, even if the next regular payday is further away. Employers who wait until the next regular payday for terminated employees may face wage complaints. For employees who resign, the next regular payday deadline applies.
What are New Mexico's income tax rates?
New Mexico has a graduated income tax with rates from 1.7% to 5.9%. The 5.9% top rate applies to taxable income over $210,000 for single filers. Employers withhold based on current TRD withholding tables using the employee's Form RPD-41195 or federal W-4.
Does New Mexico have paid family leave?
New Mexico does not have a state-funded paid family leave insurance program as of 2026. The Healthy Workplaces Act provides up to 64 hours of paid sick leave per year for employees, which can cover some family caregiving situations, but it is not a family leave insurance program. Federal FMLA governs unpaid leave at covered employers with 50 or more employees.
Simplify New Mexico Payroll
Between the Healthy Workplaces Act, local minimum wages in Albuquerque, and graduated income tax withholding, New Mexico has moving parts. Gusto handles NM state withholding, SUI filings, and paid sick leave tracking. Trusted by small businesses across New Mexico.
Legal & Tax Disclaimer
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or professional advice. Employment laws, tax regulations, and compliance requirements change frequently. The information on this page reflects our understanding as of the date noted above and may not reflect recent changes in federal or New Mexico state law.
Do not act or refrain from acting based solely on the information in this article. Always consult a qualified attorney, CPA, or HR professional familiar with New Mexico law before making payroll or compliance decisions for your business.