New Mexico HOA & Condo Association Laws
New Mexico pairs a UCA-based Condominium Act with a 2013 HOA Act that mandates recorded notices of association existence, records access, and lien-notice safeguards for homeowners.
Which statutes apply in New Mexico?
- Condominiums
- New Mexico Condominium Act (NMSA § 47-7A-1 et seq.)
- HOAs / planned communities
- New Mexico Homeowner Association Act (NMSA § 47-16-1 et seq.)
Key compliance rules for New Mexico boards and managers
- HOAs must record a notice identifying the association and contacts
- Records requests must be honored within statutory windows
- Lien enforcement requires pre-filing notice to owners
Resale and disclosure requirements
Condo resales require UCA-style certificates (§ 47-7D-9); HOA disclosure certificates are required under the HOA Act on sale.
Running associations in New Mexico?
Portier369 handles the operational side of New Mexico compliance — official records, owner and board notices, reserve and budget tracking, violation due process, and document packages — in one platform built for community association managers.
Frequently asked questions
What law governs condo associations in New Mexico?
Condominiums in New Mexico are governed by the New Mexico Condominium Act (NMSA § 47-7A-1 et seq.). Homeowners associations and planned communities fall under the New Mexico Homeowner Association Act (NMSA § 47-16-1 et seq.).
Are resale disclosures required in New Mexico?
Condo resales require UCA-style certificates (§ 47-7D-9); HOA disclosure certificates are required under the HOA Act on sale.
What software helps New Mexico associations stay compliant?
Association management software like Portier369 supports the operational side of New Mexico compliance: maintaining official records, distributing meeting notices, tracking reserves and budgets, running violation due process with notices and hearings, and assembling resale document packages.
Nearby state guides
This guide is an educational summary, not legal advice. Statutes are amended regularly — confirm current law with an attorney licensed in New Mexico before acting.