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Moving to Albuquerque, NM?

Here are the local rules you need to know before you unpack.

Every city has its own set of local ordinances that go beyond state and federal law. From when you can mow your lawn to whether you can park your RV in the driveway, these rules affect daily life in ways most people do not expect. This guide covers the key ordinances in Albuquerque across 41 categories and 195 specific rules we track.

42 Permissive119 Moderate34 Strict

πŸ”Š Noise Ordinances

Noise rules affect everything from weekend parties to lawn care schedules. Quiet hours, construction restrictions, and barking dog limits vary widely between cities.

Leaf Blower Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates leaf blowers under the General Noise Ordinance in ROA 1994 Chapter 9-9, restricting operating hours and decibel output at residential property lines in the Rio Grande Valley.

Code Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 9-9Allowed Hours: 7 AM - 9 PM weekdays, 8 AM - 9 PM weekends

Decibel Limits

Some Restrictions

ROA 1994 Chapter 9-9 sets tiered decibel limits by zoning district and time of day, with residential areas capped at 55 dB(A) nighttime and 65 dB(A) daytime.

Residential Day: 65 dB(A)Residential Night: 55 dB(A)

Outdoor Music

Some Restrictions

Outdoor music at Albuquerque restaurants, patios, and events must stay within ROA Chapter 9-9 limits and end amplified play by 10:00 PM in most residential-adjacent zones.

Commercial Day Limit: 70 dB(A) at residential property lineCommercial Night Limit: 60 dB(A) after 10 PM

Aircraft Noise

Few Restrictions

Aircraft noise from the Albuquerque International Sunport and Kirtland AFB is preempted by FAA regulation, but the city coordinates community noise mitigation through the ABQ Sunport Noise Office.

Primary Authority: Federal Aviation AdministrationAirport: Albuquerque International Sunport (ABQ)

Industrial Noise

Heavy Restrictions

Industrial facilities in Albuquerque must comply with ROA 1994 Chapter 9-9 zoning-based decibel limits, with strict enforcement along the I-25 corridor and South Broadway manufacturing districts.

Code Sections: ROA 9-9 and IDOIndustrial to Residential: 60 dB(A) day / 55 dB(A) night

Quiet Hours

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Chapter 9, Article 9 (Noise Control Ordinance) β€” nighttime quiet hours 10 PM to 7 AM. Residential zones limited to 55 dB daytime and 50 dB nighttime. Enforced by Environmental Health Department.

Ordinance: ROA Chapter 9, Article 9Quiet Hours: 10 PM – 7 AM

Construction Hours

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Chapter 9, Article 9 β€” construction permitted 6 AM to 10 PM weekdays and Saturdays. No construction on Sundays or federal holidays without a Temporary Construction Noise Permit. Equipment must use sound-control devices within 500 ft of noise-sensitive properties.

Permitted Hours: 6 AM – 10 PM (Mon–Sat)Sunday/Holidays: Permit required

Barking Dogs

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Chapter 9, Article 9 prohibits allowing an animal to persistently or continuously bark, howl, or make noise common to its species that disturbs the peace. Enforced by Animal Protection Services and APD.

Ordinance: ROA Ch. 9, Art. 9 & HEART OrdinanceStandard: Persistent/continuous barking prohibited

Amplified Music & Events

Some Restrictions

Amplified music in Albuquerque must comply with ROA 1994 Chapter 9-9 decibel limits and special event permitting, with stricter enforcement in Nob Hill, Downtown, and Old Town entertainment districts.

Daytime Limit: 75 dB(A) at residential property lineNighttime Limit: 65 dB(A) from 10 PM to 7 AM

🏠 Short-Term Rentals

If you plan to rent out your home on Airbnb or VRBO - even occasionally - you need to know the local STR rules before listing.

Registration Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Every short-term rental in Albuquerque must obtain an annual permit from the Planning Department under ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20 and collect Lodgers' Tax plus Hospitality Fee.

Permit Fee: $90 annuallyCode Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20

Occupancy Limits

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque caps short-term rental occupancy at two adults per bedroom plus two additional guests under ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20, with hard caps for parties and events.

Occupancy Formula: 2 adults per bedroom + 2Code Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20

Insurance Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires every permitted short-term rental to carry at least $500,000 in liability insurance or use a platform with equivalent host protection under ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20.

Minimum Coverage: $500,000 per occurrenceCode Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20

Night Caps

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque does not impose a citywide annual night cap on permitted short-term rentals under ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20, though non-owner-occupied permits are capped at one per owner.

Annual Night Cap: None citywideOwner Cap: 1 non-owner-occupied per owner

Host Presence Rule

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque's short-term rental ordinance R-19-19 does not mandate that hosts live on-site or be physically present during a guest stay. Whole-home rentals are permitted citywide with a valid permit and 24/7 contact requirement.

Host on-site required: NoWhole-home allowed: Yes, with permit

Primary-Residence-Only Rule

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque's short-term rental ordinance does not restrict permits to a host's primary residence. Investors can hold multiple STR permits, one per property, with no citywide cap on the number of non-owner-occupied listings.

Primary residence required: NoPermits per owner: Unlimited

Host Platform Liability

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires every short-term rental advertisement, including listings on Airbnb and Vrbo, to display the city-issued permit number. Hosts and, in practice, platforms share responsibility for compliance, with delisting used as an enforcement lever.

Permit number on ads: RequiredPlatforms covered: All

Repeat Violator Strikes

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's R-19-19 lets the Planning Department suspend or revoke a short-term rental permit after repeat substantiated violations, including noise, occupancy, or unpermitted operation. There is no fixed three-strike rule, but a documented pattern triggers escalation.

Strike count: Pattern-basedHearing offered: Yes, administrative

Extended Home Share

Few Restrictions

Stays of 30 consecutive days or more in an Albuquerque short-term rental are not subject to the city's lodgers' tax under New Mexico law, and effectively shift to a residential tenancy under the Uniform Owner-Resident Relations Act.

Tax-exempt threshold: 30 consecutive daysStatute: NMSA Β§3-38-13

Parking Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque STR Ordinance ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20 requires one off-street parking space per bedroom rented, and prohibits guest parking on unpaved front yards or across sidewalks.

Minimum Spaces: 1 off-street per bedroom rentedCode Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20

Noise Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque short-term rentals must enforce quiet hours from 10:00 PM to 7:00 AM under ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20 and the citywide noise code, with strict penalties for host non-compliance.

Quiet Hours: 10:00 PM to 7:00 AMCode Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 13-20

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's Short Term Rental Ordinance (O-20-30, codified as Article 19 of Chapter 13, ROA 1994) took effect April 23, 2021 and requires every STR operator to hold a city STR Permit issued by the Planning Department. The fee is $120 for the initial permit and $90 for each annual renewal, and operators must carry STR insurance of at least $250,000.

Code Section: ROA 1994 Sec. 13-19 (Ordinance O-20-30)Effective Date: April 23, 2021

Taxes & Fees

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque STR operators pay 5% Lodgers' Tax, 1% Hospitality Fee, and approximately 7.9% combined Gross Receipts Tax on all room revenue for stays of 29 nights or less. Monthly reporting required by the 25th.

Lodgers' Tax: 5% on room revenueHospitality Fee: 1% on room revenue

πŸ”₯ Fire Regulations

Fire pit rules, fireworks restrictions, and brush clearance requirements are especially important if you are coming from a state with different fire risk profiles.

Smoke Detectors

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque requires hardwired, interconnected smoke alarms with battery backup in every bedroom, outside sleeping areas, and on each level per the 2018 IRC and AFR fire code.

Placement: Every bedroom, outside sleeping areas, each levelNew Construction: Hardwired + interconnected + battery backup

Wildfire Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque designates Wildland-Urban Interface zones along the Sandia foothills and Bosque under the International WUI Code, triggering strict construction and defensible space rules.

Applicable Areas: Sandia Foothills, Bosque edgeRoof Standard: Class A required

Brush Clearance

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque requires defensible space clearance of flammable vegetation within 30 feet of structures in designated wildland-urban interface zones under AFR fire code and ROA 1994 Chapter 14.

WUI Area: Sandia Foothills, Bosque corridorZone 1: 0-5 ft non-combustible

Backyard Fires

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque permits small recreational fires in approved containers under AFR rules but prohibits open burning of trash, leaves, and brush year-round within city limits.

Open Burning: Prohibited year-round citywideFire Pit Size: 3 ft diameter, 2 ft pile height

Propane Storage

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque enforces the International Fire Code and NFPA 58 for propane storage, limiting residential cylinder size, mandating setbacks from buildings, and requiring permits for larger tanks.

Code: IFC + NFPA 58Tank permit: Above 125 gallons

Outdoor Burning

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque Open Burn Program β€” burning of piled vegetation allowed 10 AM to 3 PM only, pile max 3 ft diameter x 3 ft high, must be 50 ft from structures. Must call Burn/No-Burn Hotline (505) 768-2876 first. Fire dispatch notification required.

Burn Hours: 10 AM – 3 PM onlyMax Pile Size: 3 ft diameter x 3 ft high

Fire Pit Rules

Some Restrictions

Recreational fires and portable outdoor fireplaces allowed in Albuquerque. Recreational fires must be 25 ft from structures; portable fireplaces 15 ft. Wood only. No time restrictions but permit required from Fire Marshal's Office.

Recreational Fire Setback: 25 ft from structuresPortable Fireplace Setback: 15 ft from structures

Fireworks

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Chapter 10, Article 20 β€” aerial fireworks and ground audible devices are ILLEGAL within city limits. Only 'safe and sane' fireworks approved by the Fire Chief are permitted. No fireworks in parks, bosque, or open space areas.

Ordinance: ROA Ch. 10, Art. 20Aerial Fireworks: ILLEGAL in city limits

πŸš— Parking Rules

Parking rules catch more new residents off guard than almost any other ordinance. RV storage, overnight parking bans, and driveway regulations vary significantly.

Overnight Parking

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque has no blanket citywide overnight parking ban, but prohibits parking on the same street for more than 72 consecutive hours and restricts parking in permit zones under ROA 1994 Chapter 8.

72-Hour Rule: No same-spot parking over 72 hoursRV Limit: 4 hours on residential streets

EV Charging

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque requires EV-ready infrastructure in new multifamily and commercial construction under IDO amendments and offers permit streamlining for residential Level 2 chargers.

Multifamily EV-Ready: 5% of spaces for 10+ unitsCommercial EV-Ready: 2% of spaces for 25k+ sq ft

Street Parking Limits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Chapter 8 β€” vehicles may not remain parked on any street for more than 36 consecutive hours. Proper license plate and registration required. Parking between curb and sidewalk prohibited. Street parking is public; no reserving spaces.

Time Limit: 36 hours maximum on streetLicense Required: Valid plate and registration tag

Abandoned Vehicles

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque Code Section 8-5-2-3 declares a vehicle abandoned if it sits unattended on a public street for 36 hours, on private property without owner consent for 24 hours, or off a private residence's driveway for 36 hours. Inoperable vehicles on private property longer than three days are a public nuisance under Section 8-5-2-9.

Code: Albuquerque Code Sec. 8-5-2-3Public Street Threshold: 36 hours

RV & Boat Parking

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§8-5-1-13 β€” vehicles 90 inches or wider prohibited on streets except for active loading/unloading. RVs may park on private property in side or rear yard. On-property RV dwelling limited to 14 days; no permanent utility connections.

Street Parking: Vehicles 90+ inches wide prohibitedStreet Time Limit: 36 hours maximum

Driveway Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO β€” front yard parking only on improved driveways (concrete or compacted gravel). Parking on dirt or grass front yards prohibited. Lots over 5,000 sq ft limited to 400 sq ft or 60% of front yard setback for parking area.

Surface Required: Concrete or compacted gravelGrass/Dirt Parking: Prohibited in front yard

Commercial Vehicle Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§8-5-1-13 and Β§8-5-1-36 β€” commercial vehicles 90+ inches wide cannot park on residential streets. Vehicles on public streets may not be used for sale display, washing, greasing, or repair (except emergency). Oversized vehicles need permits.

Width Limit: 90 inches max on residential streetsProhibited Uses: Sale display, washing, repair on street

🧱 Fence Regulations

Planning to put up a fence? Height limits, material restrictions, and permit requirements differ by city - and sometimes by which side of the property the fence sits on.

Fence Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's Integrated Development Ordinance limits residential fences to 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in side/rear yards, with permits required for walls over 6 feet.

Front Yard Max: 4 feetSide/Rear Max: 6 feet

Material Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's IDO prohibits barbed wire, concertina, and electric fencing in residential zones and restricts chain-link in front yards of most neighborhoods.

Prohibited Residential: Barbed wire, razor wire, electricRestricted Front Yard: Chain-link discouraged/banned in overlays

Retaining Walls

Some Restrictions

Retaining walls over 4 feet tall (measured from bottom of footing to top) or with surcharge require engineered plans and a building permit in Albuquerque per the 2018 IRC and IDO.

Permit Threshold: Over 4 ft or any surchargeEngineer Requirement: NM-licensed PE stamp

Pool Barriers

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque requires a self-closing, self-latching pool barrier at least 60 inches high around any residential swimming pool over 24 inches deep per the 2018 IRC Appendix G and ROA Chapter 14.

Minimum Height: 60 inchesGate: Self-closing, self-latching, outward swing

Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO Β§14-16-5-7(D) β€” front yard walls max 3 ft for residential. Side and rear yard walls max 6 ft. Walls above 3 ft in front yard need view fencing (max 50% opaque). Design elements may project 2 ft above max height.

Front Yard (Residential): 3 ft maximumSide/Rear Yard: 6 ft maximum

Neighbor Fence Rules

Few Restrictions

New Mexico is an open range state (NMSA Β§77-16-1) with no shared fence cost statute. Albuquerque does not require neighbor consent for fences on your own property. Fence must be on or inside your property line. No spite fence statute in NM.

Shared Cost: No NM statute requiring shared costProperty Line: Fence must be on your side

Permit Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO Β§14-16-6-5(F) β€” Permit - Wall or Fence - Minor ($25) required for fences under 6 ft. Fences over 3 ft in front yard require Permit - Wall or Fence - Major (Zoning Hearing Examiner review with public hearing). Over 6 ft needs building permit.

Minor Permit: $25 for fences ≀6 ft (side/rear)Major Permit: Front yard >3 ft (public hearing)

πŸ” Animal Ordinances

Pet owners and aspiring chicken keepers should check local animal ordinances before signing a lease or closing on a home.

Wildlife Feeding

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque prohibits intentional feeding of coyotes, bears, javelinas, and other nuisance wildlife under ROA 1994 Chapter 9 with enhanced penalties in foothills neighborhoods.

Prohibited Species: Coyotes, bears, javelinas, foxesCode Section: ROA 1994 Chapter 9

Animal Hoarding

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque limits the number of companion animals per household and treats hoarding as a public-health and animal-welfare violation under Chapter 9, Article 2 of the city code.

Code section: ROA 1994, Ch. 9 Art. 2Pet cap: 6 dogs/cats combined

Cat Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires cats over four months old to be licensed, vaccinated against rabies, and prohibits cats from running at large under the city's HEART ordinance.

License age: 4 months and olderMicrochip: Required

Mandatory Spay/Neuter

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque requires sterilization of dogs and cats over six months old unless owners pay for and maintain an intact-animal permit, one of the strictest such laws in the Southwest.

Sterilization age: Over 6 monthsIntact permit fee: Annual, set by council

Microchipping

Some Restrictions

All licensed dogs and cats in Albuquerque must be microchipped, with chip information registered to the owner and updated when the animal or contact information changes.

Required for: Licensed dogs and catsRegistry update: Owner responsibility

Coyote Management

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque prohibits feeding coyotes and other wildlife and coordinates with NM Game and Fish to manage urban coyote conflicts in foothills neighborhoods bordering the Sandia Mountains.

Feeding wildlife: Prohibited citywideFirearm discharge: Illegal in city limits

Pet Store Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque restricts retail pet stores from selling commercially bred dogs, cats, and rabbits, requiring sourcing from shelters or rescue organizations under a 2022 amendment to the HEART ordinance.

Adopted in: 2022 amendmentAllowed sources: Shelters, rescues only

Pet Limits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque caps the combined number of dogs and cats per dwelling at six without a multi-pet permit, with separate caps for chickens, rabbits, and other small livestock.

Dog/cat cap: 6 combinedChicken cap: 15 hens, no roosters

Dog Leash Laws

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque HEART Ordinance (ROA Ch. 9, Art. 2) β€” all dogs must be on a leash no longer than 8 ft when in public, held by a person capable of controlling the animal. Verbal commands do not constitute control. Off-leash allowed only in designated dog parks.

Leash Length: 8 ft maximumControl: Person must physically hold leash

Exotic Pets

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§9-2-3-9 β€” permit required to own exotic or wild animals including venomous reptiles, large constrictors, alligators, crocodiles, and certain birds of prey. Collection permit (EWACP) required for 15+ exotic animals. No release into wild within city limits.

Ordinance: ROA Β§9-2-3-9Permit: Required for all exotic/wild animals

Beekeeping

Few Restrictions

Beekeeping is permitted in Albuquerque. The city was designated the first Bee City USA in the Southwest in 2016. No registration required by city or state, though commercial apiaries must register annually by November 1. Beekeepers can join the no-spray list via 311.

Status: Bee City USA since 2016Permit Required: No (residential hobby)

Breed Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque has NO breed-specific legislation. No breed bans (including pit bulls). The HEART Ordinance focuses on individual animal behavior rather than breed. Dangerous/aggressive animal provisions apply regardless of breed.

Breed Bans: None β€” no BSL in AlbuquerqueFocus: Individual animal behavior

Chickens & Livestock

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque allows up to 15 hens (no roosters) on standard residential lots under ROA 1994 Chapter 9, subject to coop setback and sanitation rules.

Hen Limit: 15 females maxRoosters: Prohibited in residential

🌿 Landscaping Rules

From grass height limits to tree removal permits, landscaping rules can surprise new homeowners, especially in drought-prone areas with water restrictions.

Rainwater Harvesting

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque encourages rainwater harvesting under the ABQ Water Authority rebate program, allowing residents to collect roof runoff without state water rights issues in most cases.

Rain Barrel Rebate: Up to $150 from Water AuthorityCistern Rebate: Up to $1,500

Weed Ordinances

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque enforces weed abatement. NM Noxious Weed Law applies statewide. Fire prevention concerns drive enforcement in arid areas.

Authority: City + county weed boardState Law: NMSA Β§3-53-1

Artificial Turf

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque allows artificial turf in residential and commercial landscapes but limits coverage in front yards and requires permeable base installation under IDO landscape standards.

Front Yard Cap: 50% of required landscapeBackyard: Generally unrestricted

Native Plants

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque strongly encourages xeriscape and native plant landscaping through Water Authority rebates and IDO landscape standards requiring low-water plants for new construction.

Turf Rebate: $2/sq ft up to $6,000Approved List: Regional Plant List (ABCWUA/IDO)

Tree Trimming

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§6-6-1-4 β€” permit required from City Forester to cut, trim, spray, remove, or plant any tree on public streets, alleys, or sidewalks. Private property trees with 6+ inch trunk diameter need permit for trimming. Street tree maintenance is property owner responsibility.

Ordinance: ROA Β§6-6-1-4Public Tree Permit: Required from City Forester

Grass Height Limits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§9-8-1 (Weed, Litter and Snow Removal Ordinance) β€” weeds exceeding 4 inches in height or width on any commercial or residential property are a violation. Major allergenic plants, fire hazards, and nuisance vegetation also prohibited.

Weed Height Limit: 4 inches maximumOrdinance: ROA Β§9-8-1

Water Restrictions

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§6-1-1-8 β€” water budgets and planting restrictions enforced by ABCWUA. No more than 10% of required landscape can be cool-season grass. Irrigated grass prohibited on slopes exceeding 1:4. Xeriscape rebate program available. HOAs cannot prohibit xeriscaping.

Cool-Season Grass: Max 10% of landscape areaSlope Restriction: No irrigated grass on slopes >1:4

Tree Removal & Heritage Trees

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Β§6-6-1-4 β€” permit required from City Forester to remove any tree on public property. Private property tree removal may require permit. Heritage Tree Program protects historically significant trees. Dead, diseased, or dangerous trees may be removed without permit.

Public Tree Removal: Permit from City Forester requiredHeritage Trees: Protected β€” special permit needed

πŸ’Ό Home Business

Working from home is common, but running a business from home often requires permits and must comply with zoning restrictions on customer traffic and signage.

Cottage Food Operations

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque residents can produce non-hazardous cottage foods under New Mexico's Homemade Food Act (NMSA 25-2-4) with up to $5,000 in annual sales before commercial licensing is required.

State Law: NMSA 25-2-4 Homemade Food ActSales Cap: $5,000 annual gross

Home Daycare

Heavy Restrictions

Home daycares in Albuquerque must be licensed by NM CYFD and comply with IDO home occupation standards, with resident providers caring for up to 6 children permitted by right.

Registered Home: Up to 6 children (4 unrelated)Group Home: 7-12 children with CUP

Home Occupation Permits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque home occupations require a business registration and must comply with IDO home occupation standards capping customer visits, employees, and visible business activity.

Registration: City business registration requiredSpace Cap: 25% of dwelling or 500 sq ft

Customer Traffic Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO home occupation rules limit customer traffic to maintain residential character. High-traffic businesses may require home occupation approval from the city. Even 'no customers' businesses must still register and comply with zoning.

Customer Traffic: Limited to maintain residential characterHigh Traffic: May require additional approval

Signage Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Home occupations in Albuquerque may display one non-illuminated wall sign up to 2 square feet under the Integrated Development Ordinance, with no freestanding signs allowed in residential zones.

Maximum Size: 2 sq ft wall-mountedIllumination: Prohibited

Zoning Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO allows home occupations in all residential zones with limitations. As of January 2025, a City Business License (replacing old business registration) is required. Manufacturing, baking, machine repair, and automotive work are not allowed from home.

Zoning: Home occupations allowed in all residential zonesBusiness License: Required (as of Jan 2025)

🏊 Swimming Pools & Spas

Pool ownership comes with safety fencing requirements, permit obligations, and drainage rules that vary by jurisdiction.

Hot Tub Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque hot tubs holding over 24 inches of water require pool barriers or ASTM F1346 safety covers, and electrical installations need permits and GFCI protection.

Barrier Threshold: Over 24 inches of waterCover Standard: ASTM F1346 locking cover

Pool Permits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires a building permit from the Planning Department's Building Safety Division for residential in-ground pools, plus barrier compliance under the New Mexico Residential Code. Public and semi-public pools must additionally obtain an operating permit under Albuquerque Code Chapter 10, Article 3, administered by the Environmental Health Department.

Building Code: NM Residential Code (14.7.4 NMAC)Barrier Height: 60 inches minimum

Safety Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque residential pools require four-sided barriers, drain anti-entrapment devices, and door alarms where the house forms part of the barrier, per 2018 IRC Appendix G.

Barrier Height: 60 inches minimumDrain Standard: VGB Act anti-entrapment

Above-Ground Pools

Some Restrictions

Above-ground pools in Albuquerque must comply with fencing requirements if over 3 ft deep or 5,000 gallons. The 6-ft barrier height is measured from outside grade. NM Residential Code defines pool as any structure over 24 inches deep. Building permit required.

Fencing Trigger: Over 3 ft deep or 5,000 gallonsHeight Measurement: From outside grade level

Fencing Requirements

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque ROA Ch. 10, Art. 3 β€” pools over 3 ft deep or 5,000 gallons must be enclosed by a barrier at least 6 ft high. Gates must be 6 ft with self-closing latch at 54 inches. Chain link must be 11-gauge minimum. Vertical bars max 4 inches apart.

Barrier Height: 6 ft minimumGate Latch Height: 54 inches (4.5 ft) minimum

πŸ—οΈ Accessory Structures

Thinking about an ADU, shed, or garage conversion? Local rules on accessory structures have changed rapidly in recent years, especially in California.

Carport Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque carports over 200 square feet require a building permit and must meet residential setback standards under the IDO, with Pueblo Revival style encouraged.

Permit Threshold: Over 200 sq ftSetbacks: 20 ft front, 5 ft side, 15 ft rear

Tiny Homes

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque allows Accessory Dwelling Units (casitas) up to 750 square feet on single-family lots under the IDO, with tiny homes on foundations treated as ADUs and tiny-homes-on-wheels restricted.

Max ADU Size: 750 sq ft or 50% of primaryTiny Home on Foundation: Allowed as ADU with Appendix Q

ADU Owner Occupancy

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque does not require owner-occupancy for casita properties under the IDO. New Mexico HB 252 (2023) - the Casita Rule - explicitly prohibits local owner-occupancy mandates for ADUs of 750 sq ft or less on single-family lots. Property owners may build a casita and rent both units to separate tenants. HOA covenants may still impose restrictions.

City Rule: No owner-occupancy requiredState Preemption: NM HB 252 (Casita Rule)

ADU Impact Fees

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque charges modest impact fees on residential development under the Impact Fee Ordinance (Chapter 14, Article 19) but casitas typically pay reduced fees as accessory uses. New Mexico Statute 5-8 (Development Fees Act) authorizes impact fees with strict capacity-need findings. Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority charges connection fees only when new service is installed.

Impact Fee Authority: Code Ch. 14, Art. 19State Law: NMSA 5-8 (Dev. Fees Act)

ADU Permits

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque permits ADUs (locally called 'casitas') under the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO, adopted 2018) Section 14-16-4-3(D)(4). Casitas are permitted by-right in all residential zones (R-A, R-1, R-MH, R-T, R-ML, R-MH). One ADU per single-family lot. Permits route through Planning Department via the Online Permit Portal. New Mexico has the Casita Rule (HB 252, 2023) that further preempts restrictive local rules.

Code Authority: IDO Β§14-16-4-3(D)(4)Local Term: Casita

ADU Rental Restrictions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires Short-Term Rental Permits under Chapter 13, Article 9 for rentals under 30 days. Long-term casita rentals require no separate registration but must comply with the New Mexico Uniform Owner-Resident Relations Act (NMSA 47-8). Albuquerque has no rent control - New Mexico Statute 47-8A-3 preempts local rent control. Lodgers' Tax (5%) applies to STRs.

STR Permit: Required (Ch. 13 Art. 9)Lodgers' Tax: 5% city + 5.125% NM

Garage Conversions

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque allows garage conversions to ADUs if they meet IDO zoning and building code standards. Must be architecturally integrated with existing residence. Building permit required showing wall and roof materials. Typical cost $30,000–$70,000.

Permit: Building permit requiredArchitecture: Must integrate with existing home

ADU Rules

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO β€” ADUs (casitas) allowed in all R-A and R-1 zones since 2023. Maximum 750 sq ft. One per lot. Must be behind rear wall of main house. 5 ft minimum side/rear setback. Cannot exceed 25% of combined side and rear yards.

Max Size: 750 sq ftQuantity: 1 per lot (R-A and R-1)

Shed Rules

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque β€” one-story detached accessory buildings used as tool storage sheds, playhouses, and similar uses may not require a building permit if they meet size thresholds. Walls less than 5 ft from property line must be one-hour fire resistive.

Permit Exemption: Small tool sheds, playhouses under size thresholdFire Rating: 1-hour if <5 ft from property line

πŸ– Outdoor Cooking

πŸŽ„ Holiday Decorations

🌍 Environmental Rules

Climate Emergency Mobilization

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's 2021 Climate Action Plan and Climate Resiliency Action Plan set citywide greenhouse gas reduction targets, build heat and drought resilience, and direct departments to integrate climate goals into operations and capital planning.

Adopted: 2021Net-zero municipal: By 2030

Vehicle Idling Restrictions

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque has no broad vehicle idling ordinance for private drivers, but city fleet policy under the Climate Action Plan limits idling for municipal vehicles, and state air-quality rules apply to heavy diesel commercial trucks.

Private driver penalty: None currentlyCity fleet limit: 5 minutes

Defensible Space

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque Fire Rescue and the IDO encourage defensible space around homes adjacent to the Sandia Mountains and Bosque Rio Grande wildland-urban interface, requiring clearing of dead vegetation and combustible materials within prescribed zones around structures.

Zone 1: 30 feet non-combustibleZone 2: 100 feet reduced fuel

Heat Island Mitigation

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque promotes heat island mitigation through shade tree requirements, light-colored paving on city projects, and IDO landscape standards that limit dark surfaces in parking lots, addressing Sandia foothills heat amplification documented in the Climate Resiliency Action Plan.

IDO shade requirement: 50% lot coverageRisk zone: Sandia foothills, ICEZ

Cool Pavement

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque pilots cool-pavement coatings and lighter-colored asphalt on selected DMD repaving projects to lower surface temperatures, primarily in Climate Resiliency Action Plan priority neighborhoods near downtown and the International District.

Program type: DMD pilotPriority areas: Equity heat zones

Flood Zones

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates development in FEMA-designated flood hazard areas under Article 5 of Chapter 14 (Β§14-5-1 through Β§14-5-4) of the city code. The Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority (AMAFCA) coordinates regional flood management across the metro area's extensive arroyo system. Major flood risks come from the Rio Grande, North Diversion Channel, and numerous arroyos including the Bear, Hahn, Tijeras, and Embudo.

Governing Code: Chapter 14, Article 5 (Β§14-5-1 to Β§14-5-4)Flood Authority: AMAFCA

Erosion Control

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque requires erosion and sediment control for all construction and ground-disturbing activities under Β§14-5-2-11 and DPM Chapter 22. The city's Construction Stormwater Quality Section reviews and approves erosion control plans before grading permits, building permits, or work orders are issued. Projects involving more than 1.0 acres or 500+ cubic yards of soil must have an approved erosion control plan.

Governing Code: Β§14-5-2-11 and DPM Chapter 22Plan Threshold: 1+ acre or 500+ cubic yards

Stormwater Management

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque enforces comprehensive stormwater management under City Ordinance Β§14-5-2-11 and the Albuquerque Metropolitan Arroyo Flood Control Authority (AMAFCA) standards. The city operates under an EPA MS4 NPDES permit administered by the New Mexico Environment Department. The Construction Stormwater Quality Section reviews all projects for compliance before grading or building permits are issued.

Governing Code: City Ordinance Β§14-5-2-11Regional Authority: AMAFCA

Coastal Development

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque is a landlocked city in central New Mexico with no coastline and no coastal development regulations. The city sits along the Rio Grande at approximately 5,300 feet elevation, over 700 miles from the nearest coast. Waterfront regulations focus on the Rio Grande bosque corridor and arroyo systems rather than coastal zones.

Coastal Regulations: None β€” landlocked cityElevation: ~5,300 feet above sea level

Grading & Drainage

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates grading and drainage through DPM Chapter 22 and the Integrated Development Ordinance. All new development must manage stormwater on-site and ensure drainage does not adversely affect neighboring properties. Grading permits are required for significant earth-moving activities. The city's semi-arid terrain and summer monsoons make proper grading and drainage critical.

Design Manual: DPM Chapter 22Permit Required: For significant earth-moving

🌱 Cannabis Regulations

Buffer Zones

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque IDO restricts cannabis retail and consumption establishments from locating within set distances of schools and daycare centers, regulating where dispensaries may operate inside the city.

Buffer distance: 300 feetProtected uses: Schools, licensed daycare

Personal Cultivation Limits

Few Restrictions

New Mexico law allows adults 21 and over to grow cannabis at home for personal use, with statewide plant caps that apply throughout Albuquerque, plus visibility and security expectations under the Cannabis Regulation Act.

Mature plants per adult: 6Immature plants per adult: 6

Cannabis Delivery Rules

Some Restrictions

Licensed cannabis couriers may deliver to Albuquerque residents from state-licensed retailers under New Mexico Cannabis Control Division rules, with ID verification, secured vehicles, and limits on quantities per transaction.

Recipient age: 21+ verified at doorTransport requirement: Locked container

Social Equity Licensing

Few Restrictions

The New Mexico Cannabis Control Division operates a social and economic equity program offering reduced fees and technical assistance to qualifying applicants, including Albuquerque residents from disproportionately impacted communities.

Program administrator: NM Cannabis Control DivisionMicrobusiness plant cap: 200 mature plants

Commercial Cannabis Zoning

Some Restrictions

The Albuquerque IDO defines which zone districts permit cannabis retail, manufacturing, testing, and cultivation, generally allowing commercial cannabis in mixed-use and industrial zones subject to buffer rules.

Retail zones: MX-L, MX-M, MX-H, NR-CCultivation zones: NR-LM, NR-GM

Dispensary Zoning

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates cannabis retail establishments through the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO). Cannabis dispensaries cannot be located within 300 feet of any existing child day care facility. The city council rejected most proposed distance buffer requirements from schools and other cannabis retailers, resulting in relatively permissive zoning compared to other jurisdictions.

Buffer from Daycare: 300 feetBuffer from Schools: Not required (proposal rejected)

Home Cultivation

Few Restrictions

New Mexico legalized recreational cannabis under the Cannabis Regulation Act (2021), which permits adults 21 and older to grow up to six mature plants and six immature plants per person, with a household maximum of 12 mature plants. Albuquerque follows state law with no additional local restrictions on home cultivation. Plants must be grown in an enclosed, locked space not visible to the public.

Legal Age: 21+Per Person Limit: 6 mature + 6 immature plants

β˜€οΈ Solar Energy

πŸͺ§ Sign Regulations

🏚️ Property Maintenance

Vacant Lot Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates vacant lots through the Code Enforcement Division and Chapter 8 (Weeds, Litter and Snow) of the city code. Vacant lot owners must maintain their properties free of weeds, litter, and debris. The city actively monitors vacant properties that attract illegal dumping and blight.

Weed Height Limit: 12 inches maximumGoverning Code: Chapter 8 β€” Weeds, Litter and Snow

Trash Bin Storage

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates trash container placement and storage through the Solid Waste Management Ordinance (Chapter 9, Article 7) and code enforcement standards. Trash bins must be stored out of public view when not set out for collection. The city's Solid Waste Management Department provides standardized carts for curbside collection.

Cart Placement: At curb by 7:00 AM on collection dayCart Retrieval: By end of collection day

Property Blight

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque addresses property blight through its Code Enforcement Division under Chapter 11 (Health and Sanitation) and the IDO. Properties must be maintained free of junk, debris, abandoned vehicles, and conditions that create a public nuisance. The city uses a complaint-driven enforcement model supplemented by proactive neighborhood inspections.

Reporting: 311 complaint systemCompliance Period: Typically 10-30 days

Snow & Sidewalk Clearing

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque's Article 8 (Weeds, Litter and Snow) addresses snow removal but enforcement is minimal due to the city's semi-arid climate with infrequent snowfall. Property owners are expected to clear sidewalks adjacent to their property within a reasonable time after snowfall, but the city does not aggressively enforce sidewalk clearing given that snow typically melts quickly at Albuquerque's elevation and latitude.

Governing Code: Article 8 β€” Weeds, Litter and SnowAverage Snowfall: ~10 inches per year

Garage Sale Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque limits garage and yard sales through the Integrated Development Ordinance. Residential properties with low-density development may hold garage sales only twice per calendar year, and multi-family properties up to four times per year. Each sale may not exceed three days in length and may only sell typical household goods.

Annual Limit (Single-Family): 2 sales per yearAnnual Limit (Multi-Family): 4 sales per year

πŸ’‘ Outdoor Lighting

πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules

Security Deposit Rules

Some Restrictions

Under NMSA Β§47-8-18, Albuquerque landlords may take a security deposit of no more than one month's rent on leases shorter than one year, and must return the deposit with itemized deductions within 30 days of move-out.

Cap, leases under one year: One month's rentReturn deadline: 30 days after move-out

Tenant Anti-Harassment

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque tenants are protected from retaliation under NMSA Β§47-8-39 if they exercise legal rights, but New Mexico has no comprehensive tenant-anti-harassment statute like Los Angeles' TAHO. Most claims rely on the retaliation rule and habitability duties.

Retaliation statute: NMSA Β§47-8-39Presumption window: Six months

No-Fault Evictions

Few Restrictions

New Mexico law permits Albuquerque landlords to end a month-to-month tenancy without cause on 30 days' written notice. There is no local just-cause-eviction ordinance and no relocation-assistance requirement for no-fault terminations.

Notice required: 30 days writtenCause required: No, month-to-month

Source-of-Income Discrimination

Few Restrictions

New Mexico's Human Rights Act does not list source of income as a protected class, and Albuquerque has not adopted a local Section 8 protection ordinance. Landlords in the city may legally refuse to accept housing-choice vouchers as a payment source.

State protection: Not protected classLocal Albuquerque ban: None

Eviction Moratorium History

Some Restrictions

From March 2020 to April 2022, the New Mexico Supreme Court paused enforcement of money-judgment eviction writs for nonpayment in Albuquerque. The moratorium ended after rental assistance funds dried up; standard NMSA Β§47-8 eviction rules now apply.

Moratorium issued by: NM Supreme CourtStart: March 2020

Rent Control

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque has no rent control or rent stabilization ordinances. New Mexico does not have a statewide rent control law, but neither does it have a statewide preemption prohibiting cities from enacting rent control. Landlords may set and increase rents without municipal limits, subject only to lease terms and general contract law.

Rent Control: NoneState Law: No statewide rent control or preemption

Just Cause Eviction

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque does not have a just cause eviction ordinance. Evictions in New Mexico are governed by the Uniform Owner-Resident Relations Act (Β§47-8-1 et seq.) which allows landlords to terminate tenancies for cause (non-payment, lease violations) with proper notice, and to decline to renew expired leases without stating a reason.

Just Cause Required: NoNon-Payment Notice: 7 days

Rental Registration

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque does not currently require a general rental property registration program. Landlords are not required to register their rental units with the city or obtain a rental license. The city relies on code enforcement and the state Uniform Owner-Resident Relations Act to regulate rental property conditions.

Registration Required: NoRental License: Not required

πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling

Pickup Rules & Schedules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque provides curbside trash, recycling, and green waste collection through the Solid Waste Management Department. Residential collection is on a weekly schedule with assigned collection days by neighborhood. The city uses an automated cart system requiring residents to use city-issued containers.

Trash Collection: WeeklyRecycling Collection: Every other week

Recycling Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque provides curbside single-stream recycling through the Solid Waste Management Department. Recycling is collected every other week in yellow-lidded carts. The city accepts paper, cardboard, plastic bottles and containers, metal cans, and glass in a single-stream system. Contamination of recycling carts is a significant concern.

Collection Frequency: Every other weekSystem Type: Single-stream

Bin Placement Rules

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's Solid Waste Management Department requires specific cart placement for automated collection. Carts must be at the curb by 7:00 AM on collection day, placed with handles facing the house, and positioned at least 3 feet from any obstacles. Carts must be retrieved by the end of the collection day.

Placement Time: By 7:00 AM on collection dayOrientation: Handles facing house, lid toward street

Bulk Item Disposal

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque offers bulky item collection by appointment through the Solid Waste Management Department. Residents can schedule free pickup of large items that do not fit in standard carts. The city also operates convenience centers for self-drop-off of large items, yard waste, and recyclables.

Scheduling: Call 311 or online requestCost: Free (limited pickups per year)

🚁 Drone Rules

πŸ” Food Trucks & Mobile Vendors

πŸšͺ Soliciting & Door-to-Door

πŸŒ™ Curfew Laws

πŸ“ Building Setbacks & Zoning

🌳 Tree Protection

Urban Forest Equity

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's Climate Resiliency Action Plan and Parks and Recreation Heritage tree program target canopy growth in low-tree neighborhoods, prioritizing equity in tree planting near ART, schools, and East Central where heat exposure is highest.

Lead office: Parks and RecreationEquity priority: ICEZ, Southeast Heights

Tree Removal Permits

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque regulates tree removal on public property and within rights-of-way through the Parks and Recreation Department. The city's Urban Forest Management program oversees street trees and park trees. Private property tree removal is generally not restricted unless trees are in designated overlay zones or subject to landscape requirements under the IDO.

Public Tree Removal: City authorization requiredPrivate Tree Removal: Generally not restricted

Heritage & Protected Trees

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque recognizes significant trees through its Urban Forest Management program, though it does not have a formal heritage tree ordinance with specific legal protections. Notable trees in parks and public spaces receive protection through the Parks and Recreation Department. The Rio Grande bosque cottonwood forest is the primary protected urban forest in the city.

Heritage Tree Ordinance: No formal ordinancePublic Tree Protection: Urban Forestry Division management

Tree Replacement Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires tree replacement when trees are removed as part of development projects subject to IDO landscape requirements. The Urban Forestry Division also manages replacement planting for public street trees that are removed due to disease, damage, or infrastructure projects. Desert-adapted and drought-tolerant species are strongly preferred for replacement plantings.

Replacement Required: For IDO landscape plan trees and public treesPreferred Species: Desert-adapted, drought-tolerant

🏷️ Garage & Yard Sales

πŸ”§ Building Safety

Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires automatic fire sprinkler systems under the adopted International Fire Code and NFPA 13/13R/13D in most new commercial, multi-family, and certain single-family construction.

Standards: NFPA 13/13R/13DInspection: Annual

Elevator Maintenance

Some Restrictions

Elevators in Albuquerque are regulated by the New Mexico Construction Industries Division under NMAC 14.7.10, requiring annual inspection, certification, and a posted current-inspection sticker.

Authority: NM CID, NMAC 14.7.10Code adopted: ASME A17.1

Lead Paint

Some Restrictions

Pre-1978 housing in Albuquerque is subject to federal lead-disclosure law, EPA RRP rules for renovation, and city environmental health enforcement when child-occupied facilities are involved.

Federal trigger: Pre-1978 housingRenovation rule: EPA RRP certified firms

Pest Control

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque requires landlords to maintain rental units free of insect and rodent infestation under the property maintenance code, with NM warranty-of-habitability backing tenant remedies.

Code base: IPMC adoptedState backing: NM Β§47-8-20

Scaffold & Sidewalk Shed

Some Restrictions

Construction scaffolding in Albuquerque must comply with OSHA, the International Building Code, and city right-of-way permits when scaffolding extends over sidewalks or public streets.

Federal rule: OSHA 1926 Subpart LROW permit: Sidewalk/street use

Childcare Center Rules

Heavy Restrictions

Childcare centers in Albuquerque must meet IBC E-occupancy standards, NM CYFD licensing, fire-marshal inspection, and zoning approvals depending on enrollment size and location.

IBC class: Group E or I-4State license: NM CYFD

Door Locking Hardware

Some Restrictions

Egress doors in Albuquerque commercial and multi-family buildings must use code-compliant locking hardware that allows single-motion exit, with limited exceptions for schools and detention.

Code base: IBC + IFC adoptedSingle-motion egress: Required

🚬 Tobacco & Vaping

πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items

πŸ’Ό Employment Preemption

πŸ›‚ Immigration Policy

πŸ›οΈ Homelessness & Encampment Rules

πŸ›΄ Mobility & Curb Rules

πŸ’§ Water Use Rules

πŸ—ΊοΈ Zoning Overlays & Bonuses

Specific Plans Overview

Some Restrictions

Albuquerque's 2018 Integrated Development Ordinance consolidates citywide zoning, while legacy Rank 3 sector plans and Centers and Corridors policies still guide Downtown, Nob Hill, and other identified areas with overlay design and use standards.

Citywide code: IDO (2018)Replaces: Old Ch. 14

Hillside Overlay Rules

Heavy Restrictions

The IDO View Protection Overlay and Sandia foothills provisions limit grading, height, and reflective surfaces on slopes east of Tramway, protecting Petroglyph and Sandia viewsheds and reducing erosion risk above the Bosque Rio Grande.

Key zone: East of TramwayOverlay code: IDO View Protection

Transit-Oriented Communities (TOC)

Few Restrictions

The IDO encourages Centers and Corridors infill near Albuquerque Rapid Transit and core ABQ Ride routes by allowing higher density, reduced parking minimums, and mixed-use forms within mapped Premium Transit areas along Central Avenue.

Spine: ART on Central AveBonus type: Density, height, parking

Density Bonus Law

Few Restrictions

Albuquerque's Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) at Section 14-16-5-6 provides density and height bonuses for projects that include workforce housing or affordable housing units. Combined with the Workforce and Affordable Housing program in Code Chapter 14, Article 9, qualifying projects in mixed-use and multi-family zones may earn an additional story (about 12 feet) of height and reduced parking minimums.

IDO Section: 14-16-5-6Workforce Housing Code: Chapter 14, Article 9

🩺 Public Health Rules

🏨 Hotels & Lodging

πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations

Tobacco Retail License

Some Restrictions

Selling tobacco, vaping, or alternative nicotine products in Albuquerque requires a New Mexico tobacco retailer license and city business registration, with state law setting the minimum sales age at 21 statewide.

State license: NM Tax & RevMinimum age: 21

Adult Entertainment

Heavy Restrictions

Albuquerque licenses adult entertainment venues separately from general business registration, restricting locations near schools, parks, churches, and residential zones, and imposing operational limits on hours, signage, and on-premises conduct.

Code reference: ABQ IDO Β§14-16-4Permit issuer: Planning Department

Massage Establishments

Some Restrictions

Massage businesses in Albuquerque must register with the city, employ only therapists licensed by the New Mexico Massage Therapy Board, and operate within commercial zones that meet IDO setback and parking requirements.

State license: NM Β§61-12C-1City role: Registration plus zoning

Secondhand Dealers

Some Restrictions

Secondhand dealers and pawnbrokers in Albuquerque must register with the city, photograph and report transactions to the Albuquerque Police Department, and hold purchased items for a mandatory waiting period.

Reporting: APD electronic systemHold period: Mandatory waiting before resale

Towing Companies

Some Restrictions

Tow operators in Albuquerque need a New Mexico Public Regulation Commission permit, a city business registration, and must follow APD rotation list rules, posted rate schedules, and consumer-protection requirements for nonconsensual tows.

State license: NM PRCRate cap: PRC tariff

🚷 Public Conduct

πŸ’° Local Taxes & Fees

Overall: What to Expect in Albuquerque

Albuquerque has 195 ordinances on file across 41 categories. Of these, 42 are rated permissive, 119 moderate, and 34 strict. This gives you a general sense of how tightly regulated daily life is in Albuquerque compared to other cities.

Rules can change, and enforcement varies. Always verify specific requirements with the city directly before making major decisions like building a fence, listing on Airbnb, or starting a home business.

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