New Mexico Income Tax Calculator
New Mexico does something no other state does: it completely waives income tax for residents aged 100 and older. It also replaced its traditional sales tax with a Gross Receipts Tax on businesses — the only state structured that way. On the income side, 2025 brings a restructured six-bracket schedule with two new low rates at 1.5% and 3.2%, making the Land of Enchantment meaningfully more affordable for modest earners than even a year ago.
Reviewed for accuracy: June 2026 · Sources: New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department, IRS
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New Mexico Tax Bracket Visualizer — 2025 (HB 252)
Six brackets starting at 1.5% — two new low-rate tiers added in 2024. The 5.9% top rate affects only the highest earners; most New Mexicans pay 4.7% or below on the bulk of their income.
| NM Bracket | Rate | Income Taxed | Tax Owed |
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Raise & Bonus Calculator — “What if I get a raise?”
“What If I Moved?” — State Relocation Comparison
Estimated state income tax only (excludes federal/FICA) at your current income level.
| State | Est. State Tax | Annual Savings vs New Mexico | 5-Year Savings | 10-Year Savings |
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Filing Status Comparison
New Mexico uses different bracket widths for each filing status — married filers get wider brackets that delay reaching the higher rates, making filing status more impactful here than in flat-tax states.
| Filing Status | Combined Tax | Take-Home | vs. Your Current Status |
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Tax Timeline — What Taxes Cost You, Broken Down
5-Year Future Projection
Assumes a 3% annual raise at the current 2025 bracket structure. New Mexico has no scheduled rate changes at this time.
| Year | Projected Gross | Projected Total Tax | Projected Take-Home |
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New Mexico Income Tax: The Western Outlier With Surprising Wrinkles
Squeeze New Mexico between its neighbors on a tax map and something looks off. Arizona taxed income at 2.5% flat. Colorado and Utah both run under 4.5% flat. Texas has nothing. Against that backdrop, New Mexico’s top rate of 5.9% appears steep — until you look at what the brackets actually do to real incomes. The six-bracket structure, reshaped most recently by HB 252 in 2024 and effective January 2025, starts at just 1.5% on the first $5,500 of taxable income for single filers. Two entirely new brackets — 1.5% and 3.2% — were added at the bottom of the schedule specifically to lower the effective burden on modest earners who previously entered the system at 3.7%. Most working New Mexicans earning between $30,000 and $100,000 find themselves paying 4.7% on the majority of their income, not 5.9%. That top rate is reserved for income above $210,000 (single) or $315,000 (married filing jointly), a threshold that touches a small fraction of the state’s population.
New Mexico follows the federal standard deduction, which for 2025 is $15,750 for single filers and $31,500 for married couples filing jointly — a meaningful starting reduction that applies before any bracket rate touches your income. The state doesn’t layer on a separate state standard deduction or a personal exemption system on top, which keeps the calculation cleaner than states like Connecticut or Maryland. Where New Mexico does add its own adjustments is through Schedule PIT-ADJ: that’s where you subtract exempt military retirement pay, Social Security benefits if you qualify, retirement income if you’re 65 or older, and any other New Mexico-specific items. The interaction of these adjustments with the bracket structure is where real planning value lives. A retiree drawing military pension, Social Security below the $100,000 AGI threshold, and some KPERS-equivalent New Mexico public pension income could see their New Mexico taxable income drop to a fraction of their gross — putting them back in the 1.5% or 3.2% bracket even on substantial total income.
Three things about New Mexico’s tax code that no other state can claim: First, residents who reach the age of 100 owe zero New Mexico income tax — every dollar of their income, from any source, is completely exempt. This isn’t a deduction or a credit; it’s a full exemption written into state law. Second, New Mexico has no traditional sales tax. Instead, it levies a Gross Receipts Tax on the privilege of doing business in the state, which businesses are permitted to pass through to customers on their invoices. The combined state and local GRT rate in Albuquerque runs roughly 7.875%, in Santa Fe around 8.44%. The distinction matters because the legal incidence falls on the seller, not the buyer — which creates different exemption patterns, particularly around food and healthcare, compared with how standard retail sales taxes work. Third, military retirement pay became fully exempt from New Mexico income tax in 2022, effective immediately with no phase-in and no income cap. Kirtland Air Force Base, Holloman Air Force Base, White Sands Missile Range, and the sprawling Cannon Air Force Base make military families a significant population in New Mexico — and this exemption directly addressed a longstanding gap that had been pushing retirees toward neighboring Texas.
Frequently Asked Questions
New Mexico uses six progressive brackets for 2025 under HB 252 (Laws 2024): 1.5% on the first $5,500 of taxable income for single filers, 3.2% from $5,501 to $11,000, 4.3% from $11,001 to $20,000, 4.7% from $20,001 to $100,000, 4.9% from $100,001 to $210,000, and 5.9% on income above $210,000. Married filing jointly filers use wider thresholds, with the 5.9% top rate applying above $315,000.
Not for most New Mexicans. Social Security benefits are fully exempt from New Mexico income tax for single filers with federal AGI under $100,000, and for married filing jointly filers with AGI under $150,000. Above those thresholds, Social Security is included in New Mexico taxable income.
No. New Mexico fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax with no dollar cap and no income limit, effective for tax year 2022 and all years thereafter. The exemption is claimed on Schedule PIT-ADJ.
Yes. Taxpayers age 65 or older may deduct up to $8,000 of qualifying retirement income — including pensions, IRA withdrawals, and annuities — from New Mexico taxable income. Additionally, New Mexico residents who are 100 years of age or older are completely exempt from New Mexico income tax — every dollar of their income is tax-free at the state level.
New Mexico follows the federal standard deduction. For 2025, that is $15,750 for single filers, $31,500 for married filing jointly, and $23,625 for head of household. New Mexico does not add a separate state-specific deduction on top of the federal amount.
No. New Mexico does not permit any city or county to levy a local income tax on wages. Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Rio Rancho, and every other New Mexico municipality are completely income-tax-free at the local level. New Mexico does have a Gross Receipts Tax on businesses — not on individual wages — which is distinct from a sales tax or local income tax.
More Income Tax Calculators
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Methodology: Calculations use New Mexico’s 2025 six-bracket income tax schedule (1.5%–5.9% per HB 252, Laws 2024, effective January 1, 2025, per New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department), the federal standard deduction ($15,750 single / $31,500 MFJ / $23,625 HOH), Social Security exemption for AGI below $100,000 (single) or $150,000 (MFJ), full military retirement exemption (effective TY2022), and an $8,000 age 65+ retirement income deduction. Federal calculations use 2025 IRS brackets and Child Tax Credit rules; FICA uses 2025 Social Security (6.2% to $176,100) and Medicare (1.45% + 0.9% additional) rates per IRS.gov. Bracket thresholds are approximated from available legislation; verify exact thresholds with the New Mexico TRD before filing. New Mexico allows no local income tax on wages. This tool is for planning purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Last reviewed: June 2026.
