New Mexico requires six months of state residency before filing and is one of only nine community property states — meaning marital assets and debts are split 50/50 by default. Filing fees start at $137, fault does not affect property division or spousal support, and couples who agree on all terms can file together without a process server, often finalizing in as little as one to three months.
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New Mexico requires six months of state residency before filing and is one of only nine community property states — meaning marital assets and debts are split 50/50 by default. Filing fees start at $137, fault does not affect property division or spousal support, and couples who agree on all terms can file together without a process server, often finalizing in as little as one to three months.
New Mexico Divorce: Fast Facts
Key facts about divorce in New Mexico
Topic
Detail
More Info
Waiting Period
30 Days. The 30-day clock starts when the Respondent is served. In uncontested cases without minor children, the Respondent may waive this period. When both spouses file jointly, service is eliminated and there is no mandatory waiting period.
~$137. Standard filing fee for a new domestic case at most New Mexico district courts (range: $135–$155 depending on judicial district). Fee waivers are available for qualifying low-income filers via Form 4-222.
50 / 50. New Mexico is a community property state. Assets and debts acquired during the marriage are divided equally by default. Separate property — assets owned before marriage or received as gifts and inheritances — is not subject to division. Spouses may agree to a different split in their Marital Settlement Agreement.
6 Months. At least one spouse must have lived in New Mexico for six months immediately before filing, with intent to remain (domicile). There is no separate county-level residency requirement — you file in the district court of the county where either spouse lives.
New Mexico is a no-fault divorce state — you cite "incompatibility" and do not need to prove wrongdoing or obtain your spouse's consent. Either spouse can file, or both spouses can file together as a joint petition. Uncontested divorces where both parties agree on all terms typically finalize in one to three months. Contested cases — where disputes must be resolved by a judge — can take six months to over a year depending on the issues involved and your local court's docket.
Confirm Residency. At least one spouse must have lived in New Mexico for six months immediately before filing and must intend to remain in the state. New Mexico does not impose a separate county residency requirement — you may file in the district court of the county where either spouse lives. Military members continuously stationed in New Mexico for six months satisfy this requirement. If you have not yet met the six-month threshold, you may file for legal separation immediately and later convert the case to divorce once you qualify.
Choose Your Filing Path and Complete Your Forms. If filing alone: complete Form 4A-102 (Petition Without Children) or Form 4A-103 (Petition With Children), along with the Domestic Relations Information Sheet (Form 4A-101). If both spouses agree on all terms, you may file a joint petition together — this eliminates the service-of-process step entirely. All official forms are bilingual (English/Spanish) and available free at nmcourts.gov. The court's Guide & File tool can walk you through form selection based on your situation.
File with the District Court and Pay the Filing Fee. File at the district court of the county where either spouse lives — in person, by mail, or via e-filing through the New Mexico Courts e-file portal. The standard filing fee for a new domestic case is approximately $137 (range: $135–$155 depending on the district). If you cannot afford the fee, file Form 4-222 (Application for Free Process) and Form 4-223 (Order for Free Process) alongside your petition. The court may grant a full waiver or reduced fee without requiring a hearing.
Serve Your Spouse (Individual Filing Path Only). If you filed alone, you must formally serve the Respondent with the Petition, a Summons, and a Temporary Domestic Order (Form 4A-201). Service may be completed by a process server, sheriff, or any adult who is not a party to the case. Certified mail requiring a signature is also permitted. The Respondent then has 30 days to file a Response. Alternatively, the Respondent may sign an Acceptance of Service (Form 4A-105) to waive formal service. If both spouses filed jointly, this step is eliminated.
Exchange Financial Disclosures. New Mexico law requires both spouses to exchange financial information within 45 days of filing, covering income, expenses, assets, and debts. This mutual disclosure obligation applies regardless of whether the case is contested or uncontested. Incomplete or inaccurate financial disclosures are a leading reason courts reject final divorce agreements. Make sure your disclosures are thorough and current before finalizing any settlement terms.
Negotiate and Sign a Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA). Your Marital Settlement Agreement is the binding contract that governs all post-divorce terms: community property division, spousal support, child custody and time-sharing, and child support. Both spouses sign. The MSA is incorporated into the Final Decree of Dissolution of Marriage as a court order. Use our settlement agreement checklist to make sure nothing is missed.
Submit Your Final Decree Package and Obtain Your Judgment. Once all terms are agreed upon and the waiting period has passed, submit your completed Final Decree of Dissolution of Marriage (Form 4A-305 for cases without children, or Form 4A-306 for cases with children) along with your signed MSA and any custody or child support orders. A judge reviews and signs the Decree. Your divorce is final on the date the judge signs. Obtain certified copies for name change, account updates, and beneficiary changes — most district courts charge $1–$3 per page for copies.
NM parenting class requirement — verify with your local district: New Mexico does not have a statewide mandate requiring parents to attend a parenting education course. However, individual judicial districts — including the Second Judicial District (Bernalillo County) — routinely require parents to complete a court-approved course before the divorce is finalized in cases involving minor children. Check with the clerk's office in your county for specific requirements and approved providers before filing. ⚠️ This varies by district and should be confirmed with a New Mexico family law attorney if you have minor children.
New Mexico Divorce Laws: Grounds, Residency, and Key Rules
New Mexico allows both no-fault and fault-based divorce, but the vast majority of cases proceed on incompatibility grounds — no proof of wrongdoing required. The state's community property standard, absence of a county residency requirement, and joint filing option combine to make New Mexico one of the more straightforward states for uncontested divorces. Marital fault does not affect property division or spousal support calculations under state law.
New Mexico divorce laws: grounds, residency, and key rules
Topic
New Mexico Rule
Statute
No-Fault Ground
Incompatibility — discord or conflict that has destroyed the marriage relationship with no reasonable prospect of reconciliation
§ 40-4-1
Fault Grounds
Cruel and inhuman treatment; adultery; abandonment (rarely used in practice)
§ 40-4-1
State Residency
6 months in New Mexico immediately before filing, with intent to remain (domicile)
§ 40-4-5
County Residency
None required — file in the district court of any county where either spouse lives
§ 40-4-4
Waiting Period
30 days after service; waivable by Respondent in uncontested cases without minor children; eliminated entirely in joint filing
NMRA 1-123
Response Deadline
30 days from service to file a Response; failure to respond may result in a default judgment
Form 4A-104
Financial Disclosures
Both spouses must exchange financial information within 45 days of filing
NMRA 1-123
Fault & Property
Marital fault does not affect property division or spousal support calculations
§ 40-4-7
New Mexico's Joint Filing Option: Skip the Process Server
When both spouses agree on all terms — property, support, and any custody matters — they can file together as a joint petition. This approach eliminates service of process entirely and removes the 30-day waiting period. Both spouses sign the petition and file it together in the district court of either spouse's county.
Property Division in New Mexico: Community Property
New Mexico is one of only nine community property states in the country. All assets and debts acquired during the marriage by either spouse are presumed equally owned and divided 50/50 at divorce. Fault and marital misconduct do not affect how property is divided. Spouses who reach their own agreement can divide community property differently in a written Marital Settlement Agreement — courts generally enforce written agreements between informed parties.
New Mexico community property categories and division rules
Property Category
Definition
Subject to Division?
Community Property
Assets and debts acquired during the marriage by either spouse
Yes — equal 50/50 split
Separate Property
Assets owned before marriage; gifts and inheritances received during marriage (kept separate)
No — returned to the owner
Commingled Property
Separate property mixed with community funds (e.g., inheritance deposited into a joint account)
Community portion only — burden on owner to trace separate funds
Quasi-Community Property
Property acquired in another state that would have been community property if acquired in New Mexico
Yes — treated as community property in a New Mexico divorce
Community Debts
Debts incurred during the marriage (credit cards, loans, mortgages)
Yes — divided equally or by agreement
Key New Mexico community property rules:
Income earned by either spouse during the marriage — wages, bonuses, self-employment income — is community property
Retirement contributions made during the marriage (401(k), pension, IRA) are community property to the extent earned during marriage — typically divided via a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO)
The community property presumption is strong — a spouse claiming an asset is separate property bears the burden of tracing it with documentary evidence
Fault and marital misconduct do not affect property division — New Mexico courts do not penalize or reward either spouse based on conduct during the marriage
Spouses can agree in their MSA to divide property differently than the 50/50 default — courts generally enforce written agreements between parties who understood their rights
New Mexico's date of separation matters: Community property accumulation stops on the date of separation — not the date you file for divorce. If you and your spouse lived separately for an extended period before filing, income and assets each of you earned after that date may qualify as separate property. Document your separation date clearly — a dated text, email, or written notice can establish it as evidence. Because the date of separation can significantly affect the size of the marital estate, this is one of the highest-value things to get right early in the process.
Spouses can resolve all property issues through a written MSA at any point. Use our settlement agreement checklist and property division spreadsheet to inventory your marital estate. For complex assets — business interests, retirement plans, or real estate with appreciated equity — a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst can help you model division scenarios and understand the tax consequences before you sign.
Spousal Support in New Mexico
Spousal support — called "alimony" in everyday language — is not automatic in New Mexico. Courts have broad discretion to award temporary support while the case is pending and longer-term support after the final decree. There is no statewide formula that a judge must apply, though an unofficial settlement guideline used in Bernalillo County is widely referenced for negotiation purposes. Marital fault does not affect whether support is awarded or how much is paid. The length of the marriage is the single most important factor: support is rarely ordered in marriages under five years, more likely in marriages of 10–20 years, and the court must retain jurisdiction over the support issue in marriages of 20 years or more.
Types of spousal support in New Mexico
Support Type
When It Applies
NM Statute
Temporary / Pendente Lite
Ordered while the divorce case is pending in court; designed to maintain the financial status quo
§ 40-4-7(A)
Rehabilitative / Transitional
Time-limited support to help a lower-earning spouse gain education, job training, or self-sufficiency; most common in medium-length marriages
§ 40-4-7(B)
Indefinite / Long-Term
Ordered in long marriages (typically 20+ years) with significant income disparity; amount is modifiable if circumstances change
§ 40-4-7(F)
Lump Sum
A single payment or series of installments in lieu of periodic support; often used when parties want a clean break
§ 40-4-7(B)
Modifiable Support
Either party may seek modification upon a substantial and material change in circumstances (new job, health change, remarriage)
§ 40-4-7(G)
Factors New Mexico courts consider when determining spousal support:
The age and health of each spouse, and each party's existing means of support
Each party's current income and future earning capacity
Each party's good-faith efforts to maintain employment or become self-supporting
The reasonable needs of each spouse, including the standard of living established during the marriage
The duration of the marriage — the single most significant factor in determining both whether support is ordered and for how long
The maintenance of health insurance and the appropriateness of life insurance to secure support payments
Any other relevant factors the court deems just and equitable under the specific circumstances of the case
The 20-year rule — what it actually means: State law requires courts to retain jurisdiction over spousal support in marriages of 20 years or more, unless the final decree explicitly states that no support is awarded. This means there is no automatic end date for support in a long marriage — the court keeps the authority to modify or terminate payments as circumstances change over time. It does not guarantee that support will be ordered; if the lower-earning spouse has sufficient income or assets, a court may still decline to award it. In marriages under 20 years, courts have full discretion to set a duration based on the statutory factors.
The Bernalillo County settlement guideline: While no statewide formula exists, attorneys and judges in Bernalillo County frequently reference an unofficial guideline formula when negotiating settlement amounts: 30% of the payor's gross monthly income minus 50% of the recipient's gross monthly income. When child support is also being paid, the formula adjusts to 28% of the payor's income minus 58% of the recipient's income. These formulas are tools for settlement — not binding rules — and a judge at trial must consider all statutory factors regardless of what the formula suggests.
For a general estimate of support amounts, see our alimony calculator guide. For cases with significant income disparity or complex support claims, a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst can help you model scenarios before negotiating your MSA.
Child Custody and Support in New Mexico
New Mexico law presumes that joint custody is in the best interests of the child — meaning both parents share legal decision-making authority and significant parenting time. Neither parent has a gender-based preference under state law. Parents who agree on a parenting plan can structure time-sharing in almost any way that serves their child's needs; the court approves arrangements that are in the child's best interests. Child support is calculated using a statutory income-shares model based on both parents' gross incomes and the custody arrangement.
Custody types in New Mexico: decision-making responsibility vs. parenting time
Custody Type
Description
Key Notes
Decision-Making Responsibility (Legal Custody)
In New Mexico, "legal custody" is called decision-making responsibility — the authority to make major decisions about the child's education, health care, child care, religion, and extracurricular activities. State law presumes joint decision-making is in the child's best interests. Sole decision-making authority may be ordered when one parent has documented domestic violence, substance abuse, or long-term absence from the child's life.
Joint decision-making does not require equal physical time — it refers solely to authority over major life decisions.
Parenting Time (Physical Custody)
Parenting time — where the child lives day-to-day — can be structured as primary (child lives mainly with one parent), joint (substantial time with both), or any arrangement parents agree to. New Mexico law does not define a specific percentage that constitutes "joint" physical custody. Arrangements are evaluated on what best serves the child's stability, relationships, and day-to-day needs.
The parenting time percentage directly affects child support calculations — more time with the paying parent generally reduces the support amount.
Key factors New Mexico courts weigh in custody determinations:
The wishes of each parent regarding custody
The child's own wishes — courts must consider the preference of a child who is 14 years of age or older; younger children's preferences may also be considered based on maturity
The interaction and relationship of the child with each parent, siblings, and other significant individuals
The child's adjustment to home, school, and community
The mental and physical health of all individuals involved
Any history of domestic abuse by either parent against the child, the other parent, or any household member — the court must make specific findings that any proposed arrangement adequately protects all affected parties
Each parent's willingness to accept parenting responsibilities and to allow the other parent to provide care without interference
New Mexico's income-shares child support model: Child support is calculated using both parents' gross monthly incomes, the custody time-sharing arrangement, and additional factors including health insurance costs and work-related childcare expenses. The calculation produces a presumptive support amount. Courts must follow this guideline amount unless a specific exception applies — such as extraordinarily high combined income, or a parent voluntarily reducing income. Parents who agree to a different amount must demonstrate it serves the child's best interests and that both parties understand their rights. An interactive child support calculator is available through the New Mexico Courts at nmcourts.gov.
Mediation is the default path for custody disputes: When parents cannot agree on a parenting plan before filing, each submits a proposed plan. The judge is required to refer contested custody to mediation unless it is inappropriate — such as in cases involving domestic violence or child abuse. If mediation does not resolve the dispute, the judge reviews both proposed plans and either approves one, combines elements of both, or creates a revised arrangement. Each district court in New Mexico offers free or sliding-scale mediation services for custody cases.
A New Mexico divorce can cost as little as $137 in court fees for a straightforward uncontested case — or $10,000–$30,000+ per spouse in a fully litigated contested divorce. The single biggest cost driver is disagreement: every issue that must be decided by a judge rather than negotiated between spouses adds attorney hours, discovery, hearings, and delay. Because New Mexico allows joint filing with no waiting period in uncontested cases, couples who can reach a full agreement often complete the process faster and at lower cost than in most states.
New Mexico divorce cost by filing path
Divorce Path
Estimated Total Cost
Primary Cost Driver
Joint / Uncontested (DIY)
$137–$300
Court filing fee only; both parties agree on all terms
Hello Divorce (online guided)
$1,500–$5,000 + court fee
Plan level + optional expert hours; flat-rate pricing
Mediated Uncontested
$2,500–$7,000
Mediator hourly rate + MSA drafting + court fee
Attorney-Led Uncontested
$2,500–$7,000
Attorney flat fee or hourly; minimal court involvement
Fully Contested (Trial)
$10,000–$30,000+ per spouse
Attorney rates $200–$400/hr in most NM markets; discovery, hearings, trial
Additional New Mexico divorce costs to budget for:
Process server fees — typically $50–$150 for standard service; higher for rush or evasive respondents (individual filing path only; eliminated in joint filing)
QDRO drafting — $500–$1,500 per retirement plan; New Mexico state employees (PERA, ERB) require specialized Domestic Relations Orders reviewed by the plan administrator; see our QDRO guide
Parenting class fees — where required by local district, court-approved parenting courses typically cost $25–$75 per parent; verify with your county clerk before filing
Child custody evaluations — if ordered by the court, evaluator fees vary by case complexity; court-connected mediators are available free or on a sliding scale at most New Mexico district courts
Certified copies of the Final Decree — typically $1–$3 per page at the district court clerk's office; obtain at least 3–5 copies for name change, financial account updates, and beneficiary changes
New Mexico offers two primary paths depending on how much the spouses agree. Joint / uncontested filing is available to any couple who agrees on all terms — property, support, and any custody matters — and is the fastest, least expensive route to a final decree. Standard / contested filing is the default when spouses disagree on one or more issues and require court intervention to resolve disputes.
Uncontested vs. contested divorce comparison in New Mexico
Factor
Uncontested / Joint Filing
Contested (Individual Filing)
Agreement Required
Both spouses agree on all terms — property, support, custody
One spouse files; the other must be formally served
Service of Process
No process server required; filing serves both parties
30-day waiting period after service (waivable in cases without minor children)
Waiting Period
No mandatory waiting period when filing jointly
30-day waiting period after service (waivable in cases without minor children)
Typical Timeline
1–3 months from filing to final decree
6–18+ months; may require a trial
Estimated Cost
$137–$7,000 depending on complexity
$10,000–$30,000+ per spouse in fully litigated cases
Availability
Available for any marriage length or asset level
Required when temporary court orders are needed during the case
Court hearing — verify with your district: Whether a court appearance is required to finalize an uncontested divorce in New Mexico varies by judicial district. Some districts approve a settlement agreement entirely on paper; others require a brief hearing before a judge. ⚠️ Check with the clerk's office in your county before assuming no hearing is needed. If your case involves a dispute or if temporary orders are sought, a court appearance will almost certainly be required.
If you and your spouse are close to agreement but stuck on a specific issue, Hello Divorce mediation services can help bridge the gap at a fraction of litigation costs. Mediation is particularly effective for property division, spousal support, and parenting plan disputes.
Legal Separation vs. Divorce in New Mexico
New Mexico recognizes legal separation as a formal court status — the process is nearly identical to divorce in terms of forms, disclosures, and judgment, but at the end you remain legally married. One significant practical advantage: the six-month residency requirement applies to divorce, not legal separation. If you have recently moved to New Mexico and haven't yet met the six-month threshold, you can file for legal separation immediately and later convert the case to divorce once you qualify.
Legal separation vs. divorce in New Mexico: reasons to choose and key differences
Why Choose Legal Separation?
Key Differences from Divorce
Preserve health insurance coverage through a spouse's employer plan — divorce typically terminates this
You remain legally married — you cannot remarry
Reach the 10-year marriage threshold for Social Security benefits eligibility
No six-month state residency requirement — you can file immediately upon establishing any presence in New Mexico
Religious or personal objection to divorce while still needing court-ordered property and support arrangements
If your spouse contests the separation and wants a divorce instead, the court may convert the case
Residency requirements for divorce not yet met — legal separation can be filed immediately
A legal separation judgment can be converted to a divorce at either party's request — the original filing date is preserved
Residency shortcut — file for separation first: New Mexico's six-month residency requirement applies only to divorce. If you have recently arrived in New Mexico and cannot yet meet the residency threshold to file for divorce, you can file for legal separation immediately. Once you have satisfied the six-month residency requirement, either party can request that the court convert the separation to a final divorce — and the original filing date is preserved, which matters for the community property cutoff and the timeline of the case.
New Mexico uses standardized statewide forms issued by the New Mexico Supreme Court — all available free and bilingual (English/Spanish) at nmcourts.gov. Individual districts may require additional local cover sheets; check with your county clerk. The court's Guide & File online tool can help you identify and complete the correct forms for your specific situation.
New Mexico divorce forms: purpose and when required
Form
Purpose
When Required
4A-101 — Domestic Relations Information Sheet
Required cover sheet submitted with the petition; provides basic case information to the court
All cases — mandatory
4A-102 — Petition (Without Children)
Primary petition initiating the divorce when no minor children are involved; filed by the Petitioner or jointly by both spouses
Cases without minor children
4A-103 — Petition (With Children)
Primary petition when minor children are involved; includes provisions for custody, parenting time, and child support
Cases with minor children
4A-104 — Response to Petition
Used by the Respondent to answer the petition; must be filed within 30 days of service; failure to respond may result in a default judgment
Individual filing path — Respondent
4A-105 — Acceptance of Service
Allows the Respondent to waive formal service of process by signing voluntarily; eliminates the need for a process server
Individual filing path — when Respondent agrees to waive service
4A-201 — Temporary Domestic Order
Automatic temporary order issued at filing that restricts both parties from transferring property, canceling insurance, or removing children from the state
All cases — served with petition
4A-301 — Marital Settlement Agreement
The binding written contract dividing property, debts, and establishing support; signed by both parties and incorporated into the Final Decree
All uncontested cases — mandatory
4A-302 — Custody Plan and Order
Establishes legal and physical custody, parenting time schedules, and decision-making responsibilities
Cases with minor children
4A-303 — Child Support Obligation Worksheet
Calculates guideline child support using both parents' gross incomes, time-sharing percentages, and qualifying add-on expenses
Cases with minor children
4A-305 — Final Decree (Without Children)
Final court order signed by the judge that legally ends the marriage; submitted as part of the judgment package
Cases without minor children — mandatory
4A-306 — Final Decree (With Children)
Final court order for cases involving minor children; incorporates custody plan, child support, and all other agreed terms
Cases with minor children — mandatory
4-222 / 4-223 — Fee Waiver Application and Order
Requests a court filing fee waiver for qualifying low-income filers; court may grant without a hearing
In New Mexico, you can request a name restoration directly in your initial divorce petition — at no additional filing cost. The judge will include the name change in your Final Decree of Dissolution of Marriage. This allows you to restore a former surname or any pre-marriage name. Once you receive your certified Final Decree, update your records in this sequence.
Social Security Administration — Update your SSA record first using your certified Final Decree and photo ID. Visit your local SSA office, submit Form SS-5 by mail, or complete the process online at ssa.gov. You need an updated SSA card before the New Mexico MVD will update your driver's license.
New Mexico MVD (Driver's License) — Visit a Motor Vehicle Division office with your updated SSA card, certified Final Decree, and proof of New Mexico residency. If you need a Real ID-compliant license, bring additional documentation per MVD requirements.
U.S. Passport — Submit the appropriate DS form with your certified Final Decree. Use DS-5504 if your passport was issued less than one year ago (no fee); DS-82 if issued more than one year ago (fee required); or DS-11 for a first-time application or if your passport was issued more than 15 years ago.
Financial accounts, employer HR, and insurance — Contact each institution individually with a certified copy of your Final Decree. Order at least 3–5 certified copies from the district court clerk when you receive your Decree — fees are typically $1–$3 per page depending on your district.
Divorce cases in New Mexico are filed in the district court of the county where either spouse lives. The following are direct links to the family law and domestic relations resources for New Mexico's five most populous counties.
The timeline depends primarily on whether the case is contested. In uncontested divorces where both spouses agree on all terms, the process typically takes one to three months from filing to a signed Final Decree. When filing jointly, there is no mandatory waiting period — the process can move as quickly as both parties complete the required forms and the court has capacity to review the package. In contested cases where one or more issues must be decided by a judge, the process routinely takes six months to over a year, depending on the complexity of the disputes and local court schedules. A 30-day waiting period applies in individual-filing cases after the Respondent is served; this period can be waived by the Respondent in uncontested cases without minor children.
Is New Mexico a 50/50 divorce state?
Yes. New Mexico is a community property state, which means all assets and debts acquired during the marriage are presumed equally owned by both spouses and divided 50/50 at divorce. This is distinct from equitable distribution states, which divide property based on what is "fair" rather than equal. Separate property — assets owned before marriage or received as individual gifts and inheritances and kept separate — is not subject to division. Spouses who reach their own written agreement can divide community property differently than the 50/50 default. Marital fault does not affect property division in New Mexico under any circumstances. For complex asset situations, a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst can help you model division outcomes. See our full guide: Community Property in Divorce.
Does New Mexico require a reason to get divorced?
No. New Mexico is a no-fault divorce state. The most common — and simplest — ground is incompatibility: that the marriage relationship has broken down due to discord or conflict with no reasonable prospect of reconciliation. You do not need to prove wrongdoing, and you do not need your spouse's agreement or cooperation to obtain a divorce. Even if your spouse refuses to participate or objects entirely, the court can still grant the dissolution. New Mexico also recognizes fault-based grounds (cruel and inhuman treatment, adultery, and abandonment), but these are rarely used in practice because they complicate the case without providing significant advantages — fault does not affect property division or spousal support calculations.
What happens to the house in a New Mexico divorce?
If the home was purchased during the marriage using marital funds, it is community property and subject to equal division. Common resolutions include one spouse buying out the other's equity (typically at 50% of net equity after mortgage payoff and sale costs), selling the home and splitting proceeds equally, or a deferred sale arrangement — where one spouse, often the parent with primary custody, remains in the home until a future trigger event such as the children finishing school or one party refinancing. If the home was purchased before marriage or bought entirely with documented separate funds, the separate property portion may be traced and excluded from division. Use our home equity split calculator to estimate your options and read our guide on what to do with the marital home.
Do I need a lawyer to get divorced in New Mexico?
No. Many New Mexicans complete uncontested divorces without an attorney using official statewide forms available free at nmcourts.gov. The New Mexico Courts' Guide & File tool walks self-represented filers through the correct forms for their situation. Online services like Hello Divorce provide guided form preparation, a completed Marital Settlement Agreement, and access to attorneys by the hour when you need specific legal advice — without requiring a full retainer. Joint filing is particularly accessible for self-represented parties because it eliminates the service-of-process step entirely. If your case involves significant assets, disputed custody, business interests, or complex support issues, consulting an attorney at key decision points is strongly recommended. See our guide: How to Choose the Right Legal Help for Divorce.
How does spousal support work in New Mexico?
Spousal support is not automatic in New Mexico. Courts have broad discretion and weigh ten statutory factors — led by the length of the marriage, each party's earning capacity, and the ability to become self-supporting. Support is rarely awarded in marriages under five years. In marriages of 10–20 years, rehabilitative or transitional support for a defined period is most common. In marriages of 20 years or more, state law requires the court to retain jurisdiction over the support issue, meaning there is no automatic end date and payments are modifiable as circumstances change. There is no statewide formula, though the unofficial Bernalillo County settlement guideline (30% of the payor's gross income minus 50% of the recipient's gross income) is widely referenced in negotiation. Marital fault does not affect whether support is awarded or how much is paid.
What are New Mexico's financial disclosure requirements?
Both spouses must exchange financial information — covering income, expenses, assets, and debts — within 45 days of filing the divorce petition. This obligation applies regardless of whether the case is uncontested or contested. The exchange is between the parties; these disclosures are not filed with the court, though the court may require confirmation that the exchange occurred. Incomplete or inaccurate disclosures are among the most common reasons courts decline to approve final divorce agreements. Make sure your disclosures are thorough and up to date before signing any Marital Settlement Agreement.
Can I file for divorce in New Mexico if I just moved here?
Not immediately for a divorce — but there is a practical workaround. State law requires at least one spouse to have lived in New Mexico for six months with intent to remain before a divorce can be filed. However, there is no residency requirement for legal separation. If you have recently moved to New Mexico, you can file for legal separation right away, get court-ordered property, support, and custody arrangements in place, and then convert the case to a divorce once you satisfy the six-month residency requirement. The original filing date is preserved through conversion, which matters for the community property cutoff date. Military members continuously stationed in New Mexico for six months are deemed to satisfy the residency requirement. There is no separate county-level residency requirement — you file in the district court of the county where either spouse lives.
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