FreedomRankings

Ranked #30 of 50 states

Abolished civil asset forfeitureRecreational marijuana legalStrong 4th Amendment

Across the hybrid multi-source index, New Mexico is roughly average in overall freedom, ranking #30 of 50 states with a score of 56.3/100. Its strongest areas are 4th amendment, drug policy, property rights, while it scores lowest in 2nd amendment, education choice, economic freedom.

best
9.5
average
5.6
worst
0.0
56.3
Grade C
0255075100
FDCBA
New Mexico’s overall score on the national 0–100 scale.
Strongest categories
4th Amendment9.5
Drug Policy9.5
Property Rights9.5
Weakest categories
Economic Freedom0.0
Education Choice1.5
2nd Amendment3.3

Score by category

How New Mexico performs in each freedom category, ranked best to worst.

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Category breakdown

Each score is drawn from the publisher listed on the tile. Hover the source chip for edition and methodology detail.

1st Amendment

6.5B-
Press shield lawsAnti-SLAPP protectionsPublic forum protectionsCampus speech policies+2 more

2nd Amendment

3.3F

Guns & Ammo 2023 — rank 34/50

Constitutional/permitless carryConcealed carry shall-issue vs may-issueAssault weapon restrictionsMagazine capacity limits+3 more

4th Amendment

9.5A+

IJ Policing for Profit 2025 — forfeiture grade A

Civil asset forfeiture protectionsWarrant requirements for digital dataSurveillance camera/drone restrictionsLicense plate reader policies+2 more

Economic Freedom

0.0F

Fraser EFNA 2024 (Overall subn score 4.05 for 2023) — rank 50/50

State income tax ratesSales tax ratesProperty tax burdenBusiness tax climate+3 more

Criminal Justice

6.9B-

Vera People in Prison 2024 — rank 16/50 (266/100k)

Incarceration rate per capitaPolice accountability measuresBail reformMandatory minimum sentencing+3 more

Drug Policy

9.5A+

Cannabis status 2025 — Fully Legal (recreational use legal, retail sales operating)

Recreational marijuana legalityMedical marijuana programDecriminalization of possessionDrug court availability+2 more

Property Rights

9.5A+

IJ Eminent Domain 2025 — post-Kelo protections A

Eminent domain protectionsZoning flexibilityRent control restrictionsBuilding code burden+2 more

Religious Liberty

5.5C
State RFRA (Religious Freedom Restoration Act)Conscience protections for professionalsReligious organization exemptionsReligious land use protections+2 more

Education Choice

1.5F

EdChoice ABCs 2025 — no private-choice program, no programs

School voucher programsEducation savings accounts (ESAs)Charter school availabilityHomeschool regulation level+2 more

Regulatory Burden

4.1D

Mercatus RegData 2024 — rank 30/48 (138,715 restrictions)

Occupational licensing requirementsBusiness licensing burdenRegulatory code volumePermit processing times+2 more

Provenance

Sources & methodology

Full methodology →
  • 1st Amendment

    FreedomRankings Editorial (no strong annual state-level source exists for 1st Amendment speech protections)

    6.5
  • 2nd Amendment

    Guns & Ammo "Best States for Gun Owners"

    3.3
  • 4th Amendment

    Institute for Justice -- "Policing for Profit" (asset forfeiture grades)

    9.5
  • Economic Freedom

    Fraser Institute -- Economic Freedom of North America (EFNA)

    0.0
  • Criminal Justice

    Vera Institute -- "People in Prison" (annual incarceration data)

    6.9
  • Drug Policy

    Per-state cannabis legality status (composite: NORML state pages, DISA legality map, NCSL medical cannabis tracker)

    9.5
  • Property Rights

    Institute for Justice -- Eminent Domain / Castle Coalition

    9.5
  • Religious Liberty

    FreedomRankings Editorial (no strong annual state-level source exists for religious liberty rankings)

    5.5
  • Education Choice

    EdChoice -- "ABCs of School Choice"

    1.5
  • Regulatory Burden

    Mercatus Center -- RegData state regulatory restrictions

    4.1

Frequently Asked

New Mexico Freedom — Common Questions

Answers are generated from New Mexico's actual category scores and rank. Toggle the source to recompute against a different dataset.

How does New Mexico rank among US states for freedom?

New Mexico ranks #30 of 50 US states with a freedom score of 56.3/100. The score is a weighted average of 10 categories — constitutional rights, economic freedom, criminal justice, drug policy, education choice, and more — drawn from the FreedomRankings Hybrid multi-source index (Fraser Institute, EdChoice, Institute for Justice, Vera Institute, NORML, Mercatus RegData, Guns & Ammo).

What are New Mexico's strongest freedoms?

New Mexico scores highest in 4th Amendment (9.5/10), Drug Policy (9.5/10), and Property Rights (9.5/10). These are the categories where New Mexico is most protective of individual liberty relative to other US states.

What are New Mexico's biggest freedom restrictions?

New Mexico scores lowest in Economic Freedom (0/10), Education Choice (1.5/10), and 2nd Amendment (3.3/10). These are the categories where New Mexico is most restrictive relative to other US states.

Is New Mexico a gun-friendly state?

New Mexico scores 3.3/10 on Second Amendment / gun rights, which places it significantly restrictive on firearms. This score reflects carry laws, permit requirements, magazine and assault-weapon restrictions, red flag laws, and castle doctrine / stand-your-ground protections.

How does New Mexico score on economic freedom and taxes?

New Mexico scores 0/10 on economic freedom, placing it among the most restrictive states for economic freedom. The score reflects state income-tax rates, sales and property taxes, business tax climate, right-to-work status, and the overall regulatory burden on economic activity.

What is New Mexico's drug policy score?

New Mexico scores 9.5/10 on drug policy, which makes it among the most permissive drug-policy regimes in the country. The score incorporates recreational and medical marijuana legality, decriminalization of possession, harm-reduction programs, and sentencing for drug offenses.

How does New Mexico rank for school choice and education freedom?

New Mexico scores 1.5/10 on education choice, placing it among the most restrictive states for education freedom. The score reflects voucher programs, education savings accounts, charter-school access, homeschool regulations, and tax-credit scholarships.

How is New Mexico's freedom score calculated?

Each of New Mexico's 10 category scores (0–10) is a weighted average, then multiplied by 10 to produce the overall 0–100 freedom score. Categories are weighted equally by default, but visitors can adjust the weights on the rankings page to produce a personalised ranking. The default source is the FreedomRankings Hybrid multi-source index; the Cato Institute 2023 edition and an editorial assessment are also available as toggles. See the methodology page for per-category source attribution.

Elected Officials

Click any official to view their full profile, donors, and financial info.

Governor

MGD

Michelle Lujan Grisham

Governor(Democrat)

4/4 from public record

Approval: 40%(est.)

A+

100%