New Mexico Take-Home Pay Calculator 2026
See exactly how much of your New Mexico paycheck you keep after all taxes.
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New Mexico Take-Home Pay Overview
New Mexico has a six-bracket progressive income tax with rates ranging from 1.5% to 5.9%, with most middle-income earners falling in the 4.7% bracket ($33,500–$66,500 of taxable income) or the 4.9% bracket ($66,500–$210,000). New Mexico's standard deduction mirrors the federal amount ($16,100 for single filers), which shelters a meaningful portion of income before the rates apply. Significant oil and gas revenue supplements the state's budget, helping fund services without relying entirely on income taxes. No New Mexico city charges a local income tax on wages.
Here's what a single New Mexico filer keeps in 2026. On a $50,000 salary, take-home is approximately $40,981 per year ($3,415/month) after federal, FICA, and state taxes. At $80,000, take-home is approximately $61,984 ($5,165/month), with the state taking $2,594. At $100,000, you keep about $75,079 ($6,257/month), with $3,569 going to New Mexico. At $150,000, take-home is approximately $107,163 ($8,930/month), with the state taking $6,019. New Mexico's graduated brackets with generous standard deduction keep the effective rate relatively low for middle-income earners — lower than the 4.9% headline rate suggests.
Compared to neighboring Texas (no income tax), a New Mexico worker at $80,000 takes home approximately $2,594 less per year. Against Arizona (flat 2.5%), New Mexico workers at $80,000 pay about $650 more in state income tax. Against Colorado (flat 4.4%), New Mexico is actually slightly better at $80,000 — New Mexico's progressive lower brackets reduce the effective rate below Colorado's flat 4.4%. Against Utah (flat 4.55%), New Mexico is similarly competitive.
Watch out: New Mexico has a gross receipts tax (GRT) that functions like a sales tax but applies to the seller of goods and services — and is typically passed on to consumers. The combined state and local GRT rates in cities like Albuquerque and Santa Fe can reach 8–9%. This is a higher consumption tax burden than you might expect from a state with a moderate income tax. Factor in grocery, dining, and service costs when comparing New Mexico's overall tax picture to neighboring states, as the GRT affects day-to-day spending in ways that pure income tax comparisons miss.