What an LLC costs in New Mexico
New Mexico costs $50 to form and requires no annual report at all, making it one of the cheapest and lowest-maintenance states.
Every LLC has two kinds of cost: a one-time state filing fee to form it, and recurring costs to keep it in good standing — the annual or biennial report, any franchise/privilege tax, and a registered agent. The calculator above adds these up for your first year and over five years so you can compare New Mexico honestly against other states.
How this is calculated
- Filing fee — the standard online Articles of Organization fee, charged once.
- Report fee — New Mexico's annual or biennial report; biennial fees are shown as a per-year average.
- Franchise / privilege tax — any flat state tax an LLC owes each year regardless of income.
- Publication — a one-time newspaper-publication cost, which only New York, Arizona, and Nebraska require.
- Registered agent — $0 if you act as your own, or a yearly fee for a commercial service.
What it doesn't include: income-based taxes (e.g. gross-receipts or margin taxes that only apply above high revenue thresholds), business licenses specific to your industry, or professional fees. It's a clean baseline of the mandatory state costs.
Data as of July 2026. New Mexico filing and report fees are from the state Secretary of State, cross-checked against LLC-cost datasets. Fees change — confirm on the state's own site before filing.
LLC cost in other states
New Mexico LLC cost FAQ
How much does it cost to start an LLC in New Mexico?
It costs $50 to form a New Mexico LLC (the standard online filing). With first-year upkeep and acting as your own registered agent, budget roughly $50 for year one.
What are the annual LLC fees in New Mexico?
New Mexico requires no annual report fee. Being your own registered agent keeps the agent cost at $0; a commercial agent adds about $125/yr.
Can I be my own registered agent in New Mexico?
Yes, if you have a physical street address in New Mexico (not a PO box) and are available during business hours to receive legal mail. That makes the registered-agent cost $0. Otherwise a commercial service runs about $100-$300 per year.
This calculator is an educational estimate, not legal or tax advice. State fees change frequently — verify with the New Mexico Secretary of State before filing. Income-based and industry-specific costs are not included. Data as of July 2026.