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New Mexico Vehicle Title Guide

New Mexico Vehicle Title — Transfer, Brands & Check First

Everything you need to title a vehicle in New Mexico: how to transfer ownership through the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division, the title brands New Mexicouses, and how to get a duplicate, lien release, or bonded title. Before you buy, run the 17-character VIN — a clean, lien-free title is what makes the transfer go through. It's free.

Check a New Mexico Title by VIN

Confirm the title is clean and lien-free — cars, trucks, SUVs, motorcycles

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NM
New Mexico title authority
NMVTIS
title verification
< 5 sec
instant VIN check
Free
lookup, no signup
1.9M
vehicles titled

New Mexico Title Data at a Glance

New Mexico titled vehicles
1.9M
New Mexico population
2.1M
New Mexico title brands
4
title VIN check
Free

How to Transfer a Title in New Mexico

Titling in New Mexico is handled by the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division. The exact steps depend on whether the car is new, used, or arriving from another state, but the core process is the same — here is how it works.

Step 1

Get the title signed over

For a used car, the seller signs the existing New Mexico title over to you in the assignment section, with the sale date, price, and the exact odometer reading. For a brand-new car, the dealer provides the manufacturer's certificate of origin (MCO) instead.

Step 2

Complete the application & verification

Submit a title application to the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division with proof of identity, a bill of sale, and an odometer disclosure. Depending on the vehicle, New Mexico may require a VIN verification and a check against the federal NMVTIS database before issuing the title.

Step 3

Receive your new title

Once fees are paid and the paperwork clears, the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division issues a new New Mexico title in your name. Any existing brand on the VIN — salvage, flood, rebuilt — carries forward and is printed on the new title.

Title Brands Used in New Mexico

A title brand is a permanent designation the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Divisionadds to a vehicle's title to warn future buyers. New Mexico records these brands — and because each is tied to the VIN in NMVTIS, it follows the car nationwide:

Salvage
Rebuilt
Flood
Non-Repairable

New Mexico title authority

Vehicle titles in New Mexico are issued by the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division. About 1.9M vehicles are titled across the state, and every title transfer is checked against the federal NMVTIS database — so a salvage or flood brand applied anywhere in the country shows up when you title the car.

New Mexico Title Services

The New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division handles every kind of title transaction. The exact forms and fees vary, so confirm with the agency — but these are the services New Mexico drivers use most:

Title transfer

Move ownership into your name after buying or being gifted a vehicle in New Mexico.

Duplicate / replacement title

Apply for a replacement if the New Mexico title is lost, stolen, or damaged.

Lien release / title with a loan

Get a clear title once a loan is paid off, or note a new lienholder on the title.

Out-of-state title transfer

Convert a title from another state into a New Mexico title when you move or buy across state lines.

Branded & rebuilt titles

Re-title a repaired salvage vehicle as rebuilt after it passes the New Mexico inspection.

Bonded title

Establish ownership with a surety bond when the New Mexico title is missing and can't be obtained from the seller.

Why Check the VIN Before You Take Title in New Mexico

The paper title only shows what the current state put on it. A free VIN check shows the full national history before you sign anything.

Title washing hides brands. Moving a car between states can strip a brand off the paper title — but the salvage record stays tied to the VIN in NMVTIS and reappears when New Mexico titles it.

An open lien blocks a clean title. If a previous owner's loan was never paid off, the title can't pass to you cleanly. A lien check surfaces it first.

Odometer fraud is a title issue. The mileage you record on the New Mexico title transfer is a legal disclosure — an odometer rollback means the figure on the paperwork is wrong and the car is worth less.

Check before you sign

Enter the 17-character VIN to confirm the title is clean, lien-free, and the mileage checks out — everything New Mexico needs to transfer the title without a hitch.

Check a New Mexico Title Before You Buy

Confirm the title is clean and lien-free so the transfer goes through the first time. Free, in seconds.

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Vehicle Titles in Other States

Titling is run state by state, with different agencies, brands, and forms. Compare New Mexico with these guides, or run any VIN nationwide.

Always check the VIN before you buy

Our free report reveals accidents, title brands, odometer rollback, theft records, and open recalls in seconds.

Accidents & damageSalvage / flood titleTheft & recalls

New Mexico Vehicle Title FAQ

The questions New Mexico drivers ask most about transferring, replacing, and clearing a vehicle title.

How do I transfer a car title in New Mexico?+

To transfer a title in New Mexico, the seller signs the existing title over to you in the assignment section — including the sale price, date, and odometer reading — then you submit a title application, bill of sale, proof of ID, and payment to the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division. New Mexico may require a VIN verification and an NMVTIS check before issuing the new title. Run the VIN through a free history check first to confirm the title is clean and lien-free before money changes hands.

What title brands does New Mexico use?+

New Mexico brands titles to warn future buyers about a vehicle's history. The brands recorded in New Mexico include Salvage, Rebuilt, Flood, Non-Repairable. Because a title brand is tied to the VIN in the federal NMVTIS database, it follows the vehicle nationwide even if the paper title is later "washed" by moving the car to another state — which is exactly why a VIN check catches what a clean-looking title hides.

How do I get a duplicate or replacement title in New Mexico?+

If your New Mexico title is lost, stolen, or damaged, you apply for a duplicate through the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division with proof of identity and the vehicle details, and pay a replacement fee. If there is still a lien on record, the lienholder may need to request it. Confirm the VIN on any paperwork matches the vehicle before you file.

Can I get a bonded title in New Mexico?+

Many states, including procedures recognized in New Mexico, allow a bonded (surety-bond) title when you own a vehicle but can't get a properly assigned title from the previous owner. You purchase a surety bond, usually based on the vehicle's value, and the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division issues a bonded title that converts to a clean title after a set period with no ownership claims. Check the VIN history first so you aren't bonding a vehicle with a hidden salvage or theft record.

What does a clean title mean in New Mexico?+

A clean title means the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division has no brand on record for that VIN — no salvage, flood, junk, rebuilt, or lemon designation. It does not guarantee the car has never been in an accident; it only means no event crossed the threshold that triggers a brand. A free VIN check goes further than the paper title, surfacing reported accidents, odometer issues, and out-of-state brands that title washing tries to erase.

Does New Mexico have any specific titling rules?+

New Mexico requires VIN inspection at a port of entry for vehicles imported from Mexico.

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Taking Title to a Car in New Mexico? Check the VIN First.

Enter a 17-character VIN to confirm a clean, lien-free title before you sign the New Mexicotransfer — and avoid inheriting someone else's problem.

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