New Mexico: No Wholesaling-Specific Law
State: New Mexico | Status: No wholesaling-specific statute as of July 7, 2026 | Bottom line: Wholesaling works here the way it always has. Contract the deal, assign it, collect at closing. Just never drift into doing agent work without a license.
What This Means
No New Mexico law singles out wholesalers. You will not find a mandated disclosure, a registration requirement, a seller cooling-off period, or an assignment ban, because none exist. Under ordinary contract law your purchase agreement is assignable unless the agreement itself says it is not.
Run the play you know: purchase contract with an assignment clause, buyer lined up, assignment executed, fee paid at the closing table.
What does exist, here and in all 50 states, is a licensing statute. Selling or marketing real estate on behalf of others without a license is illegal, and that is the trap wholesalers fall into. Keep yourself out of it:
- Your marketing should offer your position in a contract, because that is what you actually own. Presenting the property itself as yours to sell, with no ownership and no license, is what draws complaints.
- Stay a principal. Buy, or assign contracts you signed. Do not play matchmaker on other people's deals for a fee.
- If you would rather market houses openly, a license makes that legal and ends the debate.
Watch Out For
- Unlicensed brokerage is the one exposure in New Mexico today. Keep contract paperwork tight so you can always show a genuine equitable interest in any deal you advertised.
- Our three source reports contain no New Mexico wholesaling bill at all, not even a failed one. But roughly half the states are now regulating or debating wholesaling, so treat quiet as temporary.
- Check back here. This page gets updated when anything surfaces in Santa Fe.
This is analysis, not legal advice. Confirm anything you rely on with a New Mexico real estate attorney.