New Mexico flood insurance cost
West region · inland · FEMA NFIP 2026
The average NFIP flood-insurance premium in New Mexico is about $1,157 per year ($96/mo) — that's +18.5% versus the US average of $976, so it is above the national average premium. New Mexico ranks #15 of 51 states (and DC) by premium. The NFIP has handled 1,927 claims here since 1978 (rank #46). Mapped floodplains are dominated by FEMA zones AO, A, AE, X. Your real cost is set per property under Risk Rating 2.0 — use this as a benchmark, not a quote.
Source: FEMA NFIP — Policy Information by State (compiled by NerdWallet, May 2026). Data as of June 2026.
New Mexico flood-insurance figures
| Indicator | New Mexico |
|---|---|
| Average annual NFIP premium (2026) | $1,157 ($96/mo) |
| Versus the national average | +18.5% (US avg $976) |
| Premium rank (1 = most expensive of 51) | #15 |
| Total NFIP claims filed (since 1978) | 1,927 |
| Claims rank (1 = most of 51) | #46 |
| Coastal exposure | Inland (riverine) |
| Dominant FEMA flood zones | AO, A, AE, X |
Source: FEMA NFIP — Policy Information by State (compiled by NerdWallet, May 2026); OpenFEMA — FIMA NFIP Redacted Claims v2. Data as of June 2026.
Sources: FEMA NFIP premium by state · OpenFEMA NFIP claims. Estimate — verify with FEMA or a licensed agent.
What the cost means for New Mexico
New Mexico's average premium of $1,157 is above the national average premium. Most of the difference between states comes down to flood risk: river overflow, flash floods and heavy rainfall are the main hazards inland. Since FEMA fully adopted Risk Rating 2.0 in 2023, premiums are priced on each individual property rather than a flat zone rate — so two homes in the same town can pay very different amounts. The 1,927 NFIP claims paid in New Mexico since 1978 put it #46 of 51 for total claim activity.
Flood zones that matter in New Mexico
New Mexico's mapped floodplains are dominated by these FEMA flood zones. Zones beginning with A or V are high-risk Special Flood Hazard Areas where insurance is usually mandatory with a federally backed mortgage:
- Zone AO — High-risk shallow sheet-flow flooding on sloping terrain, usually 1-3 feet deep; depths (not BFEs) are shown. (high-risk, insurance usually mandatory)
- Zone A — High-risk area subject to the 1%-annual-chance flood, with no detailed analysis, so no Base Flood Elevations (BFEs) are shown. (high-risk, insurance usually mandatory)
- Zone AE — The most common high-risk zone: the base floodplain where Base Flood Elevations (BFEs) are determined and shown on the map. (high-risk, insurance usually mandatory)
- Zone X (unshaded) — Minimal-risk area outside the 0.2%-annual-chance (500-year) floodplain; insurance optional and lowest-cost. (not high-risk, insurance optional)
Estimate your premium
Use the flood-insurance calculator to get a rough annual cost for New Mexico from your coverage amount and flood zone. For example, $250,000 of building coverage in a Zone AO area of New Mexico estimates near $1,157 a year before property-specific Risk Rating 2.0 factors. It is a benchmark, not a quote.
States with similar flood-insurance costs
The five states closest to New Mexico on average NFIP premium:
| State | Avg premium | vs US | NFIP claims (since 1978) |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Mexico (this state) | $1,157 | +18.5% | 1,927 |
| Minnesota | $1,138 | +16.6% | 12,470 |
| Mississippi | $1,179 | +20.8% | 64,278 |
| South Dakota | $1,197 | +22.6% | 4,017 |
| New Hampshire | $1,201 | +23.1% | 4,422 |
| Ohio | $1,109 | +13.6% | 28,179 |
Frequently asked questions
How much does flood insurance cost in New Mexico?
The average NFIP flood-insurance premium in New Mexico is about $1,157 per year ($96/mo), which is +18.5% versus the US average of $976 — above the national average premium. That ranks New Mexico #15 of 51 states and DC by premium. Your own cost depends on your property under Risk Rating 2.0, so treat this as a benchmark, not a quote.
Do I need flood insurance in New Mexico?
If your property is in a high-risk Special Flood Hazard Area (FEMA zones beginning with A or V) and you have a federally backed mortgage, flood insurance is mandatory. New Mexico's mapped floodplains are dominated by zones AO, A, AE, X. Even outside high-risk zones it is optional but recommended, because roughly a quarter to 40% of NFIP claims come from lower-risk areas.
How many flood insurance claims has New Mexico had?
The NFIP has paid out on 1,927 flood-insurance claims in New Mexico since the program's records began in 1978 (OpenFEMA NFIP claims dataset), ranking it #46 of 51. Riverine and heavy-rainfall flooding drives most losses here.
Why is flood insurance more expensive in New Mexico?
Under FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0, premiums reflect each property's true flood risk — distance to water, flood type, foundation, elevation and rebuild cost. New Mexico's average of $1,157 is above the national average premium, shaped by its inland river and rainfall flooding and the mix of flood zones (AO, A, AE, X). Compare with similar states below.
Keep exploring
Sources & accuracy
Average premium: FEMA NFIP Policy Information by State (2026). Claims: OpenFEMA NFIP claims dataset (since 1978). Flood zones: FEMA. All public domain. The state average is a benchmark — real NFIP pricing is set per property under Risk Rating 2.0. This is general information, not insurance or financial advice; verify with FEMA, FloodSmart.gov or a licensed agent. See our methodology and disclaimer.
Last updated: 2026-06-20