Crime · New Mexico
Crime in New Mexico
Crime (FBI UCR) data for ZIP codes in New Mexico. Pick a ZIP below to dive into the crime summary.
Last verified 2026-06-10 · methodology
What lands here
Pages show per-100k rates (never raw counts) for major offense categories, the reporting agency, and whether reporting was complete for the year.
Source & refresh
FBI UCR. Refreshed weekly rolling uploads. Primary source →
New Mexico top concern
Radon, wildfire, water-supply scarcity
New Mexico has Zone 1 radon coverage statewide. Wildfire risk in northern + central forests; the 2022 Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon Fire was the largest in NM history. Water-supply scarcity drives compliance pressure on small rural EPA SDWIS systems.
See New Mexico state page for the full state-level rollup across all 12 dimensions.
Read more on crime
Editorial deep-dives explaining the source data, its limits, and how to read it.
FBI UCR and NIBRS — what crime statistics actually show (and don't)
The FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) program and its successor NIBRS aggregate crime data from local agencies. Plain-English guide to what gets reported, what doesn't, and how to read the numbers.
Reading FBI UCR national crime trends — what 2020–2025 actually shows
Plain-English guide to recent US crime data: the 2020 spike, the 2021–2024 normalization, and how the UCR-to-NIBRS transition complicates year-over-year reads.
Data staleness — when to re-check zipradar before making a decision
Federal data refreshes on different cadences. Here's when zipradar's snapshot is fresh enough for your decision and when you need to verify with the primary source.
Homeowners insurance by peril — what's covered, excluded, and surprise gaps in 2026
Standard HO-3 policies cover fire, theft, and most weather — but exclude flood, earthquake, sinkhole, and back-of-policy surprises. Plain-English guide to peril-by-peril coverage.