New Mexico Dissolution With Children — Custody and Child Support (2026)
New Mexico courts apply the "best interests of the child" standard for all custody and parenting time decisions. A Parenting Plan is required when minor children are involved.
New Mexico Custody Framework
Legal Custody
- Joint legal custody: Both parents share major decisions about education, healthcare, religion — strongly favored in New Mexico
- Sole legal custody: Ordered when the other parent is unfit, unavailable, or cooperation is impossible
Physical Custody
- Primary residence: Child primarily lives with one parent; the other has regular parenting time
- Shared physical custody: Child spends approximately equal time with each parent; may affect child support calculation
Best Interests of the Child — New Mexico Factors (NMSA § 40-4-9)
New Mexico courts consider:
- Each parent's wishes
- The child's wishes (if child is of sufficient age)
- The child's interaction and relationship with each parent and siblings
- The child's adjustment to home, school, and community
- Mental and physical health of all parties
- Each party's ability to provide the child with love, affection, guidance, and continuing education
- Willingness of each parent to accept the responsibilities of custody
- Whether there has been domestic violence (NMSA § 40-4-9.1 — significant weight given)
- The geographic distance between the parties' homes
- Each parent's ability to maintain the other parent's relationship with the child
Domestic violence: New Mexico gives significant weight to domestic violence evidence. If domestic violence is established, there is a presumption against the abusive parent receiving joint custody.
Parenting Plan — Required
New Mexico courts require a detailed Parenting Plan in all dissolutions involving minor children. The plan must address:
- Legal custody designation (joint or sole)
- Primary residential parent
- Regular parenting schedule (weeks, alternating weekends, school year vs. summer)
- Holiday and vacation schedule (Thanksgiving, Christmas, spring break, birthday, Mother's/Father's Day)
- Healthcare decisions and information sharing
- Educational and school activity communication
- Transportation and exchange logistics
- Procedure for schedule changes
- Relocation provisions (advance notice; court approval for significant moves)
- Dispute resolution method (mediation before filing a motion)
New Mexico Child Support — Income Shares Model
New Mexico uses the income shares model — both parents' incomes contribute to the support obligation.
Child Support Worksheet:
- Determine gross monthly income for each parent (wages, salary, self-employment, rental income, etc.)
- Apply standard deductions (taxes, mandatory retirement contributions, other court-ordered support)
- Add both parents' net incomes for the combined adjusted gross income
- Use the New Mexico Child Support Schedule to find the base support amount (by combined income and number of children)
- Allocate between parents proportionally based on their share of combined income
- Add adjustments for: child's health insurance premium (NCP's share), work-related childcare costs, extraordinary medical expenses, parenting time credit (if NCP has substantial time)
Duration: Child support ends when the child turns 18 or graduates from high school, whichever is later (not to exceed age 19).
Forms: nmcourts.gov/self-help-center
Last reviewed: March 2026 | NMSA § 40-4-9 best interests | Joint legal custody strongly favored | Parenting Plan required | Income shares child support | NM Child Support Schedule | Support ends at 18/HS graduation | Domestic violence — significant weight | nmcourts.gov/self-help-center
SoLongSoulmate.com Editorial Team
Researched using official state court websites and verified legal aid resources. Filing fees and procedures verified June 2026. General legal information only — not legal advice.
Last reviewed: March 2026 · Verify current fees and forms with your local court before filing.