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New Mexico Foreclosure Law Summary

Quick Facts
- Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
- Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: No
- Primary Security Instruments: Mortgage
- Timeline: Typically 120 days
- Right of Redemption: Yes
- Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
In New Mexico, lenders may foreclose on a mortgage in
default by using the judicial foreclosure process.
Judicial Foreclosure
Generally, in judicial foreclosure, a court decrees the
amount of the borrowers debt and gives him or her a short
time to pay. If the borrower fails to pay within that
time, the court then issues a notice of sale.
The notice of sale must contain a legal description of
the property and state the place, the time and the date,
which must be at least thirty (30) days after the notice
of sale is issued, on which the foreclosure sale is to
be held. The property will then be sold to the highest
bidder on the date specified in the notice.
In most cases, the borrower has up to nine (9) months
to redeem the property by paying the amount of the highest
bid at the foreclosure sale, plus costs and interest.
Non-judicial foreclosure is only available for commercial
and business properties valued at over $500,000.
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