No Contractor

Public permit-pulling record, New Mexico. Last permit filed 2017-10-19.

40 Permits filed
1 City worked in
2016 First permit on record

Permits filed by year

Volume trend in New Mexico.

28 2016 12 2017

Why this page exists

Most contractor-finder sites check state license status but don't verify that the contractor actually pulls permits when required. A licensed contractor who skips permits leaves the homeowner holding the bag, code violations, insurance complications, and problems at resale.

This page shows No Contractor's public permit-pulling record in New Mexico. It's sourced from official city open-data feeds, not self-reported. If you're interviewing contractors, ask the ones you're considering to explain any gaps or closed permits you see here.

Cities worked in (New Mexico)

Permit counts per city for No Contractor.

Albuquerque 40 permits

Most common project types

Based on permit_type codes in the underlying city data.

Residential 39
Commercial 1

Recent permits

The 20 most recent permits filed by No Contractor across all New Mexico cities.

Date City Type Status Value
2017-10-19 Albuquerque Residential $42,401
2017-06-20 Albuquerque Residential $400
2017-04-25 Albuquerque Residential $22,394
2017-04-04 Albuquerque Residential $45,000
2017-03-22 Albuquerque Residential $36,822
2017-03-22 Albuquerque Residential $1,750
2017-03-10 Albuquerque Residential $20,000
2017-03-02 Albuquerque Residential $4,665
2017-02-16 Albuquerque Residential $3,800
2017-02-02 Albuquerque Residential $28,380
2017-01-25 Albuquerque Residential $2,250
2017-01-11 Albuquerque Residential $7,000
2016-12-27 Albuquerque Residential $6,250
2016-12-15 Albuquerque Residential $10,000
2016-12-13 Albuquerque Residential $11,250
2016-12-08 Albuquerque Residential $69,840
2016-12-07 Albuquerque Residential $75,052
2016-12-05 Albuquerque Residential $10,224
2016-11-22 Albuquerque Residential $158,284
2016-11-14 Albuquerque Residential $100,000

How to vet this contractor further

  • Check their state license with your state's licensing board. This page shows permit behavior, not license status.
  • Ask for 3 recent references from the cities above. Match them against the permit addresses here.
  • Look for gaps. Are there years with many permits, then nothing? Contractors sometimes let licenses lapse or change business names.
  • Verify active bonding and workers' comp insurance. Ask for certificates directly from the insurer, not a copy from the contractor.

Planning a project in New Mexico?

Check whether your project needs a permit before you get contractor bids, so you can compare apples to apples.

Check permit requirements →
Data source: Public permit records from the cities above, pulled via their official open-data APIs. We report what the city shows; we do not verify license status, insurance, or workmanship. This is not an endorsement. Always do your own due diligence.