Electrical Work Permit Requirements in Santa Fe County, NM

Santa Fe County Building and Development Services (Growth Management Department) issues building permits for unincorporated Santa Fe County including Glorieta, Lamy, Tesuque, Agua Fria, Santa Cruz, and other rural areas outside the City of Santa Fe and City of Espanola. Zoning framework: Santa Fe County Sustainable Land Development Code (SLDC). Codes in force: 2021 New Mexico Residential Code (NMRC, NMAC 14.7.3, effective December 14, 2023) based on 2021 IRC, plus 2021 NM Commercial Code and the NM Earthen Building Materials Code (adobe construction). Northern NM high-elevation design criteria: Climate Zone 5B, 20-40 psf ground snow on valley floors (60+ psf in Glorieta Pass / mountain areas), Seismic Design Category B, WUI wildfire-prone interior requiring defensible space consideration. NM quirk: electrical, plumbing, and mechanical/HVAC permits are issued by the NM Construction Industries Division (CID) of the Regulation and Licensing Department, NOT by the county. Contractor licensing (GB98 General Building, EE98 Electrical, MM98 Mechanical) runs through CID. Septic / onsite wastewater via NMED Liquid Waste, Santa Fe District 2 at (505) 476-9108. Water rights and well permits via NM Office of the State Engineer. Utility: PNM (Public Service Company of New Mexico) for electric interconnect. Owner-builder permits allowed for primary residence with CID affidavit; resale restrictions apply for 1-2 years. Historic preservation overlays via NM State Historic Preservation Office may apply, particularly in the Glorieta Pass Civil War heritage area.

By Joey, Founder · Last verified April 22, 2026 · How we research →

Population: 154,000 Code: 2021 Verified: 2026-04-22 3 local rules

When you don’t need a Electrical permit in Santa Fe County

Exempt·Rule 1

Like-for-like replacement of switches, outlets, or light fixtures generally does not require an electrical permit per 2021 NMRC R105.2. Any new circuit, panel work, or service upgrade does require a permit.

SourceSanta Fe County Building and Development Services Division / 2021 NMRC R105.2 · view source

When you need a Electrical permit in Santa Fe County

Required·Rule 1

Adding a new circuit requires an electrical permit. New Mexico requires a CID-licensed electrical contractor for circuit work; homeowners may perform electrical work on their own primary residence.

Typical Timelineabout 1 week
SourceSanta Fe County Building and Development Services Division / 2021 NMRC E3902 / NEC 2020 · view source
Required·Rule 2

An electrical service or panel upgrade (for example, 100A to 200A) requires an electrical permit and a CID-registered electrical contractor. Coordination with PNM (Public Service Company of New Mexico) for service disconnect is required.

Typical Timelineabout 2 weeks
SourceSanta Fe County Building and Development Services Division / 2021 NMRC E3601 / NEC 2020 · view source

What Makes Santa Fe County Different

Here's how Santa Fe County's electrical work rules stack up against the standard IRC baseline that most of the country follows.

Stricter Than the IRC

Adding a new circuit requires an electrical permit. New Mexico requires a CID-licensed electrical contractor for circuit work; homeowners may perform electrical work on their own primary residence.

An electrical service or panel upgrade (for example, 100A to 200A) requires an electrical permit and a CID-registered electrical contractor. Coordination with PNM (Public Service Company of New Mexico) for service disconnect is required.

1 rule match the IRC baseline, no surprises there.

Electrical Work Permit Costs: Santa Fe County vs. Nearby

CityEstimated Fee
Santa Fe County N/A
Albuquerque $50 – $800
Las Cruces $40 – $640
Rio Rancho $40 – $680

Fees shown are estimates based on local building code data. Actual fees may vary based on project scope and valuation. See all Santa Fe County permit costs →

Zoning & HOA Considerations

HOA Communities

If you live in an HOA community: interior electrical work rarely requires HOA approval. Exterior electrical additions (outdoor lighting, EV charger installations, visible conduit) may need architectural review in some communities.

Estimated Project Timeline in Santa Fe County

Here's a typical timeline for a electrical work project in Santa Fe County, NM:

Week 1
Get quotes & finalize design
Contact licensed contractors, get 3+ quotes, finalize project scope and drawings.
Week 2
Submit permit application
Your contractor submits the application to Santa Fe County's building department.
Week 3-4
Plan review & approval
Typical processing time in Santa Fe County: about 2 weeks. Application review and permit issuance.
Week 5+
Construction & inspections
Post the permit card on site. Work begins. Schedule inspections at required stages (varies by project). Final inspection required before closing the permit.

Timeline is based on Santa Fe County's typical about 2 weeks permit processing time. Actual timelines vary by project complexity, completeness of application, and current department workload.

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Building Department Contact

NameSanta Fe County Building and Development Services (Growth Management)
Address240 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 (mailing PO Box 276, Santa Fe, NM 87504)
HoursBy appointment / pre-application

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact Santa Fe County's building department for current Electrical Work permit fee information. Fees typically vary based on project scope and valuation.

It depends on the specifics of your project. Some smaller Electrical Work projects may be exempt from permit requirements, while larger ones typically require a permit. Use our free lookup tool to check your specific situation.

Working without a required permit in Santa Fe County can result in fines, stop-work orders, being required to remove completed work, and complications when selling your home. It's always best to check first.

Typical approval time for Electrical Work permits in Santa Fe County is about 1 week. More complex projects may take longer if plan review is required.

If you live in an HOA community, you may need architectural review approval in addition to a building permit. HOA rules and city building codes are separate, you may need to satisfy both. Review your CC&Rs and submit to your HOA's architectural review committee before starting work.

Learn More About Electrical Work Permits

Read our complete guide covering permit requirements, costs, common exemptions, and the application process.

Read Electrical Work Guide →

Estimate your permit fees →

Disclaimer: This information was last verified on 2026-04-22. Building permit requirements may change. Zoning requirements (setbacks, lot coverage, height limits) are separate and vary by location. Always confirm with your local building and planning departments before starting your project. PermitMint provides general guidance, not legal advice.