Understanding Your Knife Rights in New Mexico: a Legal Guide

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Understanding Your Knife Rights in New Mexico: a Legal Guide

New Mexico maintains relatively permissive knife laws in 2026, allowing ownership and open carry of most knives with no blade length limits. Switchblades, including butterfly knives, are banned statewide, but folders, fixed blades, and tools like Bowie or hunting knives are legal for adults. Key restrictions focus on concealed carry of “deadly weapons,” defined under NMSA §30-7-2.

Nearly all non-automatic knives are permitted. Legal options include pocketknives, fixed-blade knives, daggers, dirks, Bowie knives, machetes, and kitchen blades—no size caps. Minors under 18 face school carry bans, but ownership isn’t restricted.

Carry Rules

Open carry is unrestricted for legal knives anywhere not prohibited. Concealed carry falls under “unlawful carrying of a deadly weapon” (misdemeanor): prohibited for daggers, switchblades, Bowie knives, dirks, poniards, butcher knives, or any blade inflicting dangerous cuts/thrusts (e.g., sword canes). CHL holders or on own property/vehicle can conceal deadly weapons.

Carry TypeAllowed KnivesRestrictions
Open CarryAll legal knives (any length)None statewide 
ConcealedNon-deadly (e.g., small folders)Deadly weapons banned (except CHL) 
VehicleAny legal, accessibleConcealed deadly OK on property â€‹

Prohibited Knives

Switchblades (§30-7-8, petty misdemeanor) open automatically via button, gravity, or centrifugal force—includes balisongs per State v. Riddall (1991). No bans on assisted-open folders unless qualifying as switchblades.

Restricted Locations

No knives (open/concealed) in:

  • Schools, universities, polls.
  • Courthouses, jails, liquor-serving bars.
  • State buildings, federal property.
  • Gaming casinos (tribal rules apply).​

Peace officers/military exempt for duty.​

Penalties and Enforcement

Unlawful carry: Misdemeanor (up to 1 year jail, $1,000 fine); switchblade possession: Petty misdemeanor ($300 fine). Local preemption absent—Albuquerque mirrors state law. No recent 2026 changes noted.

Practical Advice

Carry openly or pocket small folders visibly. For EDC, opt for manual folders under 4″ blades to avoid scrutiny. Ask permission on private land; declare during stops. CHL expands options—consider for concealed needs. Verify via NM statutes or attorney for edge cases like assisted knives.

New Mexico favors responsibility over restriction: Own freely, carry smartly, respect zones.

Sources

  • https://www.akti.org/state-knife-laws/new-mexico/
  • https://nobliecustomknives.com/us-knife-laws/new-mexico-knife-laws/
  • https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/knife-laws-by-state
  • https://law.justia.com/codes/new-mexico/chapter-30/article-7/section-30-7-8/

Maria

Maria is a professional content writer at MyHometownPost.com, specializing in Oklahoma local news, U.S. laws and policy updates, and global current events. With a keen eye for detail and commitment to accuracy, she delivers timely, engaging, and informative stories that keep readers well-informed about important developments locally and worldwide.

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