New Mexico knife laws emphasize open carry for most blades while banning switchblades and restricting concealed carry of “deadly weapons.” Statewide preemption prevents local governments from adding stricter rules, giving carriers clear statewide guidelines in 2026.
Legal Knives Overview
Ordinary pocketknives, fixed blades, hunting knives, Bowie knives, daggers, dirks, machetes, and kitchen knives are legal to own and possess with no blade length limit. The New Mexico Constitution (Art. II, § 6) protects bearing non-concealed arms, and no general ownership bans exist beyond prohibited types. Courts like State v. Nick R. (2009) confirm ordinary pocketknives aren’t automatically “deadly weapons.”
Prohibited Knives
Switchblades—knives opening automatically via button, spring, gravity, or centrifugal force—are illegal to possess, sell, or manufacture under NMSA § 30-7-8 (petty misdemeanor). This includes butterfly (balisong) knives per State v. Riddall (1991), ballistic knives, and disguised blades like sword canes. Ballistic knives (spring-launched blades) face federal bans too.
Open Carry Rules
Open carry of any legal knife is permitted statewide, visible on belt or in hand, without restrictions. No blade length caps apply; even large Bowie knives qualify under the right-to-bear-arms clause. Vehicles allow open storage too.
Concealed Carry Limits
Concealed carry of “deadly weapons” is unlawful outside home, property, or private vehicle (NMSA § 30-7-2), defining them as items capable of death/great harm like daggers, dirks, Bowie knives, butcher knives, or poniards (NMSA § 30-1-12).
Ordinary pocketknives often evade this if not designed for thrusting/cutting dangerously. Exceptions: your property, self-defense in vehicle, or concealed handgun license holders (knives incidental).
Restricted Locations
Knives are banned in schools, school buses (NMSA § 30-7-2.1), prisons (NMSA § 30-22-14), and posted secure areas. Courthouses and polling places may prohibit via security rules. Alcohol servers can’t carry concealed deadly weapons.
Penalties and Enforcement
Unlawful switchblade possession: petty misdemeanor (up to 6 months jail, $500 fine). Concealed deadly weapon: misdemeanor (1 year jail, $1,000 fine); felonies if aggravated. Police discretion applies—context like intent matters in court. Suppress evidence if searches violate rights.
Best Practices
Carry openly for safety; sheath fixed blades visibly. Lock prohibited knives at home. Check local spots like Bernalillo County for rare blade limits (preempted but enforced). Verify with NM AG or attorneys for edge cases. Knife rights groups like AKTI affirm NM’s permissive stance minus autos.
SOURCES:
- https://knifeinformer.com/state-knife-laws/new-mexico/
- https://nobliecustomknives.com/us-knife-laws/new-mexico-knife-laws/












