Created by potrace 1.10, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2011

New Mexico Commercial Property Disclosures: Environmental and Zoning

Review the essential disclosures and due diligence items required in New Mexico commercial leasing, including ESAs and ADA compliance.

Melvin Prince
3 min čtení
Ověřeno Apr 2026United States flag
Zveřejnění informací o komerčních nemovitostech v Novém MexikuPožadavky na zveřejnění informací v komerční nájemní smlouvěEnvironmentální zveřejnění NMStav komerčních nemovitostíVarování pro komerční nájemce NM

Právní doložka o zřeknutí se odpovědnosti

Tento obsah je určen pouze pro obecné informační a vzdělávací účely. Nepředstavuje právní poradenství a neměl by na něj být takto spoléháno. Zákony se často mění – vždy si ověřte aktuální předpisy a poraďte se s licencovaným právníkem ve vaší jurisdikci pro rady specifické pro vaši situaci. Landager je platforma pro správu nemovitostí, nikoli advokátní kancelář.Informace naposledy ověřeny: April 2026.

Lead-Based Paint
Required for older buildings
State Disclosures
Minimal

Unlike residential tenancy-which requires consumer-protection disclosures regarding lead paint, fees, and ownership identity-commercial leasing in New Mexico operates under the assumption of "caveat emptor" (buyer beware). Extensive due diligence, rather than mandated disclosure forms, drives the transaction.

1. Environmental Liability and Disclosures

Environmental contamination is one of the largest risks in commercial real estate. Under state and federal law, a current owner (and in some cases, a tenant) can be held strictly liable for cleaning up hazardous waste on a property, regardless of who caused it.

Phase I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA)

To establish an "innocent landowner" defense, prospective commercial tenants (or buyers) routinely commission a Phase I ESA.

  • Landlord Obligation: While not legally required to commission the ESA themselves, landlords must disclose any known prior environmental contamination or ongoing remediation efforts.
  • Asbestos: Older commercial buildings may contain asbestos-containing materials (ACMs). Landlords should disclose known ACMs, as tenants may disturb them during a build-out.

2. Zoning and Permitted Use

A commercial landlord should ensure the tenant's intended use complies with the local municipal zoning code (e.g., Albuquerque or Santa Fe zoning ordinances).

  • The Lease Protection: A well-drafted lease should explicitly state that it is the tenant's sole responsibility to verify that the property is zoned properly for their specific business and to obtain all necessary permits and licenses.
  • Conditional Use Permits: If the tenant requires a special use permit, the lease should dictate what happens if the local government denies the permit (e.g., the lease is voided, or the tenant remains liable).

3. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Compliance

The ADA requires places of "public accommodation" (retail stores, offices, restaurants) to be accessible.

  • Landlord Responsibility: Typically responsible for ensuring common areas (parking lots, building entrances, shared lobbies) meet ADA standards.
  • Tenant Responsibility: Usually responsible for ADA compliance within their specific leased suite.
  • Disclosures: Landlords should disclose any known instances where the building currently fails to meet ADA compliance to properly allocate the risk and cost of remediation in the lease.

4. Building Code and Safety Systems

Commercial tenants will expect disclosure regarding the building's infrastructure:

  • Fire Systems: Are the fire sprinklers and alarms up to the current New Mexico Commercial Building Code?
  • HVAC: The status and maintenance history of the HVAC system (especially critical in NNN leases where the tenant assumes responsibility).
  • Roof Warranty: Disclosing the condition of the roof and whether any warranties will pass through to the tenant.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease terms, payment schedules, and maintenance requests - making it easy to stay compliant with New Mexico regulations.

Back to New Mexico Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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