Research by Ivan Tchesnokov
The Short Answer
MAYBE — cosmetic work exempt. Plumbing, electrical, wall removal, gas work require permits. NMCID + Santa Fe Business License required. NM PE for structural drawings. 7,000-ft altitude: gas ranges/appliances require altitude derating. Historic District: HDRB pre-approval if exterior modification. Green Building Code. No HERS rater.
Permits for plumbing, electrical, wall removal, gas work. Cosmetic exempt. NMCID + Santa Fe Business License required. NM PE for wall removal (structural drawings). 7,000-ft altitude: gas range/cooktop requires altitude derating. Historic District: HDRB pre-approval if exterior modified. Green Building Code. PNM + NMGC. No HERS rater. Phone: 505-955-6588.

Santa Fe NM building permit framework — 2021 NM Building Code + Santa Fe Green Building Code

The City of Santa Fe's Building Permit Division (Land Use Department) enforces the 2021 New Mexico Residential Building Code (2021 IRC with NM amendments), the 2021 New Mexico Commercial Building Code (2021 IBC with NM amendments), the 2021 NM Energy Conservation Code (2021 IECC), the 2020 NM Electrical Code (2020 NEC), the 2021 NM Plumbing Code (2021 UPC), the 2021 NM Mechanical Code (2021 UMC), and the 2021 NM Earthen Building Materials Code. The Building Permit Division is at 200 Lincoln Avenue, 1st Floor, Santa Fe, NM 87504, phone 505-955-6588, email permitcounter@santafenm.gov. Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. (closed noon–1 p.m., and closed Saturdays, Sundays, and federal holidays). Online: CSS (Citizen Self-Service) portal at santafenm.gov. Allow 5 business days after submission before requesting a status update.

Two contractor licensing credentials are required for all contractors performing permitted work in Santa Fe: a New Mexico State Contractor's License from the NM Construction Industries Division (NMCID) at rld.nm.gov/construction-industries, AND a Santa Fe City Business License. Both credentials must be obtained before a permit will be issued to a contractor. Homeowners of single-family owner-occupied residences may apply for homeowner permits — an NMCID affidavit is required, and homeowners wishing to perform their own electrical or plumbing work must pass an examination ($15 electrical, $10 plumbing). NM 811 (dial 811) must be called at least 2 business days before any excavation.

Historic Districts — critical pre-permit step: The City of Santa Fe has active historic district overlays covering significant portions of the city. Any work on the exterior of a structure within a Historic District requires pre-approval from the Historic Preservation Division before a building permit application can be submitted. The Historic Districts Review Board (HDRB) and Archaeological Review Committee (ARC) review exterior modifications for compliance with Santa Fe's historic character — the iconic "Santa Fe Style" adobe architecture, earth-tone stucco colors, exposed wood vigas, portal elements, and traditional Pueblo and Territorial architectural forms. If your property is within a Historic District, contact the Historic Preservation Division at 505-955-6613 before planning any exterior work. Santa Fe Green Building Code applies to all new single-family homes, guesthouses, additions, and remodels throughout the city — this is an additional city-specific requirement above the state building code. PNM (Public Service Company of New Mexico) provides electric service at 1-888-342-5766; New Mexico Gas Company (NMGC) provides gas at 1-888-664-2726.

Zone 5B (cold-dry) at 7,000 feet elevation — Santa Fe NM: the highest-elevation guide city and coldest-climate non-California city in this guide. Approximately 6,000–7,000 HDD; only ~400–600 CDD (minimal cooling load). Cold winters (lows often below 0°F); warm-to-hot dry summers (80–95°F highs). Extremely dry air year-round (low humidity). No ice shield required (Zone 5B dry climate — no ice dam risk despite cold winters, same as Sparks NV and Sandy UT). Frost depth approximately 18–24 inches (dry soils at high elevation; similar to Sparks NV at 4,400 ft — dry Zone 5B soils freeze less deeply than wet-climate soils at the same temperature). R-49 attic minimum (2021 IECC Zone 5B). U-factor ≤ 0.30 for windows. SHGC ≤ 0.25. SDC B/C seismic (moderate — New Mexico is less seismically active than California's SDC D but some seismic design required). ~5.5–6.0 peak sun hours daily — excellent solar resource despite cold winters; Zone 5B high-desert sunshine at 7,000 ft is intense and sustained.

7,000-foot altitude — highest in this guide and most extreme gas appliance derating: All natural gas appliances in Santa Fe must be rated or derated for 7,000-foot elevation — the most extreme altitude gas consideration in this guide. Standard sea-level gas appliances typically rated in BTU/hr lose approximately 4% of heating capacity for every 1,000 feet above sea level — meaning a 100,000 BTU/hr gas furnace at sea level produces approximately 72,000 BTU/hr effective output at Santa Fe's 7,000-foot elevation. Gas appliances must either be altitude-rated equipment from the manufacturer or derated using manufacturer-specified procedures for high-altitude use. This affects gas furnaces, water heaters, ranges, dryers, and HVAC systems. Coordinate with NMGC (1-888-664-2726) and your NMCID-licensed HVAC or plumbing contractor to verify all gas appliances are altitude-rated for 7,000 feet. Higher at 7,000 ft than Sparks NV (4,400 ft) or Sandy UT (4,500 ft) — the most extreme gas appliance derating requirement in this guide series.

Historic Districts — exterior work requires pre-approval: The City of Santa Fe has extensive historic district overlays including the Downtown historic area and other designated zones. Before submitting any building permit application involving exterior modifications within a Historic District, contact the Historic Preservation Division at 505-955-6613 for review and pre-approval by the Historic Districts Review Board (HDRB). The Santa Fe Style architectural standards — adobe or adobe-appearance stucco, earth-tone colors (brown, tan, terra cotta), exposed wood vigas and portal elements, flat or low-slope roofs, traditional Pueblo and Territorial design elements — must be maintained on exterior modifications within historic districts. Window replacements, roofing, exterior cladding, additions, and decks all require HDRB review if within a Historic District. If your property is outside a Historic District, this pre-approval step does not apply — check your property's status at 505-955-6613 before planning any exterior project.

New Mexico contractor licensing: Two credentials required for all contractors in Santa Fe. First, a New Mexico State Contractor's License from NMCID (NM Construction Industries Division) at rld.nm.gov/construction-industries. Second, a City of Santa Fe Business License. Both are required before a permit will be issued. Trade contractors must hold the appropriate NM state trade license (electrical, plumbing, mechanical). NM licensed plumber required for plumbing work under the 2021 NM Plumbing Code (UPC — same code family as California). NM licensed electrician for electrical work under the 2020 NM Electrical Code (2020 NEC). Homeowner permits available for owner-occupied single-family homes (NMCID affidavit required; exam required for homeowner electrical/plumbing work).

Santa Fe kitchen remodel permit rules — 2021 NM Code, 7,000 ft altitude gas, Green Code

Kitchen permit thresholds in Santa Fe: cosmetic work is permit-exempt; system work requires permits. Moving the sink, adding circuits, removing a wall, adding a gas line — permits through CSS portal at santafenm.gov. NMCID + Santa Fe City Business License required. NM licensed plumber for gas and plumbing permit work (2021 NM UPC). NM licensed electrician for electrical (2020 NEC). NM Licensed PE or registered architect for structural drawings if load-bearing wall removal required. Santa Fe Green Building Code applies to all remodels. No HERS rater requirement. Historic District: if the kitchen remodel involves any exterior modification (new window, exterior vent hood penetration), HDRB pre-approval from Historic Preservation Division (505-955-6613) required before permit application.

All gas cooking appliances in Santa Fe must be altitude-rated or derated for 7,000-foot elevation. Gas ranges, gas cooktops, and gas ovens that are rated at sea level produce approximately 72% of their rated BTU output at Santa Fe's 7,000-foot elevation. Altitude-rated gas ranges — specified by the manufacturer for high-altitude operation — maintain rated performance at 7,000 ft. Standard sea-level gas ranges can be derated by an NMCID licensed plumber using manufacturer orifice adjustment procedures. NMGC (1-888-664-2726) provides gas service in Santa Fe; gas piping modifications require NMCID licensed plumber permit work. Induction cooktops require only a 240V electric circuit (NM licensed electrician, electrical permit) with no altitude adjustment — increasingly popular in Santa Fe for their performance and safety advantages at high altitude. Wall removal requires NM PE stamped structural drawings — NM seismic design is moderate (Zone 5B / SDC B/C); structural calculations include Zone 5B wind loads and residential dead/live loads. No snow load concern in typical kitchen structural design for Santa Fe's low-precipitation Zone 5B climate.

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Scenario A
Open-concept kitchen — NM PE structural, 7,000-ft altitude gas, Historic District check
A homeowner removes a load-bearing wall. If property in Historic District: check if any exterior modification required (new window, vent); if yes, HDRB pre-approval first. NM PE stamps structural drawings (NM moderate seismic; no snow load for Zone 5B). Apply permits through CSS portal. NMCID + Santa Fe Business License contractor. NM licensed electrician. NM licensed plumber if sink moved or gas added. If gas range: altitude-rated or derated for 7,000 ft. Green Building Code compliance. No HERS rater. PE fees: $700–$1,800. Combined permit fees approximately $125–$205. Project cost: $22,000–$44,000.
Estimated combined permit cost: $125–$205
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VariableHow it affects your Santa Fe kitchen remodel permit
7,000-ft altitude — gas range derating most critical in guideGas ranges lose ~28% of rated BTU output at 7,000 ft. Altitude-rated gas range required or NMCID licensed plumber deration of standard range. Most extreme altitude gas appliance challenge in this guide series (higher than Sparks NV at 4,400 ft or Sandy UT at 4,500 ft). Induction cooktop: no altitude adjustment — simpler option at 7,000 ft.
NM PE for wall removalNM Licensed PE or architect required for structural drawings. NM moderate seismic design (SDC B/C); residential dead/live loads; no snow load for Zone 5B dry climate. PE fees: $700–$1,800. CSS portal plan review.
Historic District — exterior modification triggers HDRBInterior kitchen work: no HDRB review. Exterior modification (new range hood exterior vent penetration, new window): HDRB pre-approval required if in Historic District (505-955-6613).
Santa Fe Green Building CodeGreen Building Code applies to all remodels. Contact roortiz@santafenm.gov. May specify sustainable materials, energy efficiency measures, or water-conserving appliances relevant to kitchen scope.
No HERS rater requirementNew Mexico has no HERS rater requirement for kitchen permits. No CalCERTS/CHEERS cost unlike California guide cities.
NM UPC plumbing — NMCID licensed plumber2021 NM Plumbing Code (UPC) governs all plumbing and gas piping in Santa Fe kitchens. NMCID licensed plumber required for all plumbing permit work. Verify at rld.nm.gov.
Santa Fe kitchens: 7,000-ft altitude gas appliance derating (the most extreme in this guide), NM PE structural for wall removal, Historic District exterior check, and Green Building Code compliance for all remodels define this high-altitude New Mexico capital's kitchen permit environment.
7,000-ft altitude gas appliance guidance. NM PE for wall removal. Historic District exterior check. Green Building Code. No HERS rater cost. NMCID contractor check. CSS portal walkthrough.
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What kitchen remodels cost in Santa Fe

Kitchen costs in Santa Fe, NM: Mid-range: $22,000–$44,000. High-end: $46,000–$82,000+. Cosmetic (no permits): $10,000–$23,000. NM PE for wall removal: $700–$1,800. Altitude-rated gas range: $1,400–$4,000. Combined permit fees: $100–$205. No HERS rater cost. Contact Building Permit Division at 505-955-6588 for current fee schedule.

Santa Fe Building Permit Division — permit process and contact

Building Permit Division: 200 Lincoln Avenue, 1st Floor, Santa Fe, NM 87504 | 505-955-6588 | permitcounter@santafenm.gov | Mon–Fri 8 a.m.–5 p.m. CSS portal at santafenm.gov. Historic Preservation: 505-955-6613. NMCID + Santa Fe City Business License required. PNM: 1-888-342-5766. NMGC: 1-888-664-2726. NM 811: dial 811 (2 business days). Santa Fe Green Building Code applies to all construction, additions, and remodels. Historic District pre-approval required before any exterior permit in historic zones.

New Mexico contractor licensing: Two credentials required for all contractors in Santa Fe. First, a New Mexico State Contractor's License from NMCID (NM Construction Industries Division) at rld.nm.gov/construction-industries. Second, a City of Santa Fe Business License. Both are required before a permit will be issued. Trade contractors must hold the appropriate NM state trade license (electrical, plumbing, mechanical). NM licensed plumber required for plumbing work under the 2021 NM Plumbing Code (UPC — same code family as California). NM licensed electrician for electrical work under the 2020 NM Electrical Code (2020 NEC). Homeowner permits available for owner-occupied single-family homes (NMCID affidavit required; exam required for homeowner electrical/plumbing work).

Santa Fe Green Building Code: The City of Santa Fe's Green Building Code applies to all new single-family homes, guesthouses, additions, and remodels throughout the city. This is an additional building code requirement above and beyond the state 2021 NM Residential Building Code. The Green Building Code encourages water conservation, energy efficiency, passive solar design, and sustainable materials — appropriate to Santa Fe's high-desert climate. Contact the Green Building Specialist at roortiz@santafenm.gov or 505-955-6588 for current Green Building Code requirements before finalizing any project scope in Santa Fe.

Santa Fe Building Permit Division at 505-955-6588 or permitcounter@santafenm.gov provides permit guidance. CSS portal at santafenm.gov for online applications. Historic District pre-approval (505-955-6613) before any exterior work in historic zones. NMCID state contractor license + Santa Fe City Business License required. PNM: 1-888-342-5766. NMGC: 1-888-664-2726. NM 811: dial 811 (2 business days). Zone 5B at 7,000 ft: most extreme altitude gas appliance derating in guide (losing ~28% of BTU capacity vs. sea level); ~6,000–7,000 HDD; no ice shield; R-49 attic; U ≤ 0.30; SHGC ≤ 0.25; frost depth ~18–24 in; 5.5–6.0 peak sun hours. Santa Fe Green Building Code applies to all construction and remodels. Historic Districts: HDRB pre-approval for all exterior work. NM Plumbing Code (UPC). 7,000-ft altitude gas appliance derating. NM state solar tax credit (10% up to $9,000) + PNM retail rate net metering + federal 30% credit. Santa Fe's historic district character, 7,000-ft altitude, Santa Fe Green Building Code, dual contractor licensing, and Zone 5B cold-dry climate define the city's distinctive permit environment.

Santa Fe is New Mexico's state capital and one of the oldest cities in North America, continuously inhabited for centuries and serving as a center of Spanish colonial, Pueblo, and Territorial culture. Its world-famous historic character — the adobe architecture, narrow streets, and earth-tone buildings of the historic downtown — is protected by active preservation ordinances that make Santa Fe's exterior building permit process unlike any other guide city. The Historic Districts Review Board's jurisdiction over exterior modifications means that window replacement, roof materials, stucco colors, deck designs, and other visible changes must harmonize with the Santa Fe Style that defines the city's global identity. At 7,000 feet elevation in the Sangre de Cristo foothills at the edge of the Great Basin and Southern Rocky Mountain ecosystems, Santa Fe's high-altitude location shapes every aspect of construction: gas appliance performance (altitude derating), solar production (excellent high-altitude sunshine), and winter heating requirements (~6,000–7,000 HDD — the highest heating load in this guide, comparable only to the coldest northern cities). New Mexico's unique construction code environment — 2021 NM Building Codes with NM amendments, 2021 NM Earthen Building Materials Code for adobe construction, and the NM Solar Market Development Tax Credit — provides a regulatory framework tailored to the state's distinctive climate and building traditions. Contact the Building Permit Division at 505-955-6588 and the Historic Preservation Division at 505-955-6613 before beginning any permitted project in Santa Fe, New Mexico to confirm code requirements, historic district status, Green Building Code compliance, and contractor licensing requirements.

City of Santa Fe — Building Permit Division (Land Use Department) 200 Lincoln Avenue, 1st Floor, Santa Fe, NM 87504 | Phone: 505-955-6588
Email: permitcounter@santafenm.gov | Portal: CSS at santafenm.gov
Hours: Monday–Friday 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. (closed noon–1 p.m., Sat, Sun, federal holidays)
Historic Preservation Division (exterior work in historic districts): 505-955-6613
PNM (Public Service Company of New Mexico — electric): 1-888-342-5766 | pnm.com
New Mexico Gas Company (NMGC — gas): 1-888-664-2726 | nmgas.com
NMCID contractor licensing: rld.nm.gov/construction-industries | NM 811: 811 (2 business days)
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2021 NM Building Code requirements. Historic District pre-approval guidance. Santa Fe Green Building Code. 7,000-ft altitude gas derating. PNM solar incentives. Exact permit fees.
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Disclaimer: Research April 2026. Verify with Santa Fe Building Permit Division at 505-955-6588 and Historic Preservation at 505-955-6613. Not legal advice.