New Mexico doesn't regulate mold inspectors at the state level, so the credentials you should look for are third-party industry certifications and proof of appropriate insurance. Here's how to vet them properly.
New Mexico does not license mold inspectors at the state level
as of 2026, New Mexico has not enacted a state-level mold-assessment or remediation license. Only a handful of states do -- Texas, New York, Florida, Louisiana, and Maryland.
That doesn't mean 'anyone can call themselves a mold inspector and be qualified.' It means the qualification comes from THIRD-PARTY CREDENTIALS, not a state licence.
Credentials that actually matter
The industry-respected mold-inspection credentials are:
- IICRC AMRT (Applied Microbial Remediation Technician) -- remediation-focused but indicates solid technical grounding.
- IICRC AMRS (Applied Microbial Remediation Supervisor) -- the supervisory counterpart, more senior.
- ACAC CMI (Council-certified Microbial Investigator) -- third-party-administered, widely respected for inspection work.
- ACAC CMC (Council-certified Microbial Consultant) -- advanced consultation-level credential.
- ACAC CMRS (Council-certified Microbial Remediation Supervisor) -- remediation-focused.
- InterNACHI Certified Mold Inspector (CMI) -- common in the home-inspection industry.
Tip: Both ACAC and IICRC publish public certification registries. Ask for the certification number and verify it at the issuer's site directly. "ACAC-certified" or "IICRC-certified" without a specific number you can look up is a soft yellow flag.
Insurance and E&O -- the other half of the vetting
A qualified New Mexico mold inspector should carry:
- General liability insurance ($1M minimum is typical; $2M+ is better)
- Errors and omissions (E&O) insurance on the REPORT ITSELF (not all inspectors carry this; it's a differentiator)
- Workers' comp coverage if they have employees
Ask for a COI (Certificate of Insurance) before scheduling. A legitimate pro will share one without hesitation.
What New Mexico law DOES require
Even without a mold-specific license, New Mexico mold inspectors are still subject to:
- General contractor licensing laws if structural work is involved
- Home-inspection laws if the inspection is part of a real-estate transaction (some states license home inspectors)
- Consumer-protection statutes that prohibit false advertising and bad-faith reports
- Federal EPA lead-safe certification if the home was built before 1978 and the work disturbs paint surfaces
The lack of a mold-specific license doesn't mean the industry is unregulated -- it means the regulation comes from general-purpose statutes plus industry self-regulation via certification bodies.
Frequently asked questions
Sources & references
- EPA: Mold Cleanup in Your Home — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- ACAC Certification Registry (CMI, CMC, CMRS) — American Council for Accredited Certification
- IICRC Certification Verification — IICRC
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