New Mexico’s Weight-Distance Tax — WDT — is the state’s mileage-based tax on heavy commercial vehicles using New Mexico highways. It is administered by the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division’s Motor Carrier Services through an online portal that handles registration, quarterly returns, and credential issuance in one place. WDT applies to both interstate and intrastate carriers and is separate from IFTA fuel tax.
The 26,001 lbs Threshold
WDT applies to any motor vehicle with a declared gross weight of 26,001 lbs or more operating on New Mexico highways. The threshold is low enough to capture a broad swath of heavy commercial operations — it is well below the 59,999 lbs Kentucky threshold and similar to the Oregon Weight-Mile threshold. Both for-hire and private carriers are covered.
The NM MVD Online Portal
Registration and reporting is handled electronically through New Mexico MVD’s Motor Carrier Services portal. The workflow: open an account, supply USDOT and legal-entity details, receive the WDT credential, and file quarterly returns through the same portal. The state no longer relies on paper filings for ongoing returns — electronic submission is the norm. Current portal URLs and registration requirements should be verified directly with NM MVD because state portals are renamed and re-platformed more often than reference sites catch up.
Quarterly Returns
WDT returns run on a quarterly cycle. The carrier reports New Mexico miles for the quarter against the applicable per-mile rate for the vehicle’s declared weight class. Because fee schedules are updated periodically by the state, the current per-mile rate should be verified with NM MVD each filing period rather than carried forward from a prior quarter.
WDT vs IFTA
IFTA reconciles fuel tax across member jurisdictions; WDT is a distance-based tax that does not depend on fuel consumption. A diesel truck and a CNG truck running the same New Mexico miles at the same declared weight owe the same WDT. Carriers subject to WDT file a separate quarterly return on top of their IFTA obligation. For the bigger picture, see the state trucking permit overview.
Single Trips: Temporary Permits
For a one-time crossing, a full WDT account is usually overkill. New Mexico sells a short-term temporary permit that authorizes one trip without setting up the ongoing account. Trip permits are the right tool for the occasional New Mexico run; regular operators should register for the WDT account.
Pairing With KYU and Oregon
Carriers running west-of-Mississippi heavy lanes typically pair NM WDT with KYU for Kentucky and Oregon Weight-Mile for Pacific Northwest runs. Cost comparison is in the permit cost guide.
Enforcement and Penalties
New Mexico ports of entry verify WDT registration alongside IRP plates and federal authority. A carrier operating over the weight threshold without WDT registration exposes itself to civil penalties, back tax plus interest, and potential out-of-service holds. Current penalty schedules should be verified with the New Mexico MVD because they are adjusted by statute and regulation over time.