New Mexico 2025 2025 Regular Session

New Mexico House Bill HB460 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/28/2025

                    Fiscal impact reports (FIRs) are prepared by the Legislative Finance Committee (LFC) for standing finance 
committees of the Legislature. LFC does not assume responsibility for the accuracy of these reports if they 
are used for other purposes. 
 
F I S C A L    I M P A C T    R E P O R T 
 
 
SPONSOR Block, J. 
LAST UPDATED 
ORIGINAL DATE 2/27/2025 
 
SHORT TITLE Repeal Liquor Taxes 
BILL 
NUMBER House Bill 460 
  
ANALYST Gray 
REVENUE* 
(dollars in thousands) 
Type FY25 FY26 FY27 FY28 FY29 
Recurring or 
Nonrecurring 
Fund 
Affected 
Liquor 
Excise 
Tax 
$0 ($24,730.0) ($25,010.0) ($25,260.0) ($25,520.0) Recurring General Fund 
Liquor 
Excise 
Tax 
$0 ($22,480.0) ($22,730.0) ($22,950.0) ($23,190.0) Recurring 
Local DWI 
Grant Fund 
Liquor 
Excise 
Tax 
$0 
($2,497.0) ($2,525.0) ($2,550.0) ($2,577.0) 
Recurring Drug Courts 
Liquor 
Excise 
Tax 
$0 ($249.0) ($249.0) ($249.0) ( $249.0) Recurring Class A Muni 
Parentheses ( ) indicate revenue decreases. 
*Amounts reflect most recent analysis of this legislation. 
 
Conflicts House Bill 417 and Senate Bills 378 and 431 
 
Sources of Information
 
 
LFC Files 
 
Agency Analysis Received From 
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) Health Care Authority (HCA) Department of Health (DOH) Agency Analysis was Solicited but Not Received From 
Taxation and Revenue Department (TRD) 
SUMMARY 
 
Synopsis of House Bill 460   
 
House Bill 460 (HB460) repeals the liquor excise tax and eliminates its distributions. Section 7-
1-6.40 NMSA 1978, which would be eliminated by HB460, provides a series of distributions to 
the liquor excise tax. The impact of that repeal is reflected in the table below. 
 
  House Bill 460 – Page 2 
 
HB460 Liquor Excise Tax Distribution Changes 
 
Current FY26 Estimated 
Distributions 
New HB460 FY26 
Distributions 
Fund 	Rate 
Amount (in 
thousands) Rate 
Amount (in 
thousands) 
Local DWI Grant Fund 	45% $22,700 
repealed 
$0 
Municipality – Class A County (Farmington) N/A $249 $0 
Drug Court Fund 	5% $2,529 $0 
General Fund 	49.5% $25,041 $0 
 
The effective date of this bill is July 1, 2025. 
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS  
 
This bill will reduce general fund revenue by $24.7 million in FY26. This analysis used the 
December 2024 Consensus Revenue Estimating Group liquor excise tax forecast.  
 
Analysis from the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) notes that the liquor excise tax 
provides the primary funding source for the drug court fund, which supports statewide treatment 
court programs. The Legislature could choose to maintain funding for these programs with 
general fund revenue, but that is not provided in HB460 or in the House Appropriations and 
Finance Committee Substitute for House Bill 2. Similarly, HB460 eliminates the funding 
mechanism for the Local DWI Grant Program, which could receive general fund revenue but that 
revenue swap is not provided by the bill nor the current version of HB2. 
 
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES 
 
Economic theory typically supports imposing excise taxes on alcohol consumption to better 
reflect the costs of an individual’s consumption of alcohol to society. A major rationale for 
alcohol excise taxes is to discourage alcohol consumption and its negative spillover effects (such 
as accidents, domestic violence, and health effects). Health effects can spill over to others if the 
costs are paid by third parties, for example, health insurers. Economists often refer to these 
spillover effects as externalities. Taxes will be a more effective deterrent if they are passed on to 
consumers and consumers respond by reducing consumption in some meaningful way. In 
general, the literature has concluded that excise taxes are passed on to consumers and that 
consumers respond by reducing their consumption. 
 
The costs associated with alcohol consumption have been studied by researchers in a variety of 
fields, including economics, health, and public safety and crime. Examples of the costs most 
often featured in studies include the effects of alcohol consumption on motor vehicle crashes, 
public health, domestic violence, and other crimes. In addition, many researchers have studied 
these effects among youth, as some of these effects are disproportionately concentrated among 
younger consumers of alcohol (e.g., involvement in motor vehicle crashes and violent crime). 
 
The liquor excise tax also generates revenue, which can be used to help mitigate the harms of 
alcohol consumption. Analysis from the Department of Health (DOH) notes that reducing 
revenues from the liquor excise tax would “negatively impact the infrastructure for addressing 
alcohol misuse in New Mexico.”  
  House Bill 460 – Page 3 
 
New Mexico has one of the higher liquor excise tax rates in the region. All states impose an 
excise tax on alcohol products. Under HB460, New Mexico would likely have the lowest liquor 
tax rate in the country. 
 
State Rankin
gs by State Level Liquor Excise Taxes
3
 
Liquor 
Category 
New 
Mexico 
Current 
Rates 
Surrounding States 
Arizona Utah Colorado Oklahoma Texas 
Beer
1 
14 36 13 46 15 31 
Spirits
1
 24 43 6 47 27 46 
Wine
2
 5 26 * 40 29 44 
Note: 
1
As of January 1, 2024; 
2
as of January 1, 2021. 
3
Comparable state ratings based on 
dollars/gallon, include local rates, state-controls, differing rates by alcohol content. Utah has state-
controlled sales of wine. 
Source: Tax Foundation, TRD Analysis 
 
 
The federal government levies an excise tax on manufacturers and importers of alcoholic 
beverages (e.g., distilled spirits, wine, and beer) based on the per-unit production of alcohol for 
sale in the U.S. market. The rate per unit is based on the form that the alcoholic beverage takes 
and the size of the producer. Accordingly, eliminating the state’s liquor excise tax will only 
impact one component of the total tax paid on alcoholic beverages. 
 
Eliminating the liquor excise tax would increase the profitability of liquor wholesalers. This 
benefit may or may not be passed on elsewhere along the supply chain via higher profits for 
manufacturers and retailers, or lower prices for consumers. The magnitude of these secondary 
effects on profits and prices will be dependent on market concentration and competitiveness. 
Excise taxes are generally considered regressive, meaning lower-income individuals pay a higher 
proportion of their income in taxes. Eliminating the tax would reduce overall regressivity in the 
tax code, although the effect would be minor for most taxpayers. 
 
Treatment Courts. Treatment courts are specialized court dockets that serve individuals who 
have been arrested or convicted of a crime, those at risk of losing custody of their children, and 
those who are struggling with substance use or behavioral health disorders. AOC analysis notes 
that, by offering treatment as an alternative to incarceration, these programs “integrate public 
health and public safety approaches, connecting justice-involved individuals with personalized, 
evidence-based treatment and recovery services to address the root causes of criminal behavior.” 
AOC asserts: 
Eliminating the liquor excise act would eliminate the primary funding source for the drug 
court fund which provides vital support for staffing, training, treatment provider funding, 
ancillary service contracts, and other resources across the state. It would also impact the 
ability to implement new treatment court programs, negatively impact community safety 
and health, and potentially increase recidivism. 
 
Alcohol Use Disorder in New Mexico. According to a 2023 LFC progress report, alcohol is 
New Mexico’s predominant substance-use problem. In 2021, 2,274 New Mexicans died from 
alcohol-related causes, roughly six people each day. The state has had the highest alcohol-related 
death rate in the country for over a decade, and the state’s alcohol related death rate grew by 32.4 
percent between 2019 and 2021.  
  House Bill 460 – Page 4 
 
The LFC progress report noted the effects of the pandemic 
exacerbated existing problems. According to the National Institute 
of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, the traumas of the pandemic, 
including Covid-19 infection, job losses, housing dislocation, and 
social isolation, caused alcohol consumption to increase 10 percent 
nationally and alcohol-related deaths to spike in all states. 
Nationally, Kaiser Family Foundation finds two-thirds of the public 
report they or someone in their family has been addicted to drugs or 
alcohol.  
 
According to a 2023 LFC progress report, McKinley, Cibola, Rio 
Arriba, San Juan, and Socorro Counties are hotspots of alcohol-
related deaths. McKinley, Cibola, Rio Arriba, San Juan, and Socorro 
counties had the highest alcohol-related death rates in 2021, the 
most recent year for which the Department of Health (DOH) has 
reported county-level data (Attachment 1). These five counties all 
had death rates that exceed 150 per 100 thousand people. 
Meanwhile, deaths in Bernalillo, McKinley, San Juan, Santa Fe, and 
Sandoval counties made-up 62 percent of all 2021 alcohol-related 
deaths in the state in 2021. 
 
A 2020 DOH gap analysis suggests that, of the 100 thousand people who live with an alcohol use 
disorder, about 70 thousand do not receive treatment. DOH estimated that about 10 percent of 
those who need treatment and do not receive it will never receive it.  
 
According to the Centers for Disease Control’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System 
(BRFSS), 48 percent of New Mexicans, about 700 thousand people, reported drinking at least 
once in the last 30 days in 2022. BRFSS reports that 15 percent of New Mexicans, over 225 
thousand people, reported binge drinking in 2022.  
 
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP 
 
This bill conflicts with House Bill 417 and Senate Bill 431, which imposes a liquor excise surtax 
and changes the distribution of the revenue.  
 
This bill conflicts with Senate Bill 378, which increases the liquor excise tax. 
 
This bill conflicts with Senate Bill 199, which makes changes to the Local DWI Grant Program 
that are irreconcilable with those contemplated by HB460.  
 
Attachments 
1. Sample of August 2023 LFC progress report Addressing Substance Use Disorders 
recommendations. 
2. Alcohol-Related Deaths by County, 2021 
 
BG/rl/SL2 
 
 
  House Bill 460 – Page 5 
 
 
Attachment 1 
 
Sample of August 2023 LFC progress report Addressing Substance 
Use Disorders recommendations. 
 
The 2023 LFC progress report recommended several actions related to alcohol use disorders.  
The Department of Health should consider reporting to the Legislature about its plans, 
scope of responsibility, and timeline for the creation of the Office of Alcohol Prevention. 
 
The Human Services Department should consider: 
 Reporting to the Legislature and public annually about the number of patients 
receiving substance use treatment, the forms of evidence-based treatment they 
receive, and expenditures for these programs; 
 Moving forward with its proposed plan to create additional billing codes and 
differentials for evidence-based forms of psychotherapy; 
 Studying pilots contained within New Mexico’s and other state’s 1115 Medicaid 
waivers that address social determinants of health to determine the most effective 
models and services; 
 Ensuring that the MCO contracts for Turquoise Care require the MCOs to 
maintain an adequate Behavioral Health network and ensure that access to those 
providers is readily available; 
 Ensuring that the Medicaid incentive programs reward and sanction, as 
appropriate, the MCOs who perform well in delivery of SUD services; 
 Reporting back to the Legislature about the outcomes associated with Medicaid 
provider rate increases, including impact to the state’s number of behavioral 
health providers and access to patient care; 
 Reporting to the Legislature about the plans, scope of responsibility, and timeline 
for the BHSD coordinator role focused on alcohol use disorders; 
 Reporting to the Legislature about the plans, timeline, and outcomes of the 
statewide substance use treatment plan. 
The medical licensing boards should consider expanding existing continuing medical 
education requirements related to opioid use disorders to include treatment of alcohol use 
disorders for all providers.  House Bill 460 – Page 6 
 
 
Attachment 2 
 
Alcohol-Related Deaths by County, 2021 
 
Decedent's County of Residence 
Deaths per 
100,000 
Population,  
Age-adjusted 
Number 
of Deaths 
Population 
Estimate 
(years 
combined) 
McKinley 335.7 226 71,780 
Cibola 179.4 51 27,184 
Rio Arriba 176.6 75 40,179 
San Juan 169.3 199 121,237 
Socorro 156.2 25 16,346 
Mora 144.3 6 4,196 
Taos 118.6 41 34,623 
Sierra 115.1 18 11,523 
Colfax 108.8 14 12,369 
San Miguel 106.4 32 27,150 
Quay 102.7 9 8,709 
Luna 101.9 27 25,429 
Union 98.4 4 4,036 
Valencia 98 78 77,190 
Bernalillo 96.8 709 676,626 
Otero 94 68 68,549 
Torrance 91.8 16 15,041 
Guadalupe 91.2 5 4,439 
Chaves 87.8 60 64,454 
Sandoval 87.3 137 151,369 
Lincoln 84.5 20 20,557 
Grant 81.8 29 27,889 
Santa Fe 81.5 143 155,201 
Eddy 74.8 48 61,939 
Curry 66.4 31 49,230 
Lea 63.8 43 72,637 
Dona Ana 57.2 126 221,508 
Roosevelt 52.7 10 19,232 
Los Alamos 35.2 9 19,391 
NM Resident, County Unknown . 6 . 
Catron ** ** 3,731 
De Baca ** ** 1,685 
Harding ** ** 659 
Hidalgo ** ** 4,102 
Overall 	102.7 2,274 2,120,188 
Source: DOH IBIS