Is There Asbestos in Your Albuquerque Home?
Homes and buildings built before 1980 are most at risk. Common locations include:
- Popcorn/textured ceilings (common in Albuquerque-area homes built 1960–1978)
- Floor tiles and tile adhesive (9" vinyl floor tiles are a major red flag)
- Pipe insulation and duct wrap in older HVAC systems
- Attic insulation, particularly vermiculite (gray, pebble-like material)
- Roof shingles and siding on pre-1980 constructions
- Drywall joint compound and textured paint
Asbestos Removal Costs in Albuquerque (2026)
Prices from licensed Albuquerque-area contractors. Ranges reflect project size and material type.
New Mexico & Albuquerque Asbestos Regulations
What the law requires before, during, and after removal work in Albuquerque.
Federal EPA Requirements
All asbestos removal projects must comply with the National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP). Contractors must provide written notification to the EPA before demolition or renovation of regulated facilities.
40 CFR Part 61 Subpart MNew Mexico Licensing (NMED)
New Mexico requires asbestos contractors and workers to be licensed through the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED), Air Quality Bureau; Construction Industries Division licenses contractors. License categories: Asbestos Abatement Contractor license (CID); accredited Worker, Supervisor, Inspector, Management Planner.
NMAC 20.11.20 (Air Pollution Control – Asbestos)OSHA Worker Safety
Workers must receive proper training and respiratory protection. Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is 0.1 fibers per cubic centimeter of air over an 8-hour period.
29 CFR 1926.1101Waste Disposal
Asbestos waste must be wetted, double-bagged in 6-mil poly bags, labeled, and disposed of at a NMED-permitted solid waste facility authorized to accept asbestos under federal NESHAP.
NMAC 20.9.2 (Solid Waste)Local Albuquerque Rules
The City of Albuquerque Environmental Health Department, Air Quality Division administers local asbestos NESHAP requirements under EPA delegation. Albuquerque requires its own Notice of Demolition or Renovation in addition to NMED requirements for projects within Bernalillo County.
Local agency notification requiredWhat the Removal Process Looks Like
A typical Albuquerque asbestos project from start to finish.
Initial Inspection & Testing
A certified inspector collects bulk samples and sends them to an accredited lab. Results come back in 24–72 hours. You receive a written report confirming which materials contain asbestos.
Contractor Selection & Permitting
For commercial projects, your contractor must notify New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) and file required paperwork before work begins (typically 10 working days lead time under federal NESHAP). Residential rules vary; reputable contractors follow the same protocol.
Containment Setup
Workers seal off the work area with 6-mil polyethylene sheeting, create a negative air pressure environment, and set up a decontamination unit. HVAC systems are disabled to prevent fiber spread.
Removal & Disposal
Materials are wetted before removal to suppress fibers, carefully removed, double-bagged, and transported to a permitted asbestos-receiving landfill. Workers wear full PPE including P100 respirators.
Clearance Air Testing
After removal, an independent industrial hygienist conducts final air testing. The area is not cleared for re-occupancy until fiber counts fall below 0.01 f/cc.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions from Albuquerque homeowners and property managers.