Form 2290 (HVUT) in New Mexico
Form 2290 is the federal Heavy Vehicle Use Tax (HVUT) return for trucks 55,000 lbs taxable gross weight or higher. Filing produces the stamped Schedule 1 - proof of payment that state DMVs require for truck registration renewal.
Direct answer
New Mexico carriers operating trucks with taxable gross weight 55,000 lbs or higher must file IRS Form 2290 annually by August 31. The stamped Schedule 1 is required by New Mexico DMV at registration renewal - without it, registration won't process. Fast2290Filing is an IRS-authorized e-file provider; Schedule 1 returns within hours of submission.
Filing price
From $149
New Mexico carriers
4,600+
IFTA base
New Mexico
FMCSA region
FMCSA Western Service Center
Who needs Form 2290 in New Mexico
Form 2290 is the IRS Heavy Vehicle Use Tax return for any vehicle with a taxable gross weight of 55,000 lbs or more operating on US public highways. Tractor-trailer combinations, dump trucks, refuse trucks, and other heavy commercial units all hit this threshold. The tax is calculated on a sliding scale by weight category - 55,000 lb vehicles owe $100 baseline, and the schedule scales up to $550 for 75,000+ lb vehicles annually.
New Mexico's 4,600+ registered carriers include a substantial population of owner-operators and fleets running trucks at or above the 55,000 lb threshold - every for-hire interstate carrier with a tractor-trailer combination is filing 2290 annually. New Mexico runs a weight-distance tax (WDT) that applies to any commercial vehicle 26,001+ lbs operating on NM highways - pass-through traffic owes it just as much as NM-based carriers.
Why New Mexico DMV demands the stamped Schedule 1
When a New Mexico carrier renews vehicle registration through the state DMV (or apportioned plate registration through IRP), the DMV requires proof of HVUT payment for any vehicle 55,000 lbs+. That proof is the stamped Schedule 1 - the IRS-watermarked form returned after Form 2290 is filed and tax paid. Without Schedule 1, New Mexico won't process registration renewal.
This is the single most concrete reason New Mexico owner-operators don't skip 2290: even if every other federal filing is current, a missing 2290 means the truck can't get plates renewed. Most carriers file 2290 in early July (the tax year opens July 1) so they have Schedule 1 in hand well before the August 31 deadline and registration renewal cycles.
2290 mid-year filings for new New Mexico fleet additions
When a New Mexico carrier adds a vehicle 55,000 lbs+ mid-tax-year (after July), the new vehicle owes a prorated 2290 within 30 days of first use. The proration is calculated month-by-month based on the first month of use. A truck first used in October owes 9 months' worth of HVUT (October through June). Filing the prorated 2290 is the same Form 2290 process - Fast2290Filing handles single-vehicle and multi-vehicle prorated filings as routinely as the annual return.
New Mexico carriers running fleet expansion or replacement should track first-use dates carefully. A truck purchased and registered in October 2025 owes a prorated 2290 by November 30. Missing that 30-day window triggers IRS late-filing penalties (4.5% of tax owed monthly, plus interest). Tracking first-use date and filing within the window is one of the cleanest places to avoid penalties - the cost of e-filing is trivial compared to even a single month of late penalties on a $550 tax bill.
Suspended vehicles, exempt categories, and New Mexico edge cases
Vehicles operating fewer than 5,000 miles per year (7,500 for agricultural) are "suspended" - they file a Category W 2290 with $0 tax owed but still need to file the form to stay compliant. New Mexico farm vehicles, occasional-use heavy haulers, and seasonal operators frequently fall into Category W and skip the cash but still need the form on record.
Exempt categories include logging vehicles (with $0 tax in Category Q) and certain qualified blood collector vehicles. New Mexico carriers operating in those niches still file Form 2290 annually with the appropriate category code. The IRS uses 2290 filings as a national heavy-vehicle inventory regardless of tax owed - non-filers eventually get cross-referenced against state registration databases and audited.
What makes New Mexico different
New Mexico runs a weight-distance tax (WDT) that applies to any commercial vehicle 26,001+ lbs operating on NM highways - pass-through traffic owes it just as much as NM-based carriers. The Santa Teresa port-of-entry is a primary US-Mexico border crossing south of Las Cruces. NM Motor Transportation Police staff every major port of entry on I-10, I-25, and I-40 with full Level I inspection capability.
- NM Weight-Distance Tax (WDT) - commercial vehicles 26,001+ lbs operating on NM highways, quarterly reporting
- Applies to pass-through carriers on I-10, I-25, and I-40 - not just NM-based
- Santa Teresa port-of-entry + Las Cruces commercial inspection station are primary enforcement points
File your Form 2290 (HVUT)
Form 2290 (HVUT) for New Mexico carriers - From $149
Annual - IRS tax year runs July 1 to June 30; return due August 31. 100% acceptance guarantee. No hidden fees.
Running Form 2290 (HVUT) in New Mexico? You probably also need BOC-3 Filing in New Mexico. A BOC-3 designates a process agent in every US state so the FMCSA has a local point for service of legal process on your operating authority.
Other filings New Mexico carriers need
BOC-3 Filing
$75 flat (lifetime)
A BOC-3 designates a process agent in every US state so the FMCSA has a local point for service of legal process on your operating authority.
USDOT & MC Authority
From $299 (plus FMCSA $300 filing fee)
A USDOT number is the FMCSA safety identifier every commercial motor vehicle operator needs; MC operating authority is the for-hire interstate license that lets you legally haul freight for compensation.
UCR Registration
From $46 (Bracket A, 0–2 power units, 2026 schedule)
UCR is the annual federal fee that every interstate motor carrier, broker, and freight forwarder pays through their base state to fund safety and economic enforcement programs.
MCS-150 Update
$100 service fee ($200 once for lifetime updates)
The MCS-150 is FMCSA's biennial check-in form for every USDOT holder - fleet size, driver count, operational mileage, and safety contact information.
State Trucking Permits
Varies by program (NY HUT $19+, KY KYU quarterly, NM WDT, OR weight-mile, CT HUF)
State trucking permits cover any state-specific authorization, weight-distance tax, or commercial surcharge that stacks on top of federal UCR, MCS-150, and Form 2290 - required when operating commercial vehicles on a particular state's highways.
Driver Screening
From $39 (MVR-only); full pre-hire pack from $89
Driver screening combines the Motor Vehicle Record (MVR), CDLIS query, Pre-Employment Screening Program (PSP) report, and FMCSA Clearinghouse query - the four federally-required pre-hire checks for any commercial driver position.
Authority Reinstatement
$275 flat
Authority reinstatement reactivates a previously-revoked or inactive MC operating authority - required when FMCSA has revoked authority due to lapsed insurance, missed MCS-150, unpaid civil penalty, or out-of-service safety violations.
Form 2290 (HVUT) in neighboring states
Looking at New Mexico compliance more broadly? See the full New Mexico compliance guide.
Common questions, plainly answered.
Only vehicles with taxable gross weight of 55,000 lbs or more on public highways. Lighter vehicles aren't subject to HVUT. Fleet operators routinely have a mix of vehicles above and below the threshold and file 2290 only for the heavy ones.
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