Trade licensing overview · automotive service technician
How automotive service technician licensing works — New Mexico
How this trade is regulated in New Mexico. none-in-most-states The framework below describes the national pathway most automotive service technicians in New Mexico follow.
Automotive service technicians are not licensed at the person level in most U.S. states; competence is typically demonstrated through ASE (National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence) certification. Federal EPA 609 certification is required for anyone who services motor-vehicle air-conditioning systems.
Automotive Service Technician wages in New Mexico · BLS OES A01 2024
Wages are state-level annual figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program (A01 2024). Specific automotive service technician earnings in New Mexico vary by metro area, employer type, union membership, and years of experience. Verify the current state and metro figures on the BLS OES site (bls.gov/oes).
What this trade actually looks like in New Mexico
Automotive technicians in New Mexico work in a small market where Albuquerque, Santa Fe, Las Cruces, and Rio Rancho hold most dealer service capacity. Pickup, 4WD, and diesel-pickup volume is high. Federal-government fleet work at Sandia, Los Alamos, Kirtland AFB, and White Sands adds fleet employer options. The desert climate drives heavy A/C and cooling-system work.
Where they work
Albuquerque and Rio Rancho hold the largest dealer base. Santa Fe, Las Cruces, Farmington, and Roswell are secondary hubs. National-laboratory civilian fleet support (Sandia in Albuquerque, Los Alamos), Kirtland AFB civilian fleet, White Sands civilian fleet, and tribal-government fleets add public-sector demand. Oil-and-gas fleet shops in the Permian Basin (Hobbs, Carlsbad area) add fleet demand.
Pay context
BLS OES reports the May 2024 New Mexico median annual wage for 49-3023 at roughly $47,280, near the U.S. median. Cost of living is below the U.S. average. Albuquerque and Santa Fe dealer techs commonly sit above the state median; Permian Basin fleet techs commonly sit above as well. Verify on the BLS OES New Mexico table. See https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nm.htm.
Training pathway
Central New Mexico Community College (CNM) in Albuquerque is the primary in-state on-ramp, with secondary programs at Santa Fe Community College, San Juan College in Farmington, and Doña Ana Community College in Las Cruces. Manufacturer-partnered tracks operate through select campuses. New Mexico does not require a state-issued person-level mechanic license. EPA 609 and ASE remain standard.
Considerations
If you want a quiet market with federal-fleet adjacency and warm-weather work, New Mexico fits. If you want union scale or top-quartile wages, look elsewhere. Tool investment is on the tech. Permian Basin fleet work pays distinctly above dealer service. Confirm shop tool-supply and OEM training availability.
New Mexico automotive service technician snapshot
| MSA | Employed | Median wage |
|---|---|---|
| Albuquerque, NM | 2,290 | $47,900 |
| Farmington, NM | 410 | $46,770 |
| Las Cruces, NM | 360 | $44,830 |
| Santa Fe, NM | 350 | $50,800 |
STATE LICENSE STATUS
In most states, automotive service technicians do not need a state-issued person-level license to work in a repair shop. A handful of states have technician-level rules that go beyond the federal EPA 609 requirement. Michigan requires state mechanic certification in specific repair categories through the Michigan Department of State (https://www.michigan.gov/sos/resources/businesses/mechanic-certification-information). Connecticut requires motor vehicle repairers to register with the Department of Motor Vehicles (https://portal.ct.gov/dmv). Hawaii administers a Motor Vehicle Repair Industry Board licensing program for repair dealers and mechanics (https://cca.hawaii.gov/pvl/boards/motorrepair/). Massachusetts regulates motor vehicle repair shops through the Division of Standards (https://www.mass.gov/orgs/division-of-standards). Most technicians in other states work under a licensed or registered shop rather than holding a personal state license. Verify the rule in the state of work.
ASE CERTIFICATIONS
ASE (National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence) is the voluntary industry-standard credential for U.S. automotive technicians (https://www.ase.org). The A Series covers the core automobile and light truck specialties: A1 Engine Repair, A2 Automatic Transmission/Transaxle, A3 Manual Drive Train and Axles, A4 Suspension and Steering, A5 Brakes, A6 Electrical/Electronic Systems, A7 Heating and Air Conditioning, A8 Engine Performance, and A9 Light Vehicle Diesel Engines (https://www.ase.org/tests/ase-certification-tests/automobile-light-truck). A technician who passes A1 through A8 earns ASE Master Automobile Technician status (https://www.ase.org). The L Series is advanced-level: L1 Advanced Engine Performance Specialist, L2 Electronic Diesel Engine Diagnosis Specialist, and L3 Light Duty Hybrid/Electric Vehicle Specialist (https://www.ase.org/tests/ase-certification-tests/advanced-level). ASE tests require two years of relevant hands-on work experience (or one year plus a two-year degree) and recertification every five years.
EPA 609 (MOTOR VEHICLE A/C)
Section 609 of the Clean Air Act requires that any technician who services or repairs motor vehicle air-conditioning systems for consideration must be trained and certified by an EPA-approved organization (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). The 609 credential is a one-time federal certification with no expiration, delivered by providers such as MACS (Mobile Air Climate Systems Association) and ASE. Employers must keep 609 certification records on file for shop operations that purchase refrigerant in containers smaller than 20 pounds (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs).
EV AND HYBRID SPECIALTY
High-voltage work on hybrid and battery-electric vehicles is not separately state-licensed but carries its own credentials. ASE L3 Light Duty Hybrid/Electric Vehicle Specialist is the cross-brand industry credential (https://www.ase.org/tests/ase-certification-tests/advanced-level). Dealership EV service generally requires manufacturer-specific training. Tesla delivers its technician curriculum through the Tesla START program (https://www.tesla.com/careers/search/job/tesla-start) and in-house certifications, and Rivian operates an internal service-technician training ladder (https://rivian.com/careers). OEM programs from Ford, GM, Toyota, Honda, and Stellantis include EV and hybrid modules within their branded technician tracks.
APPRENTICESHIP AND EDUCATION PATHWAY
The dominant entry pathway is a two-year community-college or technical-school program accredited by the ASE Education Foundation, the successor to NATEF (https://www.aseeducationfoundation.org). Manufacturer-partnered college programs let students alternate classroom terms with paid dealership rotations: Ford FACT/ASSET (https://fordfactschools.com), GM ASEP (https://www.gmasep.com), Toyota T-TEN (https://www.toyota.com/usa/t-ten), Honda PACT (https://www.hondapact.com), and Mopar CAP Local (https://www.fcacareersforstudents.com). DOL registered apprenticeships in automotive service are listed in the RAPIDS Apprenticeship Job Finder (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder); the Bureau of Labor Statistics describes typical entry routes, wages, and outlook under SOC 49-3023 (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/automotive-service-technicians-and-mechanics.htm).