A new New York Times analysis of fresh U.S. Census Bureau estimates shows that net international immigration fell in every metro area in America in 2025, and New Mexico was no exception.
The national story was clear: after years of mass migration and border chaos, immigration numbers dropped sharply across the country as restrictions that began late in the Biden administration intensified under President Donald Trump. The Times reported that every metro area in the United States experienced lower immigration rates during the year leading up to July 2025 than in the previous year, with many areas seeing declines of more than 50 percent.
For New Mexico, the map tells a striking story. Cross-referencing the Times graphic with a county map of New Mexico shows that most of the state’s identifiable metro and micropolitan areas were in the darker category — meaning net international immigration fell by more than 50 percent.
Based on that graphic, the New Mexico counties or county-based areas that appear to fall into the “fell more than 50%” category include much of the state, particularly across the south, west, and central corridor. That appears to include San Juan, McKinley, Bernalillo, Sandoval, Valencia, Torrance, Doña Ana, Otero, Chaves, Eddy, Roosevelt, Curry, Luna, Grant, Hidalgo, Lea, and likely several other county-based areas shown in orange on the map.
By contrast, the lighter yellow category — meaning immigration still fell, but by less than 50 percent — appears to show only a small pocket in north-central New Mexico, most clearly aligning with Santa Fe County on the cross-reference.
A few areas in the New Mexico graphic appear unshaded or are not clearly distinguishable on the Times image, meaning they cannot be confidently assigned to either category from the map alone. But the broad takeaway is unmistakable: New Mexico saw a substantial drop in international immigration across nearly all of its visible metro and micropolitan regions, and in most of them the decline appears to have exceeded 50 percent.
That is a major change from the previous few years, when border states and nearby regions were absorbing much larger numbers of foreign arrivals.
Supporters of stricter immigration enforcement will likely view the numbers as evidence that stronger border controls and tougher federal policy are having the intended effect. After years of record illegal immigration, the sharp decline suggests the federal government is finally regaining some control over the border and over who enters the country.
That does not mean legal immigration is bad. Far from it. A strong, orderly, merit-based legal immigration system has long benefited the United States. But the 2025 numbers suggest that the era of uncontrolled mass inflows of illegal migrants is finally slowing.
The Times noted that some demographers worry lower immigration could reduce population growth, especially in large cities and older rural counties. But there is another side to that equation: rapid immigration surges also strain schools, hospitals, housing markets, law enforcement, and taxpayer-funded services.
For New Mexico, the new map suggests that the biggest immigration slowdown was not limited to one corner of the state. It was widespread.
In short, the New York Times graphic shows that international immigration fell across virtually all visible parts of New Mexico in 2025 — and in most of those areas, it appears to have fallen by more than half. After years of border disorder, that is a dramatic reversal.

Cool…we can go back to carrying one weapon in the car when going to the city…or should we ?
I do not go to Albuquerque anymore. Rio Rancho is as “city” as I get.
Work on the wall is progressing near Columbus.
Thank you, President Trump.
According to my sources, Luna County just sustained an increase of camouflaged dressed people, who for unknown reasons, ran from a white with green stripped vehicle yesterday, March 27th 2026. The operators of those green diagonally striped vehicles, were dressed in darker green clothing and had what appeared to be badges…and guns.
They ran about 12 miles North of the USA-MEXICO border in a random fashion. All were on the shorter side, 5-09 to 5-05″ tall and appeared to be well tanned from what little skin tone could be deciphered.
The camouflaged people, apparently had crappy military tactics and must have forgotten, or lost their Adobe style arms and ammunition.
It is unknown as of press time why camouflaged people attempted to disperse like they did in daylight.
It is not confirmed if every camouflaged person was apprehended as of this press release… nor hiwn many camouflaged people were apprehened…as in this press release because no one wants to admit any camouflaged person escaped, let alone admit military dressed people are roaming in Luna County.
Yeah, just about had a belly full of Santa Fe. Just retired last Dec. Anybody want to buy a house in Quay county?? L.O.L.!!!
Some people are worried that reduced immigration might lead to a shrinking population (apparently in big blue metro areas).
Well, the answer is pretty clear… Start having babies!
Less people in “Blue” areas the fewer socialists in government. We need a disease that only kills brown and black people’