Lost Car Title in New Mexico: How to Replace It
Replacing a lost car title in New Mexico costs $5, filed with MVD-10901, Application for Duplicate Certificate of Title (online (mvdonline.com), mail, in-person). That's the entire DIY cost — form-prep services charge $150+ for the same paperwork.
Compiled from available sources — verify with the New Mexico titling agency · 2026-06-12 · Reviewed by the CarWhere Vehicle Data Team
State fee
$5
Form
MVD-10901, Application for Duplicate Certificate of Title
How to file
online (mvdonline.com) · mail · in-person
Processing time
Varies
Official source: www.mvd.newmexico.gov
Buying or selling while the title's being replaced?
A missing title is the moment to check the vehicle itself. The $9.99 Full VIN Report shows the federal record — recalls, owner complaints, service bulletins — plus the original window sticker where available, before any money moves. Run the report →
FAQ
How much does a duplicate car title cost in New Mexico?
$5, paid to the state with MVD-10901, Application for Duplicate Certificate of Title. Verify the current fee with the New Mexico titling agency — fees change. Form-prep services charge $150+ for this same paperwork; the state fee is all that's required.
How long does a replacement title take in New Mexico?
Processing times vary; New Mexico's titling agency publishes current estimates. Filing is available online (mvdonline.com), mail, in-person.
Can I sell a car in New Mexico while the title is lost?
Generally no — you need the duplicate in hand first, and buyers should insist on it. If you're the buyer in this situation, run the VIN before money moves: the $9.99 CarWhere Full VIN Report shows the federal record (recalls, complaints, service bulletins) and the original window sticker where available, so you know what you're buying while the paperwork catches up.
Do I need a service to replace a lost title?
No. Replacing a lost title is a standard DMV transaction costing $5 that owners complete directly. Paid services charge $150+ to pre-fill the same public form — useful only if your situation is genuinely complicated (no proof of ownership, out-of-state liens, deceased owner).
Sources: fee, form, and timeline from the New Mexico titling agency (linked above) where available — items without an official link should be verified directly. Fees change by statute — always confirm against the official page before filing. Cite this page: CarWhere, "Lost Car Title in New Mexico," carwhere.com/titles/lost-title/new-mexico, verified 2026-06-12.