Best Things to Do in New Mexico (2026 Guide)
New Mexico offers one of the most culturally layered experiences in the American Southwest — Santa Fe's Indigenous and Spanish colonial heritage, Albuquerque's Old Town and natural history, Taos Pueblo's thousand-year continuity, and Meow Wolf's genuinely strange artistic invention. The landscape ranges from high desert to mountain forest, threaded by the Rio Grande.
Find Things to Do →The unmissable in New Mexico
These are the staple sights — don't leave New Mexico without seeing them.
Destinations in New Mexico
New Mexico sits at the intersection of three distinct cultural traditions — Indigenous Pueblo peoples, Spanish colonial settlers, and Anglo-American frontier history — and that layering gives the state a character unlike any other in the US. Santa Fe, at 7,000 feet, is one of the oldest capital cities in North America and has the most intact Spanish colonial architecture on the continent. Albuquerque is the state’s largest city and commercial centre, with the Sandia Mountains rising directly east. Taos occupies a high valley and has attracted artists since Georgia O’Keeffe’s era, drawing on the same landscape that has sustained Taos Pueblo continuously for over a thousand years.
Best Time to Visit New Mexico
April through June and September through October offer ideal conditions — temperatures are moderate (18-28°C in Santa Fe), wildflower season peaks in May, and the autumn aspens at higher elevations turn gold in late September. July and August bring the monsoon season, with dramatic afternoon thunderstorms that cool the high desert and are visually spectacular. Summer also brings peak crowds and the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta (first full week of October), the largest balloon festival in the world. Winters in Santa Fe and Taos are cold, with skiing at Taos Ski Valley and Ski Santa Fe from December through March.
Getting Around
New Mexico requires a car. Albuquerque International Sunport (ABQ) is the main entry point, with domestic connections. Santa Fe is 65 miles north of Albuquerque (1 hour by car); Taos is another 70 miles north of Santa Fe (1.5 hours). The Rail Runner Express commuter train connects Albuquerque to Santa Fe and is a scenic, practical option for the Santa Fe corridor. The High Road to Taos — via Chimayo, Truchas, and Las Trampas — takes about 2.5 hours versus the more direct Low Road at 1.5 hours, but offers the more culturally rich experience.
Santa Fe
The state capital centres on the Plaza, with the Palace of the Governors (the oldest continuously occupied public building in the US, now a history museum) on its north side and Indigenous artists selling jewellery and pottery beneath the portal. Canyon Road is the densest concentration of art galleries in the American Southwest — about 100 galleries in a half-mile walk. The Museum of International Folk Art on Museum Hill houses one of the world’s largest collections of folk art, including an extraordinary survey of New Mexican tinwork, santos, and retablos. Meow Wolf’s House of Eternal Return — a 20,000-square-foot immersive art installation built inside a converted bowling alley — is one of the most genuinely original artistic environments in the US, with interconnected rooms that mix narrative, visual art, and environmental installation. Loretto Chapel contains the famous Miraculous Staircase, a helical wooden structure built in the 1870s with no visible means of support and no nails.
Taos and the North
Taos Pueblo is the most important site in northern New Mexico — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and National Historic Landmark, continuously inhabited for over 1,000 years, where some residents still live without electricity or running water in the original multi-storey adobe structures. Guided tours with Pueblo members run daily except during ceremonial closures (check in advance). The Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, 10 miles west of Taos, spans the gorge at 565 feet above the river — one of the highest bridges in the US, with walkways providing genuinely vertiginous views. The High Road to Taos passes through Chimayo, where El Santuario de Chimayo is one of the most important Catholic pilgrimage sites in the US, receiving over 300,000 visitors during Holy Week each spring. The Sandia Peak Tramway in Albuquerque offers the longest aerial tramway in the US — 2.7 miles to the summit at 10,378 feet, with panoramic views of the Rio Grande Valley.
Albuquerque
Old Town Albuquerque, established in 1706, preserves the original Spanish colonial plaza and San Felipe de Neri Church. The adjacent streets have galleries, turquoise jewellery shops, and the American International Rattlesnake Museum — an unlikely institution with the world’s largest collection of live rattlesnake species. The New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science has strong dinosaur and geology collections suited to all ages. The KiMo Theatre, built in 1927, is one of the finest examples of Pueblo Deco architecture in the US — an extraordinary fusion of Art Deco and Pueblo Revival styles, restored and still operating as a live performance venue. Breaking Bad fans will find the Albuquerque locations preserved as the show left them, with the Breaking Bad Store offering the RV tour and memorabilia.
Food & Drink
New Mexico food is distinct from Tex-Mex and from Arizona Mexican — it centres on the Hatch green chile and the red dried chile from the Chimayo valley, both of which appear in virtually every dish. “Red or green?” is the standard restaurant question about which chile sauce you want; “Christmas” means both. Sopapillas (puffy fried bread with honey) are the standard New Mexico bread. In Santa Fe: The Shed (red chile enchiladas since 1953) and Cafe Pasqual’s are the essential local institutions. The Santa Fe Farmers Market on Tuesday and Saturday mornings is exceptional for local chile products, blue corn, and heritage vegetables.
Practical Tips
- Altitude acclimatisation: Santa Fe is at 7,000 feet, Taos at 6,970 feet. Expect reduced alcohol tolerance, possible headaches, and increased sun sensitivity for the first day or two. Drink extra water.
- Taos Pueblo closes for ceremonial days throughout the year — check the Pueblo’s website (taospueblo.com) before making it the focus of a day trip.
- Meow Wolf is popular and tickets should be booked in advance, especially on weekends. The experience takes 2-3 hours minimum.
- Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta (first full week of October): book accommodation 6+ months ahead. Morning Mass Ascension launches 500+ balloons simultaneously and is genuinely extraordinary.
- The High Road to Taos is unpaved in sections and needs a standard vehicle but not 4WD. Allow a full day for Albuquerque → High Road → Taos.
Frequently asked questions
Is Santa Fe or Albuquerque better to visit?
Different purposes. Santa Fe has more cultural depth — the museums, galleries, and Pueblo architecture are exceptional, and it's a better base for reaching Taos Pueblo and Chimayo. Albuquerque has the airport, is more affordable, and has the Sandia Mountains and Old Town. Most visitors fly into Albuquerque and spend time in both cities.
What is Meow Wolf?
Meow Wolf is a Santa Fe-based arts collective that opened the House of Eternal Return in 2016 — an immersive art installation inside a converted bowling alley, where 135 artists created interconnected fantastical rooms around a loose narrative about a missing family. It became one of the most-visited arts institutions in New Mexico and spawned additional Meow Wolf locations in Denver and Las Vegas.