In New Mexico, the statute of limitations for product liability is 3 years. Enter the date the incident happened to estimate your exact filing deadline, then read how the clock starts and what can change it.
Product liability in New Mexico
3 years to file
Enter the date of the incident to estimate the filing deadline and see how long you have left.
A product-liability claim seeks compensation for injury caused by a defective or unreasonably dangerous product — a faulty airbag, a contaminated drug, a malfunctioning appliance, or an unsafe tool. Claims can rest on a manufacturing defect, a design defect, or a failure to warn.
The general limitation period in New Mexico for this kind of claim is 3 years. May be paused (tolled) while the claimant is a minor or legally incapacitated, or under the discovery rule until the injury is or should have been discovered. Miss it and a New Mexico court will almost certainly dismiss the case on a motion, regardless of how strong the underlying facts are — which is why the date matters as much as the merits.
The clock usually starts on the date of injury. The discovery rule frequently applies because some product harms — toxic exposure, slow-developing illness from a drug — surface long after use began. A statute of repose may separately bar claims a fixed number of years after the product was first sold, even if the injury is recent.
For a concrete example: A space heater purchased years ago shorts and starts a fire today. The injury clock starts now, but a statute of repose tied to the original sale date may still limit the claim. The calculator above applies the 3 years New Mexico window to your incident date, but the genuine accrual date can differ from the day the harm occurred, so treat the result as a planning estimate rather than a guarantee.
Repose limits and the discovery rule interact in ways that can be decisive: discovery can extend the deadline, but repose can cut it off entirely. Tolling for minors and incapacity applies. Multi-defendant supply chains may each have distinct deadlines.
Because each of these doctrines can move the deadline in either direction, two people with the same product liability facts can end up with very different real deadlines. A short consultation early on is the only reliable way to know which exceptions apply to you in New Mexico.
New Mexico’s 3 years window for product liability is longer than the national median of 2 years across all 51 jurisdictions we track. Ranked from the most time to the least, New Mexico sits at number 18 of 51 for this claim — roughly in the middle. For comparison, Rhode Island gives the most time (10 years) and Tennessee the least (1 year). Limitation periods are tied to where the claim arose, not where you live, so if your product liability facts touch more than one state, confirm which state’s law actually governs before you rely on the New Mexico number.
Preserve the product itself, its packaging, the receipt, and any recall notices — the physical evidence is often the case. Because repose periods can quietly expire, identify both the injury date and the product's sale date and act early.
See all New Mexico statute-of-limitations periods in one table →