The timelines, deadlines, and rights that apply to YOUR child's IEP in New Mexico — in plain language, with the actual law attached. Verified citations, no legalese, no paywall on knowledge.
Federal law (IDEA) sets the floor; New Mexico sets some of its own clocks. These are the ones parents use most:
60 calendar days from receipt of parental consent to complete evaluation (NMAC 6.31.2.10). Eligibility meeting within 15 calendar days after testing is done.
15 school days. The public agency must respond to a parent request for evaluation within 15 school days.
30 calendar days after eligibility determination, the IEP must be developed.
Written complaint filed with NMPED. Must include specific allegations and supporting facts. — New Mexico Public Education Department, Office of Special Education. File violation must have occurred within 1 year of filing date. Resolved in 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Resolution session: Within 15 days of due process complaint filing. Hearing decision: 45 days after resolution period ends. New Mexico uses hearing officers for due process..
Tip: every one of these clocks starts with something in writing. Emails count. Phone calls don't.
New Mexico special-education entitlement statute. Establishes FAPE for children with disabilities ages 3-21. NM evaluation timeline: 60 CALENDAR DAYS from consent. NM has unique provisions for bilingual special-education service delivery (NMAC 6.31.2).
What this means for you: NM bilingual special-ed requirements: IEPs for English Learners must address language needs in addition to disability needs. NM 60 calendar days for evaluation. NM has a unique Native American Special Education statutory framework recognizing tribal sovereignty. Parents Reaching Out is the NM state PTI.
New Mexico IEP rule. Requires IEP within 30 calendar days of eligibility. NM-specific: (1) IEP team must include bilingual education representative when student is English Learner, (2) IEP for Native American students must address tribal coordination, and (3) transition planning by age 14.
What this means for you: NM transition planning at AGE 14, not federal 16. NM IEP team must include bilingual rep for ELs. NM tribal coordination required for Native American students. Parents Reaching Out is the state PTI.
New Mexico PTI providing free bilingual training, information, and support to families of children with disabilities. Strong bilingual (English/Spanish) services.
📞 (800) 524-5176
Office of Special Education
📞 (505) 827-1457
The official New Mexico complaint process — use it when the school isn't following the IEP or the law.
New Mexico protection & advocacy organization — legal advocacy for people with disabilities.
📞 (505) 256-3100
In New Mexico: 60 calendar days from receipt of parental consent to complete evaluation (NMAC 6.31.2.10). Eligibility meeting within 15 calendar days after testing is done.. (Context: federal law sets a default of 60 calendar days from parental consent — 34 CFR § 300.301(c) — and allows each state to set its own timeframe. New Mexico's rule is the one that applies.)
15 school days. The public agency must respond to a parent request for evaluation within 15 school days.
Written complaint filed with NMPED. Must include specific allegations and supporting facts. — New Mexico Public Education Department, Office of Special Education. Time limit: Violation must have occurred within 1 year of filing date. Resolution: 60 calendar days from receipt of complaint.
Yes. Parents Reaching Out (PRO) is New Mexico's federally funded Parent Training and Information center — free help for families — (800) 524-5176.
Ask Know Your Rights any New Mexico IEP question in plain language, free. And before the school year starts, run the free Fall IEP Audit — it grades last spring's IEP so you know exactly what to push on.
Ask Know Your Rights → Run the Free Fall AuditShort, practical, from a mom who's been in that chair — a script to use, a right to know, a deadline to watch. No spam, never sold, unsubscribe anytime.