Coverage · NM

LiDAR Data in New Mexico — Availability & Accuracy

ToposNow indexes 79 USGS 3DEP lidar collections covering New Mexico, flown 2007–2024, with vertical accuracy from 5 cm. 74 of them meet the 10 cm RMSEz survey-grade tiers (QL1/QL2).

Collections

79

Flight years

2007–2024

Best accuracy

5 cm RMSEz

Survey-grade (≤10 cm)

74

From public lidar to project-ready files

The 2.6 trillion lidar points published for New Mexico are free — but they arrive as raw tiles in national coordinate systems, weeks of GIS work from a design surface. ToposNow clips your exact site, reprojects to the coordinate system you work in, and delivers classified LAS/LAZ, Civil 3D-ready DXF surfaces, XYZ grids, GeoTIFF DEMs, or a print-ready contour map PDF — in minutes, priced per acre.

Every order starts with a free availability report: which collections cover your site, when they were flown, and their stated accuracy — before you pay anything.

New Mexico lidar — common questions

Is lidar data available for my site in New Mexico?

New Mexico has 79 published USGS 3DEP collections indexed by ToposNow, flown between 2007 and 2024. Coverage varies within the state — draw your exact site on the ToposNow map for a free availability report listing the collections, flight dates, and accuracy for your location.

How accurate is New Mexico lidar data?

The best collections covering New Mexico state 5 cm RMSEz vertical accuracy on open terrain; older collections state up to 10 cm. The free per-site report quotes the exact figure for every collection covering your site.

What formats can I download for a New Mexico site?

Classified LAS/LAZ point clouds, Civil 3D-ready DXF ground surfaces, XYZ grids, GeoTIFF DEMs, and print-ready PDF contour maps — reprojected to any EPSG coordinate system (for example your New Mexico State Plane zone) with vertical datum control. Delivery takes minutes after checkout.

Source: USGS 3D Elevation Program (3DEP) WESM metadata, indexed 2026-07-10. Counts include every published collection whose footprint intersects New Mexico. ToposNow deliverables are derived from published USGS lidar and are not a land survey.