Review of Albuquerque, New Mexico


An honest review
Star Rating - 6/18/2014
I will try to give the most honest, semi-educated review here - very much unlike the others. I live in the middle of Albuquerque near UNM and downtown. My car has been left unlocked for the past six months with no problems (not recommended of course). Albuquerque is one of the poorest major cities I can think of, and there is an average amount of crime though it is almost always non-violent. The city is old and not "beautiful" like you might be used to in newer, wealthier cities or suburbs. Bars on windows - absolutely. There are plenty of gangs and such like most cities, and these are most prevalent in the southeastern part of the city and southern farming communities. Being from the St. Louis area, I was surprised to see people calling this portion of the city a "ghetto," since bikers ride through it regularly with no problems. Racial and cultural diversity is phenomenal, some of the best of any US city. Racism is much less of a problem than any other major city I've been in other than Seattle. Socially, the city is extremely accepting, and I've not experienced any cliqu-yness whatsoever. This city is so laid back that it's hard to imagine such a thing. There are ~400 miles of bike roads/trails throughout the city, and within 45 minutes you can be at 10,678ft overlooking the road grid at a temperature 20 degrees below that in the city. If you get away from buildings, you can easily see 60 or more miles to distant mountains. A two-hour drive will get you to the most scenic-natural places of any other major city outside of perhaps the Northwest. But culturally, this will not be your type of city if you cannot accept that there is no majority. The climate index is similar of that in coastal California (check it out!), though I do miss rain!

I have heard that many public schools are subpar, so certainly keep that in mind. Police are corrupt (major city for you). It is a bit smaller than most cities - perhaps less to do - and you can't come the suburbs of Whiteville, USA and expect the exact same culture. This isn't anything like Phoenix! I personally feel that this is a bit of a hidden gem, but that's for you to decide. I hope this gives a bit better perspective than the other reviews.

Best of luck!
Bryan | Albuquerque, NM
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2 Replies


I really enjoyed reading your review. I currently live in a suburb of Oklahoma City, but I've lived in Seattle, WA (15 years) and grew up in Phoenix, AZ. My husband and I are considering retiring in Albuquerque (approx. 10-15 years from now) because he loves the dry heat and I refuse to ever return to Phoenix. Your honest and positive review will be stored away in my memory for future decision-making.
Debra-Emily | Choctaw, OK | Report Abuse

I have to say, Bryan, that possibly coming from St. Louis, you might have the view you have of Albuquerque. As a life-long (50 something) resident (left a few of times for college and adventure), an educated, law-abiding, non-drug using female, (oh and being caucasian), this is the most unfriendly, oppressive, expensive, uneducated, filthy, hostile, low-life friendly place I have ever had the displeasure of experiencing. I grew up here in the 70's and 80's and it was OK - just OK. We moved here from Ohio and my older siblings, who had experienced living elsewhere, begged my parents to go back. They stayed for the climate. Coming from Ohio, this must have seemed like a lovely climate. Living here is a whole different story. If you are an avid hiker and biker, then this is a good place for that because the number of days all year, where one can have outdoor activities, is great. If you want to do other things such as walk around and experience a real downtown, experience a culture other than low-rider hispanic trash, shop and dine at local Mom-and-Pop stores (everything is huge box stores and huge chains), attend festivals, art shows, museums, art galleries, etc., etc., then this is NOT the place for you. There is one culture here and that is the hispanic culture. If you are white - you are treated with hostility. That was even the case growing up here. The dream job doesn't exist here, and the low-paying crap you will have to settle for will be given to a hispanic relative of the business owner. That's the reality. Housing is ridiculously expensive. Yes, it may seem cheap if you are moving here from NYC, Los Angeles, Seattle, or some other metropolitan place, but housing is NOT commensurate with the low wages. You can get a trashed-out fixer for about $200k that will need another $50k just to make it habitable. Schools are second to last in the nation. So, that said, if you are moving here with a family and education is important, choose anywhere else but Mississippi! I am about to graduate with my degree this coming spring, and we can't leave fast enough. I came back here and stayed because my family is here, but now not even that is enough. I want my son to have something to do to keep him away from the rampant drug and gang culture. My son is intelligent and the kids at his school pick on him relentlessly because he is smart and loves to read and travel. There are a couple of private schools here that have ok ratings, but the tuition is around $26k per year. If you are a physician or independently wealthy, that might be a good option, but for the other 99.9% - well, you guess. Don't move here! Don't retire here! Don't raise kids here! Don't come here thinking you can change things because the hispanics don't want change and you will get chased out. Don't come here thinking you will love the sunshine because you will curse it after a short time. It is not just HOT but you are at 5200 feet in elevation so it is the most intense heat you can ever feel. The winters are dry and cold. It rarely snows here (don't believe the 26" of snowfall) - it hasn't snowed that much in Albuquerque that much since I have lived here. Perhaps in the mountains East of the city, but not in Albuquerque. It is violent and filthy and people have no respect for property or each other. New beautification projects that have been placed around the city get covered with graffiti within 24 hours or destroyed. You cannot walk downtown unless you are a gun or knife-wielding gang member (or a drunk that doesn't know any better). So there it is, from someone who knows. I have been here over 50 years. Just sayin........... Ok, now in all fairness, let me tell a few things that I love about Albuquerque and New Mexico. I DO love the fall. It is gorgeous here with the fall colors and the smell of roasting chile. Jemez, Santa Fe, Taos, Ruidoso, and a select few other places, are absolutely lovely to visit just about any time of year. The sunsets are the most spectacular I have ever seen. The turquoise jewelry is to die for. I'm really struggling to find anything else worth mentioning.
Juniper | Albuquerque, NM | Report Abuse
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