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How to become a certified crane operator in New Mexico. NCCCO certification required. State license required. Total initial fees: $150-$250. Verified 2026-03-21. Data verified 2026-03-21. Source: LicenseMap (getlicensemap.com).
Crane Operator — CCO/NCCCO
Governing Authority
New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department — Crane Operators Safety Program
Official website →Yes
State License Required
Required
NCCCO Required
Required
Practical Exam
Required
OSHA Compliance
Varies
CE Hours
$150-$250
Total Initial Fees
Education & Training Requirements
VerifiedMinimum Education
High school diploma or GED (recommended but not universally mandated; NCCCO requires minimum age 18)
Training Program
Required
Crane Types Covered
Construction, demolition, and excavation cranes; classified as Class I, Class II, and Class III
Approved Programs
NCCCO-accredited training programs, NCCER crane operator training, CIC certification, union apprenticeship programs
Crane operator education requirements typically include a high school diploma or GED, followed by completion of an approved crane operator training program. Training covers crane setup, load charts, rigging practices, signaling, site conditions, and OSHA safety standards. Many operators gain experience through union apprenticeship programs (IUOE, Operating Engineers) or employer-provided training. NCCCO, NCCER, and other accredited organizations offer certification exams upon completion of training.
NCCCO Certification & OSHA Requirements
VerifiedNCCCO Certification Required
National Commission for the Certification of Crane Operators
State License
Required
OSHA Compliance
Required
Practical Exam
Required
Certification Details
New Mexico requires a state crane operator license under the Crane Operators Safety Program Act. Licenses classified as Class I, II, and III with varying experience requirements. Must pass state Law & Safety Examination. All licenses valid for 2 years.
The NCCCO (National Commission for the Certification of Crane Operators) is the most widely recognized crane operator certification body in the United States. Under OSHA's crane operator certification rule (29 CFR 1926.1427), all crane operators must be certified by an accredited testing organization. NCCCO, NCCER (National Center for Construction Education and Research), and OECP (Operating Engineers Certification Program) are the primary accredited certifiers. Certification is crane-type specific, covering mobile cranes, tower cranes, and overhead cranes.
Examination Requirements
VerifiedNCCCO Written Examination Required
National Certification Examination
Exam Topics
Core crane knowledge, load charts, rigging practices, site conditions, crane setup, signaling, OSHA safety standards
Passing Score
Scaled score determined by NCCCO; pass both written and practical exams
Practical Exam Required
Skills/Practical Examination
The NCCCO certification exam consists of two parts: a written examination covering core crane knowledge (load charts, rigging, site conditions, crane setup, signaling, and OSHA safety standards) and a practical examination demonstrating hands-on crane operation skills. The written exam is crane-type specific, with separate exams for mobile crane (lattice boom and telescopic boom), tower crane, and overhead crane specialties. Some states require both written and practical components, while others accept the written exam alone from NCCCO or equivalent accredited certifiers.
State Licensing Requirements
VerifiedState License Required
State-specific licensing in addition to OSHA certification
State License Title
Crane Operator License
Additional Notes
New Mexico requires a state crane operator license for all operators performing construction, demolition, or excavation work.
Under OSHA's crane operator certification rule (29 CFR 1926.1427), all crane operators on construction sites must be certified by an accredited testing organization such as NCCCO, NCCER, or OECP. About 30 states have additional state-specific licensing or registration requirements beyond federal OSHA certification. States without additional requirements rely on employer verification of OSHA-compliant certification.
Crane Types & Work Settings
VerifiedCrane Types
Construction, demolition, and excavation cranes; classified as Class I, Class II, and Class III
Work Settings
Commercial construction, industrial facilities, infrastructure projects, bridge construction, power plants, demolition
Capacity Restrictions
Certification is crane-type specific; operators must hold valid certification for each crane type operated
Supervision Requirements
NM Regulation and Licensing Department administers the Crane Operators Safety Program with enforcement through inspections and compliance actions
Certified crane operators are qualified to operate specific types of cranes based on their certification endorsements. Mobile cranes (lattice boom and telescopic boom), tower cranes, and overhead cranes each require separate certification. Operators work in commercial construction, industrial facilities, infrastructure projects, power plants, bridge construction, and other settings requiring heavy lifting. OSHA requires that crane operators be certified for each specific crane type they operate, and load charts must be followed for all lifts.
| Fee | Amount |
|---|---|
Application Fee Approximate application fee; varies by class | $50 |
Certification Fee State exam and licensing fees; varies by class | $100-$200 |
Recertification Fee | $50-$100 |
Total Initial Fees Includes state licensing fees; NCCCO exam fees are separate | $150-$250 |
Recertification & CE Requirements
Verified2 years
Recertification Period
—
CE Hours Required
$50-$100
Recertification Fee
CE Details
No formal CE hours; renewal requires valid credentials and fees; late fee of $5/month for late renewal; reinstatement fee of $100 for lapsed licenses
Regulatory Board
Crane operator certifications typically must be renewed every 5 years. NCCCO recertification requires completion of continuing education hours and either retesting or meeting the recertification by CEC (Continuing Education Credits) pathway. CE topics include crane safety, load management, rigging practices, signaling, OSHA regulatory updates, and equipment-specific training. Massachusetts is unique in requiring biennial renewal of its Hoisting Engineer License.
Out-of-State Reciprocity
VerifiedEndorsement Available
Yes
Comity Available
Yes
Reciprocity Requirements
Because NCCCO certification is nationally recognized and accredited by ANSI/NCCA, crane operators with valid NCCCO certification can generally work across state lines. However, states with additional licensing requirements may require separate state registration or licensing even with valid NCCCO certification. Operators should verify state-specific requirements before beginning work in a new jurisdiction.
New Mexico has its own tiered licensing system (Class I, II, III) with a state-specific Law & Safety Examination and notarized employer experience verification requirements.
New Mexico requires a state crane operator license for all operators performing construction, demolition, or excavation work.
Licenses are classified as Class I, Class II, and Class III.
Class I and II require 36 months experience with 500 hours in the last 3 years.
Class III has no experience or practical exam requirement.
Must pass an approved Law & Safety Examination covering the NM Crane Operators Safety Program Act.
Notarized employer documentation verifying experience is required.
All licenses valid for 2 years; late renewal incurs $5/month penalty.
There is no interstate compact for crane operators. OSHA requires certification by a nationally accredited organization (e.g., NCCCO) for crane operators in construction.
Explore requirements for other professional licenses in New Mexico.
How this state compares to 50 others for this profession
Timeline
#1 of 51
Salary
#39 of 51
Cost
#3 of 51
Processing
#1 of 51
Based on May 2024 Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS data for Crane and Tower Operators (SOC 53-7021)
Entry Level
$50,720
25th percentile
Median
$60,950
-8% vs. national avg ($66,370)Experienced
$69,420
75th percentile
Wage Distribution (Annual)
110 employed in this state
Source: BLS OEWS – Crane and Tower Operators (May 2024)
National employment projections for 2024-2034
Projected Growth
+10.1%
High DemandNew Jobs
+4,600
over 10 years
Annual Openings
5,200
per year (avg.)
45,300 currently employed nationwide (2024)
Source: BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034 (September 2025)
Government fees and exam costs to obtain your initial license
Note: These are government licensing fees only. Education/training program costs (tuition, books, etc.) are not included as they vary widely by institution.
Estimated total: 16–42 weeks
Timeline estimated from licensing requirements on this page.
2 to 8 weeks after complete application submission
Estimated processing time
Study guides for NCCCO crane operator certification exams.
Browse Study Guides on Amazon →As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
Current program information
Accessed 2026-03-09
Current FAQ information
Accessed 2026-03-09
2025-2026 certification information
Accessed 2026-03-09
Current federal OSHA standard
Accessed 2026-03-09
New Mexico requires state licensing for crane operators. NCCCO certification is required. All crane operations must comply with OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1427. Certification is managed through New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department — Crane Operators Safety Program.
Requirements vary by state. Always verify current requirements with your state licensing authority and OSHA.