Thank you for your interest in foster care and/or adoption.
Juliet Martinez
Phone: 800-432-2075
To foster or adopt, it is required that you have an approved home study done through the Children, Youth and Families Department of the State of New Mexico. A homestudy is a document that talks about your strengths as a family. This will include interviews with everyone living in your household.
Fostering is when you care for a child while their case worker decides if they can be safely reunited with their birth family. Many children are reunited, but many others cannot return to their birth families and need adoptive families.
You can qualify to become a foster family in New Mexico if you are:
Adopting is when a child permanently joins your family.
You can qualify to become an adoptive family if you:
The Children, Youth, and Families Department website has more information about adoption and foster care.
Fostering is free. In fact, you can receive financial assistance to help you to meet some of the children’s needs.
Adopting is free if you adopt a child in New Mexico and are licensed through the Children, Youth and Families Department. In fact, you can receive financial assistance for some of the other standard costs of finalizing your adoption. The following expenses may be reimbursed in part, or completely:
If you are licensed through a nonprofit or private agency, they may charge fees. If you adopt a child who is waiting in foster care in another state, your licensing agency may charge fees. However, when families adopt children who are in foster care and eligible for subsidy, the families may be eligible for reimbursement of some adoption-related costs, such as attorney fees and court fees, through the child’s state and/or federal options.
New Mexico Parent and Child Resources, Inc.
Phone: 505-858-3028
Fax: 505-268-4973
Address: 3500 Indian School Road NE, Albuquerque, NM 87106
There are approximately 2,300 children in foster care in New Mexico; 70 of these children are waiting for adoptive families.
Children become available for adoption for a number of reasons, including neglect or abuse. Children often experience conflicting emotions or grief over the loss of important people in their lives.
Some children may have brothers and sisters, and they may need families who can keep them with their siblings. Our children represent every race, age, and religion. All of these children have different talents, hopes, and dreams and all of them deserve a loving family.
New Mexico children currently live in foster homes, group homes, and treatment centers.