Local pros in Santa Fe, NM

Santa Fe County, New Mexico. Population 89,008.

Updated what's new
Santa Fe CountyFIPS 357050089,008 residents

Top verified pros in Santa Fe, NM

8 gold-tier pros (confidence score 80+ — full NAP, license, and multi-source coverage). Ranked by ProFix data-confidence: complete licensed contact details and multi-source public-record coverage; ProFix verifies state licenses where available; never by payment.

  1. #1Brownlow, David J
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  2. #2Brownlow, David J
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  3. #3Gcbendito 4 Llc
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  4. #4Gwp Investments Inc
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  5. #5Hutton Broadcasting Llc
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  6. #6New Mexico, State OF
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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  7. #7Northern New Mexico Radio Foundation
    Foundation Repair Contractors
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  8. #8Santa Fe, County of
    Water/Fire/Mold Restoration
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Trade breakdown

  • Water/Fire/Mold Restoration: 7
  • Foundation Repair Contractors: 1

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Data-derived local notes

Hiring context for Santa Fe, NM

Santa Fe is a midsize-city page in the top-2,000 launched-state city set, ranked #408 by the population value in all-cities.json. The city record places it in Santa Fe County; the pro counts below are exact city-name matches from the NM gold shard.

  • Population in seed: 89,008.
  • Matched pro records: 8.
  • 24/7 emergency flag count: 0.
  • Top matched trade buckets: Water/Fire/Mold Restoration (7) and Foundation Repair Contractors (1).
  • Santa Fe County does not meet the generated county-hub link threshold in this seed.

Trade counts from the shard

  • Water/Fire/Mold Restoration: 7
  • Foundation Repair Contractors: 1

0 records carry the 24/7 emergency flag.

Seasonal scheduling notes

New Mexico's seasonal seed describes the climate zone as "High desert, mountains, monsoon flash-flood corridors, wildfire smoke, strong sun, and elevation-driven freezes". For Santa Fe, the highlighted windows below are selected from hvac service / install, roofing, and exterior paint / siding because those projects match either the city's top trade counts or the highest-urgency state calendar entries.

  • HVAC service / install
    Ideal: January, February, March, April, October, November · High urgency
  • Roofing
    Ideal: February, March, April, October, November · High urgency
  • Exterior paint / siding
    Ideal: February, March, April, October, November · Medium urgency
View state seasonal calendar

Climate resilience context

Santa Fe uses the New Mexico state resilience seed. The scenarios linked to this city page are flooding, freezes and winter cold snaps, extreme heat, and wildfire and smoke; they are state-level hazards, not city incident claims.

  • flooding

    New Mexico flood risk is usually flash flooding from monsoon storms, arroyo flow, burn scars, slot canyons, and hard soils that shed water quickly.

  • freezes and winter cold snaps

    New Mexico freezes vary sharply by elevation, catching mountain cabins, high-desert homes, irrigation lines, wells, and poorly insulated exterior-wall pipes.

  • extreme heat

    New Mexico heat domes can push high-desert homes above design assumptions, stressing evaporative coolers, refrigerant systems, roof surfaces, and vulnerable residents.

  • wildfire and smoke

    New Mexico wildfire risk comes from dry forests, piñon-juniper, grasslands, canyon winds, and monsoon debris flows after burn scars form.

View resilience guide

Generated from all-cities, all-counties, state pro shards, state code updates, seasonal/climate seeds, emergency seeds, and licensing/permit-contact seeds.

Emergency