HavenCostGuide

ROI verdict · 800 sqft · 5-year hold · mid-range finish

Should I finish my basement as a family / rec room in New Mexico?

Our 2026 ROI math for an 800 sqft basement at the mid-range finish tier, anchored to New Mexico's median home value ($305,000) and a 5-year hold before sale.

ROI verdict

BORDERLINE

Borderline — depends on use

Recoup sits in the middle. The math says yes only if you'll genuinely use the space — don't finish purely for resale.

Run your exact numbers

2026 math (default scenario)

Project cost (state-adjusted, mid)
$44,000
Range
$24,000 – $68,000

Combined return

Resale lift @ year 5
$15,708
Personal-use value (5 yrs)
$16,000
Total benefit
$31,708
Combined recoup
72%

Defaults: 800 sqft, mid-range finish, 5 years until sale, New Mexico median home value ($305,000). Change any input via the live calculator above.

Try a different scope in New Mexico

Same state, different use — instant verdict update.

Cost-per-sqft transparency

National baseline for a family / rec room basement finish, before applying New Mexico's cost multiplier (×1.00).

Basic finish (DIY-friendly, builder-grade)
$30/sqft
Mid-range finish (most homeowners)
$55/sqft
Premium finish (custom millwork, high-end fixtures)
$85/sqft
New Mexico's state cost multiplier
×1.00
Resale-lift recoup baseline (use-specific)
70%

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to finish a basement as a family / rec room in New Mexico?

For an 800 sqft basement at our mid-range finish tier, the 2026 state-adjusted cost in New Mexico is approximately $44,000 (range $24,000–$68,000). Cost includes labor, materials, permit fees, and a 10% contingency. New Mexico runs near the US national average.

Will I recoup the cost at resale?

Our 5-tier verdict for a family / rec room basement in New Mexico is BORDERLINE. The use-specific NAR Cost-vs-Value recoup baseline is 70%, then time-decayed by years-until-sale (we used 5 years for this estimate — change it with the live calculator). For New Mexico's $305,000 median home value, our over-improvement guardrail caps the appraisal lift at the higher of ~$24,400 or 85% of project cost.

What's the verdict logic?

Combined recoup % = (resale lift + personal-use value) ÷ project cost. ≥110% → STRONG YES, ≥85% → PROBABLY, ≥60% → BORDERLINE, ≥40% → PROBABLY NOT, below 40% → DON'T. Personal-use value is $/sqft/yr × sqft × years held (varies by use: rec room $4, suite+bath $9, rental unit $22).

Should I do a different scope instead?

In New Mexico, the recoup curve shifts notably by use. Rental-unit conversions recoup 85% (appraiser uses cap-rate underwriting); full-suite-with-bath 78%; bedroom suite 75%; rec room 70%; home office 63%. If you're forever-home + want utility, scope to your lifestyle. If you're <5 years from sale, lean toward a bath addition — it's the single biggest resale-lift item.

Methodology

Cost-per-sqft sourced from the 2026 NAR Remodeling Cost vs Value report, HomeAdvisor 2026 True Cost Guide, and Remodeling Magazine's basement remodel benchmark — includes labor, materials, permit fees, and a 10% contingency. State multipliers from HavenCostGuide's same-base cost index that powers our 550 state landing pages. Resale lift = use-specific recoup × time-decay (100% yr 1 → 5% beyond yr 12), capped by the higher of (85% × project cost) or (8% × home value) — the over-improvement guardrail. Personal-use value = $/sqft/yr × sqft × years held. Verdict thresholds applied to the combined recoup percentage.

For your actual decision, run the live calculator with your exact sqft, finish tier, home value, and years-until-sale. This leaf is a sane default — not a contractor-quote replacement.

Privacy Preferences

We and our partners share information on your use of this website to help improve your experience. For more information, or to opt out click the Do Not Sell My Information button below.