New Mexico is a place where centuries-old adobe buildings stand beneath endless skies and ancient traditions live alongside experimental art and science. Known as the Land of Enchantment, the state offers a landscape shaped by volcanoes, mesas, and high desert plateaus. Santa Fe, the oldest state capital in the U.S., features historic sites like the 17th-century San Miguel Chapel and a walkable downtown filled with galleries and artisan markets. Its streets smell of piñon wood in winter, while in summer, the Santa Fe Opera draws crowds with performances staged in an open-air theater set against the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
In Taos, visitors can tour the Taos Pueblo, a UNESCO World Heritage site continuously inhabited for over 1,000 years. The multi-storied adobe homes are still lived in by members of the Taos community, offering a rare, firsthand view of Native American culture that predates the U.S. by centuries. Further south, Albuquerque balances history and modernity with its Route 66 roots, neon signage, and the annual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta, the largest hot air balloon event in the world. For nine days in October, the sky fills with hundreds of colorful balloons at sunrise, some shaped like cows, bees, and even pop culture icons.
New Mexico’s landscape is filled with surprises. White Sands National Park spans over 275 square miles of gypsum sand dunes that glow almost white, forming a dreamlike terrain unlike anywhere else. At Carlsbad Caverns, visitors descend into a subterranean world of stalactites, vast chambers, and evening bat flights from the cave entrance. Meanwhile, Bandelier National Monument preserves ancient cliff dwellings, carved into the soft volcanic rock by Ancestral Puebloans more than 700 years ago.