New Mexico flag

Procedures

DREAMer scholarships in New Mexico — college financial aid without SSN

Scholarships and financial aid for DREAMer/DACA/undocumented students in New Mexico. Friendly universities, Tuition Equity, private programs, FAFSA alternatives.

DREAMer / DACA / Undocumented Scholarships in New Mexico

New Mexico at a glance

New Mexico is home to about 195,484 foreign-born residents (9.2% of the state’s 2,114,768 people) and 1,018,321 residents of Hispanic or Latino origin (48.2%), per the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (2023 5-year estimates). The procedures below apply to everyone in New Mexico regardless of immigration status unless noted.

If you’re a DACA, undocumented, or protected-status student, there are paths to finance college education in New Mexico WITHOUT needing SSN or federal status.

Private scholarships (no SSN required)

National DREAMer scholarships

Religious / community scholarships

  • National Association of Latino Independent Producers (NALIP) — journalism / film
  • National Latina/o Education Research Initiative (NLERI)
  • Latin GRAMMY Foundation — music
  • Hispanic churches — many have university funds

State financial aid in New Mexico

New Mexico Dream Act / state financial aid for undocumented students: verify with one of these organizations:

  • Higher Ed Immigration Portal — state-by-state laws and programs
  • Undocumented student associations at public universities in New Mexico
  • Admissions offices of public universities in New Mexico

DREAMer-friendly universities in New Mexico

Look for these indicators:

  • “Sanctuary Campus” — non-cooperation policy with ICE
  • DACA Resource Center or Undocumented Student Services
  • Specific counseling for undocumented students
  • Endowed scholarships for DREAMers (rich private universities)

Private universities frequently offer best deals to DACA/undocumented:

  • Pomona, Williams, Amherst, Princeton, Harvard, Yale — some need-blind for undocumented
  • Trinity, Tufts, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr — generous financial aid

Costs to consider

  • Tuition: in-state vs out-of-state is HUGE difference ($10K vs $40K/year typically)
  • Books and supplies: ~$1,200-$1,500/year
  • Housing: varies by city
  • Health insurance (sometimes required): varies

Cost reduction options

  1. Community college first (2 years) — much cheaper, then transfer to university
  2. In-state tuition if your state has Tuition Equity
  3. Live at home while studying
  4. Work with EAD (if you have DACA) — Federal Work-Study no, but on-campus jobs at many universities accept EAD
  5. Apply early — many scholarships have November-January deadlines

Resources by organization

  • UnitedWeDream — DACA resources + scholarships
  • Immigrants Rising — scholarships + entrepreneur training
  • Generation Hope — support to young student parents
  • CHIRLA, RAICES, NALEO — Latino organizations with college info
  • NACAC College Counselor for Undocumented Students (free)

Important (CRITICAL)

  • Your academic info is NOT shared with USCIS or ICE
  • FERPA protects educational records — only parents/guardians can see with permission
  • Don’t need to show immigration status to enroll in most university programs
  • If you have DACA: keep renewal current to not lose EAD

Last verified: 2026-05-25.

General procedural information for educational purposes. Not legal, tax, or immigration advice. Laws and fees change — verify with the issuing agency before taking action. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration attorney or other appropriate professional.

Frequently asked questions

Can I go to college in New Mexico being undocumented or DACA?
YES. Public and private universities in New Mexico accept DACA/undocumented students. Private universities frequently offer generous financial aid. Public universities in ‘Tuition Equity’ states (CA, TX, NY, IL, NJ, MD, NM, NE, WA, OR, KS, MN, CT, RI, FL, VA, CO, MA, …) offer in-state tuition.
Do I qualify for FAFSA or federal aid without SSN?
NO federal FAFSA (requires SSN or eligible status). But MANY states have alternative state FAFSA (California Dream Act Application, etc.), and private scholarships don’t require SSN.
Do universities in New Mexico ask immigration status on application?
PRIVATE universities generally do NOT ask status. Public universities in New Mexico may ask to determine in-state vs out-of-state tuition, but don’t share with immigration authorities.