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Baltimore, MD vs Albuquerque, NM: Eviction Risk Comparison

Baltimore, MD

Baltimore city · Pop 573,243
6.5
Elevated risk · 32.0% rent burden

Albuquerque, NM

Bernalillo County · Pop 562,218
5.8
Elevated risk · 31.4% rent burden

Side-by-side metrics

MetricBaltimoreAlbuquerque
Landlord risk score 6.5/10 5.8/10
Risk tier Elevated Elevated
Population 573,243 562,218
Rent burden 32.0% 31.4%
Median gross rent $1,331 $1,145
Renter share 52.5% 38.2%
Poverty rate 20.1% 16.0%
Eviction timeline 147 days 70 days
Avg eviction cost $6,237-$17,264 $3,024-$8,553
Rent-control risk 5.5/10 4.0/10
Housing court bias 6.0/10 5.0/10

✓ marks the more landlord-friendly value on each metric (lower rent burden, lower risk score, shorter timeline, cheaper process).

Which is better for landlords?

On overall landlord-risk score, Albuquerque, NM comes in at 5.8/10 versus 6.5/10 for Baltimore, MD. Lower scores indicate faster, cheaper, more landlord-favorable conditions. The headline gap is 0.7 points.

Score is one signal. The full operator-side picture also includes rent burden (the strongest predictor of eviction filings), the structural eviction-process speed of the state, the court culture at the relevant county venue, and tenant-organizing capacity. Use the metric table above for the granular comparison and follow the city links into the dedicated landlord-risk pages for each city to see the full sub-score breakdown and statute references.

For landlords evaluating both markets

If you are deciding between an acquisition in Baltimore and Albuquerque, the metric to anchor on is rent burden combined with eviction-process speed. A high-burden market with a fast eviction process can be operable at scale; a high-burden market with a slow process compresses NOI substantially during contested cases. The cost-and-timeline columns above price that risk for an uncontested case; contested cases run materially longer in tenant-protective jurisdictions.

The Maryland state overview and the New Mexico state overview cover the statutory frameworks (notice periods, filing fees, preemption posture, recent legislation) that shape both markets at the state level.

Acquiring or operating in either market?
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