What's Going Around in Santa Fe?
Fast local read for Santa Fe, powered by New Mexico surveillance plus city context lower on the page — May 2026
Fast answer
What matters first in Santa Fe
For a quick "what illness, virus, or sickness is going around in Santa Fe?" check, start with rsv. It is high and down from 4.0 per 100k last week in the best public signal we have for the Santa Fe area. This page gives the broad local read first, then lets you open the direct local answer pages that matter most.
Strongest current signal
RSV
3.2 per 100K
↓ Decreasing — down from 4.0 per 100K last week
Flu
Low, 1.6% ILI, down from 2.1% last week
RSV
High, 3.2 per 100K, down from 4.0 per 100K last week
COVID-19
Moderate, 1.0 per 100K, down from 1.1 per 100K last week
Measles
12 cases in 2026
Spread signal
New Mexico statewide surveillance
City context
CDC PLACES 2022
Best use
Fast local read before deeper charts
1.6% ILI
↓ Decreasing — down from 2.1% last week
↓ Declining in New Mexico
3.2 per 100K
↓ Decreasing — down from 4.0 per 100K last week
↓ Declining in New Mexico
1.0 per 100K
↓ Decreasing — down from 1.1 per 100K last week
↓ Declining in New Mexico
12 cases in 2026
94.8% in New Mexico
Prevention context, not a weekly spread signal.
CDC Recommendations at This Level
RSV activity is elevated — extra care for vulnerable groups
- • Limit infants' exposure to crowds and sick contacts
- • Anyone with cold symptoms should avoid close contact with babies and elderly family members
- • Watch infants closely for breathing difficulties — RSV can get serious quickly in babies
- • Adults 60+ with chronic lung or heart disease should take extra precautions
- • Call your pediatrician if your baby is breathing rapidly, wheezing, or not feeding well
This is general public health guidance based on CDC recommendations — not personal medical advice. Talk to your healthcare provider about what's right for you and your family.
Useful questions
Questions that make the Santa Fe page easier to use
These are the pages that explain scope, sharing, and page choice without making the main city answer any noisier.
Trust Question
Why Does My City Page Use State Data?
A trust page that explains the scope of city pages clearly and routes people into the best city, state, and travel surfaces.
Sharing Question
What Page Should I Send Someone Who Asks What’s Going Around?
A utility page for sharing the right LHS link the first time instead of sending a random dashboard or article.
Routing Question
Should I Check the City or State Page First?
A product-utility page that reduces search friction and helps users choose the right level of page on the first try.
Source and context
Where this city page data comes from
Updated
May 29, 2026
Coverage
State-level disease surveillance plus slower city-level community context
Best For
Quick local infectious-disease orientation before deeper chart review
Use the top half of this page for what is spreading now in the Santa Fe area. The lower community-context section is older CDC PLACES data about respiratory burden and access to care, included to explain possible impact rather than current spread.
Secondary context
Community context that can change impact
This does not tell you what is spreading this week. Because rsv is the main infectious signal right now, this context helps explain who could feel a respiratory wave harder in Santa Fe. The measures below use CDC PLACES city estimates from 2022.
Respiratory burden
9.4%
Asthma
Higher asthma prevalence can mean more people feel respiratory surges harder.
Chronic lung disease
4.4%
COPD
COPD can raise the stakes when respiratory infections rise, especially for older adults.
Access to care
15.8%
Uninsured
Higher uninsured rates can make prevention, testing, and treatment harder to reach quickly.
Preventive care reach
65.9%
Annual Checkup
Routine checkups make vaccination, follow-up, and early care easier when illness is spreading.
See the full city context dataset 14 more measures
Chronic Conditions
Mental Health
Health Behaviors
Prevention & Access
More Cities in New Mexico
Compare this snapshot with other major cities in New Mexico.
Frequently Asked Questions
What illnesses are going around in Santa Fe, New Mexico right now?
Based on the best current public-health signal for the Santa Fe area, flu activity in New Mexico is low, RSV is high, COVID-19 is moderate, and New Mexico has reported 12 measles cases in 2026. Click any topic above for the detailed page that matches the actual question.
Is the flu bad in Santa Fe right now?
Flu activity in New Mexico (which includes Santa Fe) is currently low with 1.6% ILI. The trend is declining, which is good news. See the New Mexico flu page for weekly trend charts.
Why does this page include city-level community context?
The lower community-context section does not show what is spreading this week. It uses CDC PLACES (2022 data) to show slower-moving local vulnerability and access-to-care patterns in Santa Fe, such as asthma burden or uninsured adults, so the infection data has clearer local context.
Does Santa Fe have its own health data, or is this state-level?
This page combines two types of public-health data. The infectious disease section (flu, COVID, RSV, measles) shows New Mexico state-level surveillance, which is the most reliable available indicator for the Santa Fe area right now. The lower community-context section adds slower Santa Fe-specific CDC PLACES estimates about respiratory vulnerability and access to care. State infectious disease data reflects overall trends that apply to communities within the state, including Santa Fe.
Local Health Signal is not affiliated with the CDC or any government agency. Data is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended for clinical decision making. See our methods page for details on data sources and limitations.