CWD & EHD by county

New Hampshire disease risk map.

No Detections to DateEHD: Rare

New Hampshire has no documented CWD detections to date. NHFG runs ongoing surveillance and maintains carcass import restrictions. EHD is rare in New Hampshire.

Verify before hunting

Confirm CWD management zones, sampling requirements, and carcass transport rules with New Hampshire Fish & Game and USDA APHIS before hunting.

New Hampshire county detections

Where it's been found.

No county-level CWD detections recorded to date in this state.

New Hampshire

Live county map — coming soon

Carcass transport rules

No statewide carcass transport restrictions for CWD currently apply since the state has no detections to date. Confirm the latest rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting harvest from out of state.

CWD testing

The state does not require CWD testing because it has no detections to date. Hunters who hunt in CWD-positive states should follow that state's testing requirements before transporting harvest home.

EHD activity in New Hampshire

New Hampshire sees rare EHD outbreak history. EHD is not transmissible to humans, and meat from clinically healthy deer is safe to consume. Watch for the disease-specific signs reported by hunters and biologists in late summer.

Hunter FAQ

Common questions, New Hampshire.

  • Is CWD present in New Hampshire?+

    No publicly reported CWD detections in wild New Hampshire cervids to date. Status can change — verify with New Hampshire Fish & Game before hunting.

  • What are the New Hampshire carcass transport rules?+

    No statewide carcass transport restrictions for CWD currently apply since the state has no detections to date. Confirm the latest rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting harvest from out of state.

  • How do I get CWD testing in New Hampshire?+

    The state does not require CWD testing because it has no detections to date. Hunters who hunt in CWD-positive states should follow that state's testing requirements before transporting harvest home.

  • How active is EHD in New Hampshire?+

    Rare EHD outbreak history. EHD is not transmissible to humans and meat from clinically healthy deer remains safe to consume.

  • Is venison from CWD or EHD-affected deer safe to eat?+

    EHD is not transmissible to humans. For CWD, the CDC and major health agencies recommend that hunters test deer harvested from CWD-positive zones and not consume meat from animals that test positive. No human cases of CWD have been documented.

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State maps tell you the perimeter. Bield: Hunt records every observation, every recovery, every condition — so the trend on your land shows up before the agency reports do.

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