Moose Hunting in NH

It's my day! Moose hunt lottery winner Tricia Currier and her dad, Brett, are all smiles after hearing Tricia's name at the 2011 drawing.
Tricia Currier

Jessica and 2007 moose
Moose Hunt Photo Gallery

Click on a year for stories and pictures from the hunt!

NEW! 2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2011 N.H. Moose Hunt Highlights:

  • Largest bull – 930 lbs. dressed weight, taken in WMU A1, town of Pittsburg, by Richard Matthews.
  • Largest cow – 735 lbs. dressed weight, taken in WMU C2, town of Cambridge, by Glenn Huntress.
  • Greatest antler spread – 64.5 inches, taken in WMU A1, town of Pittsburg by David Perry.
  • Oldest hunter – Robert Houle, age 78, took a 900-lb. bull in WMU C2 .
  • Youngest hunter – Dylan Douglas, age 9, took a 500-lb. cow in WMU J2,  with a rifle.

New Hampshire's moose hunt is nine days, starting the third Saturday in October. The 2012 hunt will take place on October 20-28, 2012. By permit only. Permits are distributed by lottery.

Moose Lottery Application cover 2012

2012 N.H. Moose Hunt Lottery The lottery is open! To enter:

  • CLICK HERE to enter online.
  • CLICK HERE for a printed application.
  • Visit a local fish and game license agent.
  • Or call 603-271-2461.
What are the odds of winning a NH moose hunt permit?
History of the NH moose hunt.
Thanks to the recovery of moose populations, N.H. has had an annual moose hunt since 1988. That year, 75 permits were issued for a three-day hunt in the North Country. The availability of moose hunting permits, with some issued for every area of the state during the nine-day season, is made possible by careful management of moose populations. The resulting sustainable annual harvest of moose helps to regulate moose numbers and provides a unique recreational opportunity considered by many the adventure of a lifetime.

Click on a moose hunt topic:

Moose hunters: click here for a moose hunt Q&A
More about the moose hunt:
  • NOTE: You must have landowner permission before using an ATV on privately owned land. All hunters should be prepared to get their moose out of the woods on foot.

Respect landowner rights:
Hunters are advised to seek landowner permission before hunting on any properties, including timber company lands. ATV use is prohibited in the state of the New Hampshire without written land owner permission. Please respect landowner’s rights and never tamper with closed or locked gates or block roads.

Moose Season Quick Facts

  • The heaviest moose taken in 2011 was a 930-pound bull shot in Pittsburg by Richard Matthews of Nashua on the second day of the season.
  • Average dressed weight of all yearling bulls taken in 2011 was 435 pounds. The average dressed weight of all bulls aged 5.5 and older in 2011 was 726 pounds.
  • The largest bull moose ever taken in N.H. weighed in at 1,040 pounds, dressed weight, taken in 1993. Live weight of this moose would have been approximately 1,400 pounds. The largest cow ever taken dressed at 815 pounds. These two animals came from Zone A2 and both were taken in 1993.
  • Greatest antler spread measurement for moose taken in New Hampshire is 68.5 inches, taken in A-2 in 2010 by Jack Middleton.
  • Moose have been taken with the use of conventional firearms and archery, handguns, muzzleloaders (including flintlocks) and the longbow. In 2011, 97% of hunters took their moose using conventional firearms (rifle or shotgun).
  • 58% of the harvest occurred in the first 3 days of the 2011 season.
Moose Hunt Basics

Each permit holder (permittee) may select one person of any age (subpermittee) to join him or her on the moose hunt.

Both either-sex and antlerless-only permits may be issued in some units.

The limit is one moose per permit, which may be shot by either hunter. Those drawing an antlerless-only permit may take one antlerless moose. All other permit holders may take either an antlered or antlerless moose.

Archery, muzzleloader, and regular firearms hunting are allowed, according to the hunting license type the hunter possesses.

Hunting is permitted by unit assignment, made as a result of the preferences listed on the application form and the order in which the applicant ranks in the drawing. Hunters may hunt only in the unit assigned to them.

The percentage of permits issued to nonresidents is the same as the percentage of hunting licenses sold to nonresidents in the previous year (recently about 15 to 17 percent of the total.)

The odds of winning a New Hampshire moose hunt permit in the 2010 lottery were 1 in 27 for New Hampshire residents, and 1 in 82 for nonresidents, some of the best odds in the nation for moose hunting.

Moose hunters must carry their valid moose permit and N.H. hunting license with them at all times while hunting and registering their moose.

License and permit fees
Resident
Nonresident
Hunting
$ 22.00
$103.00
Archery
$ 22.00
$ 73.00
Moose Permit (regular hunting or archery license also required)
$150.00
$500.00
Moose Hunt Lottery

Moose hunting permits are offered to successful lottery applicants following a computer-generated random drawing. Anyone who obtained a moose permit in 2009, 2010 or 2011 is not eligible to obtain a permit in 2012.

Bonus Points: N.H. Fish and Game has a bonus point system to improve the chance of success for unsuccessful applicants who apply each year. Unsuccessful applicants accrue one point for each consecutive year that they apply for the lottery. Each point translates to a chance in the drawing. Don't forget: Applicants lose all accrued points if they do not apply to the lottery for one year, or if they are offered and accept a moose permit. Click here for more about the bonus point system.

Lottery Drawing/Unit Assignment
Permittee candidates are selected through a computer-generated random number draw. The 2012 drawing will take place on June 15, 2012.

Each applicant selected in the lottery drawing is assigned to hunt within a unit of his or her choice, except when the permit quota for that unit has already been filled. In cases where the quota in the applicant's first choice unit has been filled, the applicant will be assigned to the next unfilled unit of his or her choice, as indicated on the application. Applicants are considered for antlerless-only permits if no either-sex permits are available and the application indicates the applicant is willing to accept an antlerless-only permit. Any unit not ranked on the application form indicates that the applicant does not wish to hunt in that unit, even if it is the only unit where a permit quota has not yet been filled. Alternate candidates are selected to fill any permits not taken by the original applicants selected.

Notification of winners
Successful applicants are notified within 10 working days of the drawing. Moose hunting information packets are mailed in mid- August, and permits are mailed in mid-September.

If your name is drawn, a nonrefundable payment of $150 for residents and $500 for nonresidents must be postmarked no later than midnight July 15, 2012, or received at Fish and Game headquarters in Concord, N.H., no later than July 27, 2012. Failure to submit payment by the deadline will result in disqualification of the applicant and the permit will be offered to an alternate candidate.


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NH Fish and Game Dept.
11 Hazen Drive
Concord, NH 03301

603-271-3211
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