new updates

Early voting in New Hampshire

In New Hampshire, registered voters can request a mail-in ballot or vote early in-person.

Mail-in ballots requested237,541

47%
23%
30%
DEMGOPOther

+283% from 2016

Mail-in and early in-person ballots returned175,529

100%
Mail-in
Last updated Dec. 3. Party registration is publicly available in the state.Data provided by

New Hampshire Primary election results

Democratic Primary/ 24 Del.24 Delegates

Full New Hampshire Primary Results
  • DEM

    Bernie SandersWinner

    25.6%

    76,394

    + 9 Delegates

  • DEM

    Pete Buttigieg

    24.3%

    72,474

    + 5 Delegates

  • DEM

    Amy Klobuchar

    19.7%

    58,832

    + 4 Delegates

Republican Primary/ 22 Del.22 Delegates

Full New Hampshire Primary Results
  • REP

    Donald TrumpWinner

    85.7%

    129,698

    + 22 Delegates

  • REP

    Bill Weld

    9.2%

    13,849

  • REP

    Write-ins

    2.5%

    3,756

How New Hampshire voted

In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the state with 48 percent support, according to NBC News results, while Donald Trump received 47 percent. While New Hampshire has a history of backing both Democratic and Republican candidates, the last Republican to win the state was George W. Bush in 2000.

  • Democrat

    Hillary ClintonClintonWinner

    47.6%

    348,526

  • Republican

    Donald TrumpTrump

    47.2%

    345,790

  • Democrat

    Barack ObamaObamaWinner

    52.2%

    369,561

  • Republican

    Mitt RomneyRomney

    46.6%

    329,918

More to the story in New Hampshire 2020

The coronavirus pandemic and its devastating economic fallout are two major issues that have an impact on the election. NBC News is tracking and updating daily the number of coronavirus related deaths in each state and U.S. territory, as well as the jobless claims as reported weekly by the Department of Labor that counts how many people have filed for unemployment benefits.

U.S. ClaimsWeekly
change
Monthly
change
3,731,000+0.11%-9.75%
23,257+6.96%-5.27%
New Hampshire Claims

The expected vote is the total number of votes that are expected in a given race once all votes are counted. This number is an estimate and is based on several different factors, including information on the number of votes cast early as well as information provided to our vote reporters on Election Day from county election officials. The figure can change as NBC News gathers new information.

Source: National Election Pool (NEP)