r/newhampshire • u/AahanKotian • 5h ago
List of top tier restaurants in NH?
I would like to visit and eventually move to NH from Canada. What are a list of very good restaurants in NH that I can go to or bring my parents to?
r/newhampshire • u/AahanKotian • 5h ago
I would like to visit and eventually move to NH from Canada. What are a list of very good restaurants in NH that I can go to or bring my parents to?
r/newhampshire • u/CoolNefariousness865 • 20h ago
They weren't home when I swung by. I dont know them well so was just going to put a note in their door.
It wont be anywhere near the property line (surveyed)so dont see any issues.
r/newhampshire • u/Argo_Menace • 20h ago
Anyone know of any places that sell sabich sandwiches other than Pressed Cafe? Miss these sandwiches so damn much after leaving the city.
Even better if there’s a place in Rockingham county.
r/newhampshire • u/Ok_Flight5485 • 1d ago
White Mountains, in or around, thx.
r/newhampshire • u/CarrollCounty • 1h ago
From New Hampshire Bulletin: New Hampshire reduced its business profits tax from 8.5% to 7.5% and its business enterprise tax from .75% to .55% in a series of cuts spanning from 2016 to 2024. The result, according to new research from the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute, was somewhere between $795 million and $1.17 billion in forgone revenue.
“The rate reductions do not appear to have provided clear, unambiguous economic benefits to the state,” Phil Sletten, author of the study and research director at the Fiscal Policy Institute, said. “However, the state not having sufficient revenue to fund existing services is a clearly identifiable risk associated with having fewer public dollars available, including from business tax revenues.”
r/newhampshire • u/KraljZ • 2h ago
Hello all. My deck needs to be replaced. Looking for quotes or numbers for a new deck (626sqft). I’m in the Lakes Region so the numbers I’m getting are 70-100k for a new deck. Please tell me that’s not normal.
r/newhampshire • u/planlife • 4h ago
Hi. Wondering…off I-93 between Manchester and Tilton, where is a good hiking trail for an easy to medium intense hike that’s close to the highway and good for a 8 year old? Thanks!
r/newhampshire • u/Citizens_Count • 1h ago
r/newhampshire • u/Generalaverage89 • 6h ago
r/newhampshire • u/TheGavMasterFlash • 22h ago
r/newhampshire • u/JennyB443 • 4h ago
Yes the private school vouchers issue and other cuts/additions to the state’s budget are highly important, but I want to draw your attention also to the increases proposed to (from what I can tell) nearly all motor vehicle STATE fees. To name a few:
Titles and title applications: increasing from $25 to $35 Salvage inspections: increasing from $50 to $60 Agricultural vehicles: state fees increasing from $3.60 to $12 Agricultural tractors: state fees increasing from $1.80 to $12 Antique motorcycles: state fees increasing from $2.40 to $12
ALL regular motor vehicles (cars, trucks, etc) where the state fees are based on gross weight are increasing. 0-3000lbs: increasing from $31.20 to $42 3001-5000lbs: increasing from $43.20 to $48 5001-8000lbs: increasing from $55.20 to $66 8001-73,280lbs: increasing from $0.96 to $1.44 per hundred pounds gross weight
Motorcycles increasing from $15 to $30 Mopeds increasing from $3 to $14
Antique motor vehicles other than motorcycles: increasing from $6 to $16
Construction equipment increasing from $25 to $40
Vanity plates increasing from $40 to $60
Replacement decals increasing from $1 to $5 Replacement/duplicate registrations increasing from $15 to $20
Replacement driver’s license due to address change increasing from $3 to $10
Note also: these increases are only increasing the state’s revenue from motor vehicles. The towns/cities who actually put in the work and issue these registrations, answer registrant questions, get yelled at for not being able to magically fix problems with registrations, are not getting anything from this.
These increases are directly affecting you, the resident and non-resident motorists of New Hampshire. If you had trouble scraping enough together to pay your registration last year, you’re going to have a harder time this year if this bill goes through as-is.
Contact your representatives here: https://gc.nh.gov/house/members/
Track the status of the bill here: https://fastdemocracy.com/bill-search/nh/2025/bills/NHB00013632
And please, if this goes through, please don’t take it out on your town officials. We didn’t want this, and we are not benefiting from this.
r/newhampshire • u/edorylime • 19h ago
r/newhampshire • u/kitschling • 21h ago
big fan of music here — i’m curious to hear more of what the granite state grooves to. 🛰️
r/newhampshire • u/TheRedEyedAlien • 4h ago
r/newhampshire • u/FrameCareful1090 • 7h ago
Such an angry bunch of folks
r/newhampshire • u/zapadas • 1h ago
New Hampshire. Standard sized windows. ProVia Endure, double-hung, tempered glass on lower half (windows are low-ish to floor...apparently this is code-required for safety as these are not first floor windows). Includes screens. Warranty looks like lifetime with 1 transfer to a subsequent owner of the lifetime warranty.
$1400.00 per window. 2 windows, $2800.00.
Is this totally outlandish?
We got a prior quote from the same company for like $1150.00 a window, but that was without the tempered glass and was several months ago.
These windows need replacement as 1 is leaking water into the house - it gets on the window sill and has damaged paint etc. when it's a driving "sideways" rain. The other has a broken sash. They both appear to let bugs in...we get pretty bad ladybug and stinkbug infestations in that space. They are both in the same space, so I'm looking to just do them both.
We also had 2 other quotes...one wouldn't quote us without both parties being present and has a bad rep. (looking at you, Andersen....), and the other was $1600 or $1650 a window and came with a neighbor's recommendation.
Thoughts? Thank you for your input! :)
r/newhampshire • u/Granitest8hiker • 7h ago
Mt. Washington in all her glory. Live free or die.
r/newhampshire • u/One-Pumpkin5300 • 1h ago
I'm currently in New Hampshire because my father passed and I'm taking care of his estate.
His home uses heating oil and we are below 1/4 tank. I'm trying to avoid the newbie learning curve.
My dad used a company that is currently charging $3.65/gal delivered. Someone recommended a company called Heatable that is charging $3.29/gal delivered.
Should I just choose the lowest cost provider from a reputable company? Or is there a reason to pay more that I am unaware of?