Home Birth Midwife in New Hampshire: 2026 Guide
New Hampshire certifies Certified Midwives through the New Hampshire Midwifery Council under RSA 326-D. Home birth packages run $4,500 to $7,000. New Hampshire Medicaid coverage of home birth attended by certified midwives is limited. Established home birth communities exist in the Upper Valley, Concord, Nashua, Manchester, and the Seacoast.
New Hampshire certifies Certified Midwives through the New Hampshire Midwifery Council, with home birth communities concentrated in the Upper Valley, the Seacoast, the Manchester-Nashua corridor, and Concord. New Hampshire's home birth scene benefits from cross-border connections to Vermont's strong home birth landscape. This guide explains what state law requires, what home birth costs across New Hampshire, and how to evaluate the midwife you are considering.
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Sources cited (2)
- New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification
- Home Birth Partners New Hampshire Medicaid Guide
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New Hampshire's CM credential
New Hampshire certifies Certified Midwives through the New Hampshire Midwifery Council under RSA 326-D. CMs in New Hampshire are credentialed through NARM CPM exam plus New Hampshire-specific certification requirements. New Hampshire CNMs are licensed by the New Hampshire Board of Nursing as advanced practice registered nurses with prescriptive authority.
Verify any midwife at oplc.nh.gov/midwifery. Confirm the certification is active, in good standing, and free of disciplinary actions. New Hampshire law specifies risk-screening criteria, informed-consent requirements, and emergency-equipment standards including oxygen, IV access, postpartum hemorrhage medications, and neonatal resuscitation equipment.
What home birth costs across New Hampshire
New Hampshire midwife packages run $4,500 to $7,000.
Upper Valley (Lebanon, Hanover, the Vermont/New Hampshire border): $5,500 to $7,000. Active community spanning the VT/NH border with Dartmouth-Hitchcock as the major hospital.
Seacoast (Portsmouth, Dover, Exeter): $5,000 to $7,000. Strong community, growing population.
Manchester-Nashua corridor: $5,000 to $6,500. Largest population center, mixed urban and suburban practices.
Concord and central New Hampshire: $4,500 to $6,000. Stable supply.
North Country and rural NH: midwife scarcity is the binding variable. Some families work with practitioners who travel from the Upper Valley or Concord.
Labs, ultrasounds, and birth supplies are typically billed separately, adding $200 to $500.
| Label | Detail | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Upper Valley | $6,250 | |
| Seacoast | $6,000 | |
| Manchester / Nashua | $5,750 | |
| Concord / Central | $5,250 |
New Hampshire Medicaid and home birth
New Hampshire Medicaid coverage of home birth attended by certified midwives is limited. CNM home birth coverage exists in narrower circumstances. Most New Hampshire home birth midwives operate as private-pay practices.
If you have New Hampshire Medicaid, ask any midwife you interview: are you currently enrolled with New Hampshire Medicaid, and what does coverage look like for your clients? For full details, see our New Hampshire Medicaid home birth guide.
For commercial insurance, most New Hampshire home birth midwives are out-of-network. Standard process: pay the midwife, get a superbill at birth, submit for reimbursement. PPO plans typically reimburse 50 to 80 percent of allowed amount after deductible. See our OON reimbursement guide.
Midwife availability and transfer hospitals
Upper Valley: stable supply. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center (Lebanon) is the regional academic referral center for the Upper Valley.
Seacoast: Portsmouth Regional Hospital, Wentworth-Douglass Hospital (Dover), Exeter Hospital.
Manchester-Nashua: Catholic Medical Center (Manchester), Elliot Hospital (Manchester), Southern New Hampshire Medical Center (Nashua), St. Joseph Hospital (Nashua).
Concord: Concord Hospital.
North Country: Littleton Regional Healthcare, Memorial Hospital (North Conway), Androscoggin Valley Hospital (Berlin). Distances are substantial; drive your route once before your due date.
Red flags and what to ask
Reconsider any New Hampshire midwife who cannot produce a current Midwifery Council CM certificate (or Board of Nursing CNM license), cannot tell you her transfer rate, claims she has never needed to transfer without explanation, doesn't perform a clinical health history before accepting you, or is vague about emergency protocols.
Ask before hiring: How many births have you attended total, and how many in the last 12 months? What is your transfer rate for first-time mothers (honest numbers run 22 to 45 percent per documented research)? What emergency medications do you carry, and when did you last use each? Walk me through your postpartum hemorrhage protocol. Which hospital do you use for transfers, and have you transferred a client there in the last 12 months? Can I speak with three recent clients?
Call the references.
Where to go from here
New Hampshire has a real home birth landscape with anchors in the Upper Valley, the Seacoast, and the Manchester-Nashua corridor. The constraint up north is geography and supply.
Start your search by week 8 to 10 in the Upper Valley, the Seacoast, and Manchester. Treat 10 weeks as a deadline elsewhere. Verify any midwife at oplc.nh.gov/midwifery.
Use the matching form below: tell us your due date, ZIP code, insurance type, and birth history.
Neighboring states
Many home birth families consider midwives across state lines, especially near borders. See guides for nearby states:
Bottom line: New Hampshire certifies Certified Midwives through the Midwifery Council under RSA 326-D. Medicaid coverage of home birth is limited. Verify any midwife at oplc.nh.gov/midwifery. Start your search by week 8 to 10 in the Upper Valley, the Seacoast, and Manchester.
- New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification. New Hampshire certifies Certified Midwives through the New Hampshire Midwifery Council under RSA 326-D.. View source
- Home Birth Partners New Hampshire Medicaid Guide. New Hampshire Medicaid coverage of home birth attended by certified midwives is limited.. View source
▶ How we research and review this content Editorial standards
Every guide on Home Birth Partners is researched against primary sources (federal regulations, peer-reviewed clinical literature, and state-level licensing boards) and reviewed by a credentialed midwife before publication.
We update articles when source data changes, when state laws are revised, or at minimum every 12 months. The "Last reviewed" date in the byline reflects the most recent review.
If you spot an error or have a primary source we should add, email [email protected].