UST Check → counties → New Hampshire
Underground storage tanks in New Hampshire
EPA UST Finder county aggregates for New Hampshire — registered tank facilities and leak (LUST) incidents as reported by the state program to EPA.
4,636registered facilities
2,695open tanks
12,656closed tanks
2,419leak incidents
594cleanups still open
By county
| County | Facilities | Open tanks | Closed tanks | Leak incidents | Open cleanups |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hillsborough | 1,037 | 605 | 2,870 | 545 | 134 |
| Rockingham | 826 | 566 | 2,351 | 495 | 128 |
| Merrimack | 558 | 339 | 1,600 | 279 | 73 |
| Grafton | 502 | 274 | 1,353 | 254 | 64 |
| Strafford | 330 | 182 | 874 | 191 | 49 |
| Cheshire | 320 | 179 | 808 | 150 | 26 |
| Belknap | 300 | 136 | 783 | 157 | 46 |
| Carroll | 300 | 148 | 731 | 142 | 37 |
| Coos | 261 | 157 | 765 | 98 | 22 |
| Sullivan | 202 | 109 | 521 | 108 | 15 |
Screen a specific property in New Hampshire
County numbers set the context; a deal needs the registry around one address — registered tanks at the parcel, facilities within 500/1,500 ft, leak cleanups with status and distance, every line cited to the official record.
Screen an address — $49This is a screen of EPA-registered tank and leak records, not an environmental site assessment. State registries are incomplete by design: tanks removed before 1986 and most residential heating-oil tanks were never registered, so a clean screen cannot prove the absence of a tank. "Closed" means a tank was taken out of service per the registry — it does not certify that no contamination remains.
source: EPA UST Finder EPA data vintage 2024-12-04