State ranking · HUD FMR
New Hampshire: Cheapest Counties to Rent
The most affordable counties in New Hampshire by 1-bedroom Fair Market Rent, FY 2026.
- $994
- Cheapest 1BR — Coos County
- $1,460
- NH avg 1BR
- 10
- Counties ranked
The cheapest county for rent in New Hampshire is Coos County with a 1-bedroom FMR of $994/mo, which is 32% below the state average of $1,460. The national average 1-bedroom FMR is $959.
What "cheapest" really means for New Hampshire renters
These rankings are drawn directly from HUD's FY 2026 Fair Market Rent schedule, which reports the 40th percentile of gross rents (utilities included, except telephone) for every county in New Hampshire. The cheapest 1-bedroom here is Coos County at $994, with a studio at $988, 2-bedroom at $1,287, 3-bedroom at $1,702, and 4-bedroom at $1,708. Because HUD sets FMR per county (or per metro), these are the official rent ceilings that local housing authorities use to set Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher payment standards — typically 90%–110% of FMR — which means they are also the closest thing to a documented "floor" for the county rental market.
Compared with the New Hampshire state average of $1,460 for a 1-bedroom, the cheapest county is 32% below the state benchmark, and 4% above the US average of $959. Across the 10 counties in this ranking, the spread between the cheapest and most expensive is wide enough that renters can see meaningfully different budgets within the same state simply by moving FMR areas. "Cheapest" does not mean "least desirable" — rural and small-metro counties frequently rank cheapest because HUD's sample of comparable rental units reflects lower-density housing and lower local wages, not lower quality per se.
For budgeting, the 30% affordability rule implies a household needs roughly $39,760/year to afford the cheapest 1-bedroom FMR in New Hampshire without being cost-burdened — far less than the $58,400/year needed to afford the state average. For voucher recipients, movers, or anyone prioritizing low rent, New Hampshire's cheapest counties typically cluster in non-metro FMR areas where the HUD sample is anchored to smaller rental stocks. Pair this ranking with the year-over-year FMR growth and rent burden pages to see whether today's cheapest counties are holding steady, tightening, or becoming burdened as incomes fail to keep pace.
Top 10 Cheapest Counties in New Hampshire
| # | County | 1-BR | 2-BR | 3-BR | vs State Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Coos County | $994 | $1,287 | $1,702 | -32% |
| 2 | Sullivan County | $1,332 | $1,747 | $2,418 | -9% |
| 3 | Carroll County | $1,343 | $1,709 | $2,353 | -8% |
| 4 | Belknap County | $1,425 | $1,800 | $2,219 | -2% |
| 5 | Grafton County | $1,455 | $1,909 | $2,590 | -0% |
| 6 | Cheshire County | $1,468 | $1,926 | $2,518 | +1% |
| 7 | Merrimack County | $1,504 | $1,974 | $2,604 | +3% |
| 8 | Hillsborough County | $1,673 | $2,127 | $2,822 | +15% |
| 9 | Strafford County | $1,677 | $2,194 | $2,693 | +15% |
| 10 | Rockingham County | $1,730 | $2,270 | $2,722 | +18% |
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Methodology
Rankings are based on FY 2026 Fair Market Rents (FMR) published by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). FMR represents the 40th percentile of gross rents for standard quality units in a given area. Counties are ranked by 1-bedroom FMR in ascending order. "vs State Avg" compares each county's 1-bedroom FMR to the New Hampshire average.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.