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Window Replacement Cost in New Hampshire (2026)

A typical whole-home replacement in New Hampshire averages $7,686. Most modeled projects land between $3,708 and $11,664, which is 4% above the national average. New Hampshire window replacement budgets usually rise when owners move beyond a basic insert swap and start paying for tighter frames, better spacers, and full-frame correction work that performs in colder weather.

Minimal pixel-style illustration of replacement windows, a U.S. map motif, and regional budget markers.

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Updated March 2026 · Uses the live window replacement estimator with a default New Hampshire pricing context.

How to read this state benchmark

This page uses the same window replacement calculator shown above, but starts from New Hampshire-specific labor and climate pressure. Use it to benchmark a quote fast, then compare nearby states or return to the national calculator if the scope changes.

  • Each state page uses the live window replacement calculator with four fixed benchmark scenarios: a starter retrofit package, a typical whole-home package, an efficiency-focused full-frame upgrade, and a premium feature-window package.
  • State-level pricing changes come from the calculator's existing window replacement multiplier table, not from location-name swaps or unsupported local fee claims.
  • Every page includes visible scenario assumptions, five direct-answer FAQs, a related-state comparison graph, dataset notes, and a parent link back to the national window replacement calculator.
  • Every published page links back to the national calculator, related-state comparisons, and the supporting research that explains the benchmark.

Typical Window Replacement Budgets in New Hampshire

These scenarios are built from the same calculator model shown above. They are not contractor quotes, but they give you a useful range for comparing a smaller insert package, a typical whole-home job, an efficiency-led upgrade, and a premium feature-window project in New Hampshire.

ProjectLowMidpointHigh

Starter retrofit package

6 standard single-hung vinyl windows, double-pane glass, first-floor insert replacement.

$1,146$3,012$4,878

Typical whole-home package

12 standard double-hung vinyl windows, low-E double-pane glass, first-floor retrofit installation.

$3,708$7,686$11,664

Efficiency-focused full-frame upgrade

10 fiberglass casement windows, triple-pane low-E glass, second-floor full-frame replacement.

$9,030$18,760$28,490

Premium feature-window package

4 large wood bay windows, triple-pane low-E glass, second-floor full-frame replacement.

$23,344$50,792$78,240

How New Hampshire Compares to National Pricing

In our model, New Hampshire comes in 4% above the national average for a 12-window whole-home package with vinyl double-hung units, low-E double-pane glass, and retrofit installation. That is a benchmark, not a promise. The more useful question is whether a quote is high or low for the scope you are actually buying.

If your quote sits above the modeled high range, pressure-test the project for full-frame work, larger openings, upper-story access, custom trim repair, or a better glass package. If it sits far below the low range, check whether disposal, finish repair, or permit handling is missing.

  • New Hampshire sits in a climate profile where air sealing, glass performance, and condensation control usually matter more than the cheapest frame choice alone.
  • New Hampshire labor usually stays a little above national averages, with scheduling and installer availability doing more work than material price alone.
  • New Hampshire has enough older housing stock that window replacement can turn into trim, flashing, or opening-correction work once crews expose the existing frame.
  • New Hampshire homeowners often compare standard double-pane vinyl against fiberglass or triple-pane upgrades once comfort and winter performance enter the decision.

Where a Typical New Hampshire Window Budget Goes

For the typical whole-home package in New Hampshire, material cost is still the largest bucket, but labor moves quickly when the project becomes harder to access or shifts from insert work to a full-frame replacement. Savings and resale ranges are not cash in hand. They are directional planning benchmarks for the same modeled package.

Budget bucketRange
Materials$2,592 to $8,160
Labor$1,116 to $3,504
Estimated annual energy savings$1,725 to $4,830
Estimated resale value recovery$5,380 to $5,841
Total modeled range$3,708 to $11,664

Scenario Inputs and Dataset Notes

The structured dataset behind this page is intentionally simple and inspectable. Each scenario uses fixed inputs so you can compare states on like-for-like assumptions rather than on fuzzy editorial averages. Costs are modeled from the calculator, then surfaced as low, midpoint, and high benchmarks.

Dataset fieldWhat it represents
totalProjectCostState-adjusted low and high estimate for the full package.
perWindowTotalInstalled cost per window after quantity discount.
materialsCost and laborCostModeled split of material and labor budget buckets.
annualEnergySavingsDirectional annual savings range for the chosen glass package.
homeValueIncreaseDirectional resale value recovery range from the modeled project.
stateMultiplierThe existing CostFigure window multiplier used to localize pricing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does window replacement cost in New Hampshire?

A typical 12-window replacement package in New Hampshire averages $7,686, with most modeled projects landing between $3,708 and $11,664. Simpler insert swaps can land lower, while full-frame work, larger windows, and higher-performance glass move the number higher.

Is New Hampshire more expensive than the national average for replacement windows?

Yes. New Hampshire is 4% above the national average for a typical whole-home replacement package in our model. The difference is mostly explained by new hampshire labor usually stays a little above national averages, with scheduling and installer availability doing more work than material price alone. New Hampshire has enough older housing stock that window replacement can turn into trim, flashing, or opening-correction work once crews expose the existing frame.

What usually pushes a New Hampshire window quote above the midpoint?

New Hampshire sits in a climate profile where air sealing, glass performance, and condensation control usually matter more than the cheapest frame choice alone. New Hampshire homeowners often compare standard double-pane vinyl against fiberglass or triple-pane upgrades once comfort and winter performance enter the decision. On real projects, full-frame replacement, upper-story access, custom sizes, and feature windows usually move the number faster than brand marketing alone.

What is a realistic per-window budget in New Hampshire?

For the typical whole-home scenario in New Hampshire, the modeled installed cost lands around $641 per window, with a broader range of $309 to $972. Bay windows, wood frames, and full-frame installation are still far above that benchmark.

How can I keep a New Hampshire window replacement project on budget?

In New Hampshire, homeowners usually save the most by separating must-have full-frame corrections from optional efficiency or appearance upgrades before they compare bids. Homeowners usually get the cleanest comparisons when every bid spells out insert versus full-frame scope, glass package, finish repair, disposal, and permit responsibility before anyone signs.

Explore More Window Replacement Cost Pages

Quick facts for this state

Data Updated

2026-03-08

State Multiplier

1.04x

Benchmarked Scenarios

4 window scenarios

Published format

Standalone state benchmark page

More to compare

3 nearby state pages plus the national calculator

Helpful links

5 ways to compare this page inside CostFigure