Nevada disease risk map.
Nevada has no documented wild CWD detections to date. NDOW maintains carcass import restrictions on cervids from positive states and runs ongoing surveillance.
Disease detections, management zones, and transport rules change. Cross-reference this page with Nevada Department of Wildlife and the USDA APHIS distribution map before relying on it for hunting decisions.
Nevada county detections
0 counties with seeded CWD records. The agency may have additional positive counties — verify before each hunt.
No county-level CWD detections currently seeded for Nevada in our database. This is not the same as no detections existing — always cross-reference with the state wildlife agency and the USDA APHIS distribution map for current data.
Carcass transport rules
No statewide carcass transport restrictions for CWD currently apply since the state has no detections to date. Confirm the latest rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting harvest from out of state.
CWD testing
The state does not require CWD testing because it has no detections to date. Hunters who hunt in CWD-positive states should follow that state's testing requirements before transporting harvest home.
EHD activity in Nevada
Nevada has historically experienced rare EHD activity. EHD is a viral disease transmitted by Culicoides midges and is not transmissible to humans — meat from EHD-affected deer is safe to consume per state agency guidance. Outbreak years correlate with hot, dry conditions; localized die-offs can reduce hunting opportunity for a season but do not persist year to year the way CWD does.
Hunter FAQ — Nevada
Is it safe to eat deer harvested in Nevada?
Are there carcass transport restrictions in Nevada?
How do I get a deer tested for CWD in Nevada?
How often does Nevada get hit by EHD?
Where does Nevada's CWD/EHD data come from?
- Nevada Department of Wildlife — CWD →
- Nevada Department of Wildlife — EHD →
- USDA APHIS CWD Distribution Map →
- National Deer Association EHD Tracker →
Disease information is summarized for hunter awareness only. Always cross-reference with the state agency for legal, regulatory, and current-detection data.
Track herd health on your land.
Statewide disease maps tell you what to expect in general. Bield: Hunt logs every sick or recovered deer you find on your specific property — and surfaces patterns across seasons that would otherwise live in your camera roll and your memory.