Bield:Hunt
CWD & EHD by county

Pennsylvania disease risk map.

CWD PositiveEHD: FrequentFirst CWD: 2012

Pennsylvania confirmed its first captive-cervid CWD detection in 2012 and has had wild detections in multiple Disease Management Areas (DMAs) since. PGC runs free CWD testing and active management. Verify current DMA boundaries with PGC.

Verify with agency

Disease detections, management zones, and transport rules change. Cross-reference this page with Pennsylvania Game Commission and the USDA APHIS distribution map before relying on it for hunting decisions.

CWD detection timeline

From first publicly-reported detection to the most recent year on record. Verify current detection counts with Pennsylvania Game Commission.

201520202025First detection 2012Most recent 2024

Pennsylvania county detections

12 counties with seeded CWD records. The agency may have additional positive counties — verify before each hunt.

Seeded detection counties
CountyFIPSFirst / RecentSourceQuality
Centre County420272012 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Bedford County420092013 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Blair County420132013 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Cambria County420212018 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Clearfield County420332017 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Clinton County420352018 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Huntingdon County420612018 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Indiana County420632019 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Jefferson County420652018 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Westmoreland County421292018 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Fulton County420572014 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify
Adams County420012017 / 2024Agency →Estimated — verify

County pages

Pennsylvania
Centre County
FIPS 42027
CWD Confirmed
First: 2012Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Bedford County
FIPS 42009
CWD Confirmed
First: 2013Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Blair County
FIPS 42013
CWD Confirmed
First: 2013Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Cambria County
FIPS 42021
CWD Confirmed
First: 2018Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Clearfield County
FIPS 42033
CWD Confirmed
First: 2017Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Clinton County
FIPS 42035
CWD Confirmed
First: 2018Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Huntingdon County
FIPS 42061
CWD Confirmed
First: 2018Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Indiana County
FIPS 42063
CWD Confirmed
First: 2019Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Jefferson County
FIPS 42065
CWD Confirmed
First: 2018Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Westmoreland County
FIPS 42129
CWD Confirmed
First: 2018Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Fulton County
FIPS 42057
CWD Confirmed
First: 2014Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency
Pennsylvania
Adams County
FIPS 42001
CWD Confirmed
First: 2017Most recent: 2024Transport restrictions apply
Estimated — verify with agency

Carcass transport rules

If hunting in a CWD-positive area, follow your state agency's carcass transport rules — most agencies prohibit moving whole carcasses with brain or spinal tissue across designated zone boundaries. Verify the current rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting any harvest.

CWD testing

Most state wildlife agencies offer free or low-cost CWD testing of harvested deer at check stations or sample-drop locations during season. Contact the state agency for current testing locations and turnaround times.

EHD activity in Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania has historically experienced frequent 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 — Pennsylvania

Is it safe to eat deer harvested in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania has confirmed CWD. CDC and state wildlife agencies recommend NOT consuming meat from any deer that tests positive for CWD, and recommend testing harvested deer in CWD-positive areas before consumption. There is no documented case of CWD transmitting to humans, but the recommendation is precautionary. EHD is a separate concern — meat from deer that survived EHD or were harvested in an EHD year is safe; EHD does not affect humans.
Are there carcass transport restrictions in Pennsylvania?
If hunting in a CWD-positive area, follow your state agency's carcass transport rules — most agencies prohibit moving whole carcasses with brain or spinal tissue across designated zone boundaries. Verify the current rules with your state wildlife agency before transporting any harvest.
How do I get a deer tested for CWD in Pennsylvania?
Most state wildlife agencies offer free or low-cost CWD testing of harvested deer at check stations or sample-drop locations during season. Contact the state agency for current testing locations and turnaround times.
How often does Pennsylvania get hit by EHD?
Pennsylvania historically has frequent EHD activity. EHD outbreaks are weather-driven (hot, dry, midge-heavy late summers) and are not predictable year over year. Refer to your state agency's most recent annual report for current outbreak status.
Where does Pennsylvania's CWD/EHD data come from?
Disease status on this page is summarized from publicly-reported information from Pennsylvania Game Commission, the USDA APHIS CWD distribution map, and the National Deer Association EHD tracker. Bield does not generate disease records — we surface what state agencies report. Always verify directly with Pennsylvania Game Commission before making hunting decisions.
Primary sources

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.