US Trends

what states have moose

There are 19 U.S. states that have wild, resident moose populations , plus a few others where moose only wander through occasionally.

🦌 What states have moose?

Core states with established moose populations

These states have regular, established wild moose populations (not just rare visitors).

  • Alaska 🧊
  • Maine
  • Idaho
  • Washington
  • Minnesota
  • Wyoming
  • New Hampshire
  • Colorado
  • Vermont
  • Utah
  • Montana
  • Massachusetts
  • New York
  • Michigan
  • North Dakota
  • Connecticut
  • Oregon
  • Nevada
  • Wisconsin

Alaska and Maine are the real heavyweights: Alaska has around 175,000 moose, and Maine has about 60,000–70,000, the most in the Lower 48.

Handy overview table (resident moose states)

Below is a simplified look at which states have moose and how often people see them.

State Moose presence Notes
Alaska Frequent Largest moose population in the U.S. (≈175,000).
Maine Frequent Biggest population in the Lower 48.
Idaho Common Up to about 10–12k animals, mostly forested areas.
Washington Common Often in the Selkirk Mountains and northeastern ranges.
Minnesota Common Especially in the Arrowhead region in the northeast.
Wyoming Common Concentrated in mountainous and river‑valley habitats.
New Hampshire Common Well‑known for roadside and backcountry sightings.
Colorado Common Reintroduced; good numbers in the central/north mountains.
Vermont Common Moose found across the state, especially in the Northeast Kingdom.
Utah Common Often along the Wasatch Front and northern mountains.
Montana Occasional Mainly western forests and mountain valleys.
Massachusetts Occasional Central and western parts of the state have the most sightings.
New York Occasional Mostly Adirondacks and the far north.
Michigan Occasional Mostly in the Upper Peninsula.
North Dakota Occasional Scattered in the northern and wooded regions.
Connecticut Occasional Small, growing presence; sightings mostly in the north.
Oregon Occasional Small population in northeastern mountains.
Nevada Occasional Limited numbers, mainly near high, cooler ranges.
Wisconsin Occasional Border/forest areas near Minnesota and Michigan UP.
Data above is based on recent population compilations and wildlife summaries.

States with very rare or wandering moose

Some states do not have a stable moose population but get occasional wanderers from neighboring states.

  • Arizona (rare reports near Grand Canyon)
  • Pennsylvania (very rare, often in the north or border areas)
  • Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico, New Jersey, Indiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Rhode Island (uncommon, usually single dispersing animals)

These sightings are interesting outliers, not signs of a resident herd.

Mini “story” snapshot

Imagine driving at dusk through the spruce forests of northern Maine: fog in the low spots, your headlights catching something huge and dark off the roadside. That towering shape with a long nose and broad antlers is exactly why locals slow down on those back roads—here, seeing a moose is almost a seasonal ritual rather than a once‑in‑a‑lifetime event.

“What states have moose” as a trending topic

People keep searching “what states have moose” because:

  1. Travelers want to know where they can safely and legally go to see or photograph moose.
  2. Hunters track which states still have viable seasons and tags.
  3. Wildlife fans follow shifting ranges as climate and habitat change.

Recent wildlife articles and hunting/outdoors blogs continue to update state lists and population estimates, so the topic stays current each year as new data appears.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.