New Hampshire Polling
The Suffolk University Political Research Center has been covering Presidential Primaries and General Elections in New Hampshire for over a decade. SUPRC bellwethers and tracking polls have made national headlines.
New Hampshire 2024 Polls
January 23, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- In final poll before N.H. primary, Trump widens lead over Haley
- Friday's results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 21-22, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 22, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- Friday's results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 20-21, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 21, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- Friday's results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 19-20, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 20, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- Friday's results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 18-19, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 19, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- Friday's results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 17-18, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 18, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
- Thursday results from the Suffolk/Globe tracking poll of N.H. Republican primary voters
- Trump continues to dominate New Hampshire, leading Haley by 16 points, new Globe/Suffolk/NBC-10 poll shows
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 16-17, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 17, 2024: NH Republican Primary Tracking Poll with The Boston Globe and NBC-10
Poll Documents:
Boston Globe Articles
Statement of Methodology:
The statewide tracking survey of 500 likely New Hampshire Republican primary voters consists of a two-day rolling average and includes only those respondents who indicated that they were very or somewhat likely to vote in the January 23, 2024 New Hampshire Republican Presidential Primary. The field was conducted January 16-17, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews. Each area’s quota and demographic information -- including geography, gender, and age -- were determined from the 2020 Census and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportionate to the number of likely voters expected based on similar open Republican primaries in past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample is plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.
January 10, 2024: New Hampshire with The Boston Globe and USA TODAY
Poll Documents:
Suffolk Article
Boston Globe Articles
- Majority of likely New Hampshire primary voters say abortion will factor into their vote, according to Globe poll
- N.H. voters support Israel, Biden in war against Hamas, according to Globe poll
- Anti-Trump voters consolidate around Nikki Haley in effort to keep former president out of office
- Analysis: The Nikki Haley surge in New Hampshire may have peaked, Globe poll finds
- Most N.H. primary voters not concerned about northern border security, Suffolk/Globe/USA TODAY poll finds
- Most N.H. voters say they have cut back on restaurant spending in President Biden’s economy
- Trump leads Haley by big margin in N.H. primary, but would lose general election to Biden, according to Globe poll
USA Today Articles
- The Israel-Hamas war dominates headlines. Is it affecting voters in New Hampshire?
- Exclusive: Haley narrows gap with Trump in NH, but he's still far ahead with 2 weeks to go
- Exclusive: It's not the economy, stupid. In NH, democracy is the top issue for Dems, independents
Statement of Methodology:
This survey of 1,000 New Hampshire voters was conducted between January 3 and January 7, 2024, and is based on live telephone interviews of adults who indicated they were planning to vote in the General Election for president in November of 2024. Each area’s quota and demographic information were determined from 2020 Census data and exit polling from like elections. Samples of both standard landline (11 percent) and cell phones (89 percent) were called using a probability-proportionate-to-size method, which means that the phone numbers assigned to each county were proportional to the number of likely voters expected based on past elections. New Hampshire’s 10 counties were grouped into four general regions. Respondents in the household were selected by initially asking for the youngest adult. The margin of sampling error for results based on the total sample of 1,000 is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points. The margin of error for the subset of 318 respondents who indicated they are likely to vote in the New Hampshire Democratic primary is +/- 5.5 percentage points; the margin of error for the subset of 491 respondents who indicated they are likely to vote in the New Hampshire Republican primary is +/- 4.4 percentage points. Error margins increase for smaller subgroups in the cross-tabulation document that follows. All surveys may be subject to other sources of error, including but not limited to coverage error and measurement error.