When the state Department of Fish and Game proposed increasing the cost of hunting and fishing licenses earlier this year, the feedback the agency received from hunters and anglers was largely positive, officials said.

But shortly after those information-gathering sessions, the department pulled back the changes until at least next year, a move Gov. Kelly Ayotteโ€™s office later said she had requested.

โ€œGovernor Ayotte opposes increasing fees for fishing licenses,โ€ wrote spokesperson John Corbett, senior advisor to the governor, in an email statement last week. โ€œFish and Game clearly didnโ€™t adequately consult with stakeholders before bringing forward this proposal, so the Governor directed Fish and Game to pull back these proposed rules.โ€

The twist follows four initial discussion sessions, hosted by Fish and Game, that the department said yielded โ€œoverwhelmingly positiveโ€ feedback. Members of the public speaking at the sessions expressed โ€œfull support of increased fees,โ€ reads a summary of the meeting shared by Department Executive Director Stephanie Simek and Administrative Assistant Tanya Haskell. โ€œMost felt it was long overdue and the proposals were not enough of an increase,โ€ the memo reads.

In the wake of the pause, the hunting and angling lobbying group, the Congressional Sportsmenโ€™s Foundation, has expressed concern that delaying the fee increases will exacerbate financial strain on Fish and Game. The department is self-funded, meaning it must raise the majority of its own revenue through means such as license fees.

โ€œThey havenโ€™t had a substantial (fee) increase in 10 years. Theyโ€™re overdue. They have to get with the times. โ€ฆ We want to make sure (Fish and Game) is open for business,โ€ said Fred Bird, Eastern states senior manager with the foundation.

The cost for a 16-year-old to purchase a lifetime license for hunting, fishing, or both is the same as it was in 2016, according to a fee schedule from that year posted on the Fish and Game website.

The departmentโ€™s budget funds its activities related to the conservation of wildlife and their habitats, search and rescue, research, and law enforcement, as well as the maintenance of natural areas and infrastructure such as boat launches.

In the departmentโ€™s 2024-2025 biennial report, published last September, Simek wrote that the department needed new revenue sources.

โ€œA revised and sustainable funding model is essential to ensure our long-term capacity to fulfill our mission effectively,โ€ she wrote.

Revenue from license fees covered about one-quarter of the departmentโ€™s expenditures in fiscal year 2025, according to the report.

The fee increases would have seen the cost of season and one-day hunting and fishing licenses increase by $2. The fee for a resident fishing license, for example, would have increased from $43 to $45. With 77,951 resident freshwater fishing licenses sold in New Hampshire last year, this 4.6% change in cost would have generated an additional $155,902 within that category alone. Other hunting and fishing license categories โ€” including resident and nonresident hunting, fishing, combination, and one-day licenses โ€” also increased by $2.

Other proposed fee increases varied. The largest was the cost of a newbornโ€™s lifetime combination hunting and fishing license, which would have risen to $475, an increase of $175, or about 58%, over its previous rate. The proposal would have raised the cost of a Hike Safe card to $30, up from its current $25 fee. The wildlife habitat license fee, charged once per year when purchasing a hunting or fishing license, was proposed to double from $2.50 to $5. And for lifetime hunting or fishing licenses, fees for most age groups increased by less than $10.

โ€œYou look across the country at how fees and permits have gone up, and โ€ฆ we are very cheap,โ€ Bird said. โ€œWe do ourselves a disservice by not keeping up with the times.โ€

Input from the public at the sessions โ€œraised several considerations that warranted further evaluation,โ€ Simek and Haskell said via email. (They added that the sessions were not recorded because they were not part of the formal rulemaking process.)

โ€œGiven the volume and substance of the feedback, pausing the process was the most prudent course,โ€ they wrote.

Yet a fee increase could still be in the works. The department will continue to evaluate the proposed rule changes in 2027, the release said. Officials are also committed to continuing โ€œpublic engagement workโ€ related to that process, though the previously planned public hearings have not yet been rescheduled.

Since 2025, Ayotte has been a member of the Governors’ Sportsmenโ€™s Caucus, a network of governors organized through the Congressional Sportsmenโ€™s Foundation that collaborates in support of hunting and fishing. Bird said the governor has supported the foundationโ€™s mission in the past, and he was hopeful that some form of fee increase would move forward.

โ€œConservation-minded sportsmen and women, we understand the importance of these fees, of the generating of revenue,โ€ he said. โ€œโ€ฆ This isnโ€™t a dead issue.โ€