If your company has received a consumer data request from a New Hampshire resident, you need to understand what the law requires, how quickly you must respond, and what information must be redacted before you send the response. This guide covers the New Hampshire Privacy Act (NHPA) in practical terms — what it means for your business, not just what the statute says.
These requests are formally known as Data Subject Access Requests (DSARs) under European law, or consumer privacy requests under U.S. state law. Regardless of the terminology, the obligation is the same: locate the consumer's personal data, review it, redact third-party personal information, and respond within the statutory deadline.
For a comparison of all US state privacy laws, see our comprehensive comparison page. For state-specific guidance, see our guides for California, Virginia, Colorado.
The New Hampshire Privacy Act (NHPA) (N.H. Rev. Stat. Ch. 507-H) took effect on January 1, 2025.
Applicability thresholds: Conducts business in New Hampshire or targets NH residents, AND either: (a) controls or processes personal data of 35,000 or more NH consumers (excluding payment-only), OR (b) controls or processes data of 10,000 or more consumers and derives over 25% of gross revenue from data sales.
Exemptions: State and local government, nonprofits, HIPAA, GLBA, higher education.
Physical presence: No physical presence required.
Practical note: If you are unsure whether your business meets the thresholds, consult with your legal team. The penalties for non-compliance are significant, and "we didn't know the law applied to us" is not a recognized defense.
Under the NHPA, New Hampshire consumers have the following rights regarding their personal data:
New Hampshire follows the Connecticut model closely. Low thresholds reflecting the state's small population.
You have 45 calendar days from receipt of the request to provide a substantive response.
Extensions: One 45-day extension with notice.
When the clock starts: Upon receipt.
Standard model with appeal process.
Critical point: The deadline runs from when you receive the request, not from when you finish verifying the consumer's identity. Do not wait to begin processing until verification is complete — start locating and reviewing the data immediately.
When you compile documents for a consumer data request response, you will inevitably find personal information belonging to other people — colleagues, clients, family members, business contacts. This third-party data must be redacted before you send the response to the requesting consumer.
Some categories of information require case-by-case assessment:
The entire point of a consumer data request is to give the individual access to their own data. Do not redact the requester's personal information. This includes their name, email, phone number, address, employment records, transaction history, and any other data that relates to them specifically.
This is what makes data request redaction different from standard document redaction. You are performing selective redaction: keeping one person's data while removing everyone else's. Automated tools that simply blank out all PII will over-redact and produce an unusable response.
Penalties: Up to $10,000 per violation.
Enforcement: New Hampshire AG (exclusive). No private right of action.
Cure period: 60-day cure period.
Recently effective. No notable actions as of 2026.
Risk note: Even where a cure period exists, it typically applies only to the first violation. A pattern of non-compliance or a failure to cure within the allowed period can result in full penalties. The cost of responding correctly the first time is significantly lower than the cost of enforcement.
SafeRedact automates the most time-consuming part of responding to consumer data requests: identifying and redacting third-party personal information across thousands of documents.
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