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Origin → Destination

Bringing a carcass from Iowa to Maine

Maine restricts which deer and elk parts you can bring in from out of state, including from Iowa. You may generally bring back the lower-risk parts listed below; high-risk parts are prohibited. CWD has never been detected in Maine (clean); recent surveillance reported all 909 white-tailed deer samples negative. Restriction applies to imports from ALL states/provinces EXCEPT New Hampshire. maine.gov pages are CloudFront geo-blocked from this environment; rule text verified via search-surfaced Maine IFW content. Verify exact current wording on-page if precision is critical. Verify with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife before transport.

Origin · Iowa

CWD confirmed
brings the rule from the destination

Destination · Maine

No known CWD
Reverse: MEIA

CWDCrossing provides informational summaries of state CWD carcass-transport regulations. Rules change annually pre-hunting-season; verify with both the origin and destination state wildlife agencies before transport. Failure to comply may result in citations. Not affiliated with the CWD Alliance, the National Deer Association, or any state agency.

What you can bring into Maine

  • boned-out meat
  • hardened antlers (with or without skull caps)
  • skull caps cleaned free of brain and other tissues
  • hides without the head portion
  • finished taxidermy mounts

What's restricted in Maine

  • whole carcass
  • head
  • brain
  • spinal cord/spinal tissue
  • bones (other than cleaned skull caps/antlers)

Handling + processing requirements

Illegal to transport high-risk wild cervid carcass parts into Maine from any state/province except New Hampshire; also bans cervids from commercial hunting preserves anywhere. Prohibits temporary importation of cervid carcasses/parts in-transit through Maine. If still attached, skull caps must be cleaned free of brain/tissue.

What to do before you transport

  1. Confirm the current rule directly with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife before you transport anything.
  2. Keep proof of where you hunted — many states require a label with your name, license number, and the state of harvest.
  3. Iowa has confirmed CWD detections; check whether Maine applies a stricter rule to carcasses from CWD-affected states.
  4. If your route crosses additional states, check each one — a state you only drive through can still regulate possession in transit.

Iowa and Maine on the CWD map

  • CWD confirmed in state
  • Under heightened surveillance
  • No known CWD detections

Zone status is informational, not a hazard rating. Detections expand over time — confirm current status with each state's wildlife agency.

Other destinations from Iowa

Check a different pair

The state you took the deer or elk in.

The state sets the rule for what you can bring in.

Verified against the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife on June 16, 2026Expert review in progress(state-DNR contact / wildlife biologist / hunting-org compliance officer)

CWDCrossing provides informational summaries of state CWD carcass-transport regulations. Rules change annually pre-hunting-season; verify with both the origin and destination state wildlife agencies before transport. Failure to comply may result in citations. Not affiliated with the CWD Alliance, the National Deer Association, or any state agency.