Zygiella x-notata
The cool, northern climate means the traditional season for New Hampshire spiders runs from late spring to early fall.
Spider enthusiasts almost always need to wait until mid-summer to explore spider diversity in the White Mountains. Lower lying towns and larger residential areas such as Manchester and Nashua tend to share the same spider species. In fact, all New England provides suitable habitat for the New Hampshire spiders.
Currently an internet search for a comprehensive checklist of New Hampshire spiders comes up empty. Maine’s current checklist of 677 spiders divided into 33 families, provides a good foundation for thinking about the topic.
The two most common types of spiders in terms of species numbers are the Dwarf/Sheetweb spiders and the Jumping Spiders. Dwarf and Sheetweb spiders build messy webs around the shrubs. Their diminutive size, most around the 1/16 of an inch, means that their webs are more visible than the spiders.
On the other hand, many jumping spiders often grow around one quarter of an inch, and they pop up and down around the yard constantly.
This introduction to New Hampshire spiders focuses on the more common spiders found in residential areas around the state.
Orb Weaving Spiders
There’s around one hundred orb weaving spider species, many of them regionally situated. Some of the species come in a range of colors.
Here’s a few of the more common species with a wider geographical range. See this page for more detail.
Yellow Writing Spider bottom view
Yellow Writing Spider top view
Banded Writing Spider
Cross Orb Weaving Spider
Araneus nordmanni
Trashline Orb Weaver
Gray Cross Spider
Larinioides patagiatus orange shade
Larinioides patagiatus brown shade
Larinioides patagiatus bottom
Sleeping Orb Weaving Spider
Long-jawed Orb Weaver
Long-jawed Orb Weaver side view
Crab Spiders

Flower Crab Spider
It’s sometimes difficult to identify Crab Spiders using body color. Body hair and eye configuration can help. Here’s a few examples.
Flower Crab Spider yellow
Yellow and Red Northern Crab Spider
Northern Crab Spider white
Northern Crab Spider yellow
Swift Crab Spider
Slender Crab Spider
Ground Crab Spider
Jumping Spiders

Bold Jumping Spider
A couple hundred jumping spider species inhabit residential areas, many with limited ranges. Body color can change over the course of time, as with the species presented here. See Jumping Spiders for more complete information.
Bold Jumping Spider
Bronze Jumping Spider Female
Brilliant Jumping Spider face
Brilliant Jumping Spider side
Brilliant Jumping Spider top
Bronze Jumping Spider Male
Zebra Jumping Spider
Zebra Jumping Spider Side
Zebra Jumping Spider Eyes
Lynx Spiders

Striped Lynx Spider Eyes
Lynx spiders can be abundant in residential areas. The following pictures might help with ID.
Striped Lynx Spider top
Western Lynx Spider Eyes
Western Lynx Spider Female
Western Lynx Spider Juvenile
Western Lynx Spider Male
More Spiders and Relatives

Ground Spider
Funnel weaving spider Hololena nedra
Pirate Otter Spider
Opaline or Daddy Long Legs
Dog Tick Female
Dog Tick Male