Last updated: May 2026 • Sources: CDC, NJDOH Vector-Borne Disease Dashboard, NJDOH Weekly Surveillance Reports, New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP), EPA, NOAA, CDC ArboNET
Table of Contents
Introduction to New Jersey Mosquito Season
New Jersey mosquito season 2026 is already underway, and this year is shaping up to be a notable one. The pattern we have seen over the last several seasons — earlier starts, longer active windows, disease detected in more counties — shows no real sign of reversing.
This guide covers when the season starts, when it peaks, which mosquito species you are actually dealing with, and what recent surveillance data from the New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) tells us about disease risk. No inflated claims, no guesswork.
If you live in New Jersey, or just want a data-grounded look at how mosquito season is shifting in the Northeast, this is the resource.
When Does New Jersey Mosquito Season 2026 Start?
The short answer: late April, sometimes earlier.
Mosquitoes become active when ambient temperatures hold consistently above 50°F for multiple days in a row. Below that threshold, they are essentially dormant — cold-blooded insects have no ability to thermoregulate. Once that threshold is crossed, things move fast.
In New Jersey, that crossing point typically arrives between late March and early May depending on year-to-year weather variability. Some winters have been mild enough that March is no longer out of the question, particularly in the southern counties closer to the coast.
What is notably different in 2025 — and relevant as a trend signal for 2026 — is that West Nile virus was first detected in mosquito pools in April of 2025, which the NJDOH described as “considerably earlier than expected.” That is an important indicator. WNV circulates in birds and amplifies into mosquito populations. An April detection means Culex mosquitoes were already actively feeding that early.
New Jersey Mosquito Season 2026: Month-by-Month Timeline
| Month | Mosquito Activity Level | Key Conditions / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| March | Minimal to Low | Early warming events; floodwater species emerge near wetlands |
| April | Low to Moderate | Season starts; WNV detected early in pools (per 2025 trend) |
| May | Moderate | Breeding accelerates; tidal marshes in Monmouth, Middlesex, Ocean active |
| June | Moderate to High | First generation adults peak; Aedes albopictus becomes active |
| July | High — Peak Begins | Culex pipiens surges; WNV transmission season officially underway |
| August | Highest — True Peak | Mid-Aug to mid-Sep = peak WNV transmission window historically |
| September | High to Moderate | Continued risk; EEE detections possible through early fall |
| October | Moderate to Low | Activity slows; season can extend into early November in warm years |
| November | Minimal | Hard frosts end season; some overwintering adults persist |
Peak Mosquito Season in New Jersey: July Through Early September
Ask any county mosquito control program in New Jersey, and they will tell you the same thing — July and August are when things get serious. Not just from a nuisance standpoint, but from a public health one.
The peak window for West Nile virus transmission in the state historically runs from mid-August to mid-September. That overlaps with maximum Culex pipiens populations — the Common House Mosquito — which is the primary vector for WNV in the Northeast. These mosquitoes breed heavily in standing water around homes, including clogged gutters, birdbaths, and even wheelbarrow pools left out after rain.
In 2024, New Jersey recorded 41 confirmed WNV cases and 8 deaths — a significantly higher number than the state’s historical average of approximately 13–14 annual cases, according to NJDOH data. That year was an outlier in both case count and early detection timing.
The 2025 season opened with similar early indicators: WNV was detected in 776 mosquito pools statewide by late August, spread across all 21 New Jersey counties. That number exceeded the comparable figure from 2024 at the same point in the season.
Mosquito Species in New Jersey: Who’s Actually Biting You
New Jersey is home to over 60 documented mosquito species according to NJDEP records. Not all of them bite humans. Not all of them transmit disease. But a handful matter enormously from a public health perspective.
| Species | Common Name | Biting Pattern | Disease Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Culex pipiens | Common House Mosquito | Evening and night | West Nile Virus (primary vector) |
| Aedes albopictus | Asian Tiger Mosquito | Daytime, aggressive | Dengue, Zika (travel-linked); La Crosse |
| Culex salinarius | Salt Marsh Mosquito | Dawn and dusk | WNV — coastal/tidal areas |
| Coquillettidia perturbans | Cattail Mosquito | Dusk and night | EEE vector in marshy areas |
| Aedes vexans | Inland Floodwater Mosquito | Dawn and dusk | Nuisance; minor arboviral risk |
The Asian Tiger Mosquito — Aedes albopictus — deserves special mention. It is invasive, highly aggressive, and bites during daylight hours, which catches people off guard. Unlike Culex species that need larger stagnant pools, the tiger mosquito breeds in tiny containers: bottle caps, plant saucer runoff, even puddles in folded tarps.
Coquillettidia perturbans, a cattail-associated species, is a less-discussed but important EEE vector. Atlantic County — which has recorded EEE in mosquito pools in recent seasons — is particularly associated with the wetland habitats this species prefers.
Climate Trends Reshaping New Jersey’s Mosquito Season
This section matters more than people often realize. The conversation about New Jersey mosquito season has shifted in the last decade — not because of any single dramatic event, but because the cumulative trend is hard to ignore.
for mosquito activity
prior decades — NE trend
in peak summer heat
1. Earlier Season Starts
Pest management professionals and public health researchers in the Northeast have noted that mosquito seasons are starting sooner than they did in previous decades. The warming of early spring temperatures pushes that critical 50°F threshold earlier in the calendar year. What was once a reliably late-April emergence is now sometimes March.
That extra few weeks matters biologically. More generations of mosquitoes can develop in a season. Populations that establish early have more time to grow before the summer disease transmission window opens.
2. Extended Fall Activity
On the back end, seasons are ending later too. The NJDOH notes that mosquito season can extend into early November depending on weather conditions — a range that extends what was historically an October cutoff. Mild autumn temperatures delay the hard frosts that traditionally mark the end of active season.
3. Rainfall and Flood Events
Precipitation is a direct multiplier of mosquito populations. A mosquito can breed in as little as half a cup of standing water, and eggs from the previous season can survive in soil and hatch as soon as warmth and moisture return. Heavy spring rain events — increasingly common in the Northeast — create temporary breeding pools across properties with no formal wetland connection.
After a wet early summer in 2024, the NJDEP’s Commissioner explicitly cited the rainfall as a key factor in elevated mosquito activity that season. The same pattern held in prior years.
Urban Heat Island Effect in NJ Metro Areas
Bergen, Hudson, Essex, and Union counties — the most urbanized in the state — consistently show the highest West Nile virus activity in NJDOH surveillance reports. Urban surfaces retain heat, keeping overnight temperatures above the mosquito activity threshold longer. Dense development also creates more standing water opportunities in gutters, downspouts, and sealed pavement areas where drainage is poor.
This is not coincidence. The counties that are warmest overnight are the counties where Culex pipiens, a species that thrives in urban environments, shows the highest pool positivity rates season after season.
Mosquito-Borne Disease Risk in New Jersey 2026
West Nile virus is the disease that matters most in New Jersey. It has been endemic in the state since the first human case was reported in 2000, and it resurfaces every single season with varying intensity.
1. West Nile Virus (WNV)
In a typical year, New Jersey reports approximately 13–14 human WNV infections, according to NJDOH baseline data. The 2024 season was far outside that range, with 41 confirmed human cases and 8 deaths — the highest in recent memory for the state. The 2025 season started with early viral detections across all 21 counties and at least two confirmed human cases by late August, including a child from Atlantic County.
Most people infected with WNV — roughly 80 percent — show no symptoms at all. About one in five will develop West Nile fever: headache, body aches, fatigue, mild fever. Less than one percent develop neuroinvasive disease, which can include encephalitis or meningitis. That percentage is higher in adults over 50 and immunocompromised individuals.
2. Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE)
EEE is rare but extremely serious. New Jersey went from zero EEE human cases for years to reporting cases in 2019 and again in 2024 — when the state recorded its first EEE human case in Atlantic County since that 2019 cluster. The case involved a minor who was hospitalized and later discharged. EEE-positive mosquito pools have been detected in Atlantic, Cape May, Gloucester, Hunterdon, Monmouth, Morris, and Union counties across recent seasons.
The fatality rate for neuroinvasive EEE is substantially higher than WNV. State and county mosquito control programs treat known EEE habitat proactively precisely because of that severity difference.
3. Other Arboviruses Under Surveillance
NJDOH also monitors for Jamestown Canyon Virus (JCV), La Crosse encephalitis, and other arboviruses. JCV-positive mosquito pools were detected in Morris and Sussex counties in 2025. La Crosse encephalitis had a positive pool in Sussex County the same year. These remain low-frequency findings, but they reflect the breadth of New Jersey’s vector surveillance infrastructure.
| Year | NJ Human WNV Cases | Deaths | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | ~13 (typical range) | Not specified | Near average season |
| 2023 | 14 | 1 | Early activity in some counties |
| 2024 | 41 | 8 | High-volume, early-onset season; first EEE human case |
| 2025 | Lower than 2024* | Under investigation | WNV in all 21 counties; early April detection |
| 2026 | Season ongoing | Season ongoing | Surveillance active as of this publication |
* Per NJDOH Acting Commissioner Jeff Brown statement, August 2025. All data sourced from NJDOH official press releases.
New Jersey’s Mosquito Surveillance and Control Infrastructure
What distinguishes New Jersey from many states is the depth of its organized mosquito control infrastructure. This matters practically — the programs doing the work affect what residents actually experience in their communities.
The New Jersey State Mosquito Control Commission coordinates 21 county-level mosquito control agencies, each of which manages trapping programs, conducts pool testing for arboviruses, and carries out larviciding and adulticiding operations in high-risk areas. The NJDOH, NJDEP, and NJDA work in close coordination, and the state posts weekly vector-borne surveillance reports throughout the active season at nj.gov/health/cd/statistics/arboviral-stats
In 2025, WNV was detected in 776 mosquito pools by late August — higher than the comparable figure from 2024 by that same date. That kind of systematic monitoring is what allows for timely public health advisories and targeted spray operations before disease transmission peaks.
High-Risk Counties and Regions for Mosquito Activity in New jersey
Not all parts of New Jersey experience the same exposure. Geography, land cover, and the presence of wetlands all shape local risk in ways that aggregate statewide data can obscure.
| Region / County Area | Key Risk Factors | Primary Concern |
|---|---|---|
| Bergen, Hudson, Essex, Union (NE NJ) | Urban heat island; dense population; standing water in infrastructure | West Nile Virus — highest pool positivity rates |
| Monmouth, Middlesex, Ocean (Shore/Central) | Tidal wetlands; retention basins; early-season floodwater hatches | WNV; EEE in marshy areas |
| Atlantic, Cape May (South Jersey) | Coastal marshes; Coquillettidia habitat; EEE-positive pools historically | EEE; WNV in Culex-heavy zones |
| Morris, Sussex (NW NJ) | Inland wetlands; Jamestown Canyon Virus; La Crosse encephalitis pools | JCV; La Crosse; EEE in wooded areas |
| Camden, Cumberland, Salem (SW NJ) | Agricultural drainage; low-lying terrain; seasonal flooding | WNV; nuisance floodwater species |
Bergen · Hudson · Essex · Union
Monmouth · Middlesex · Ocean
Atlantic · Cape May · Gloucester
Morris · Sussex · Hunterdon
Camden · Cumberland · Salem
Practical Mosquito Prevention for New Jersey Residents in 2026
Surveillance data and climate context are useful. But the practical question for most people is: what actually reduces my exposure this season?
The core answer from NJDOH, NJDEP, and the CDC is consistent and evidence-backed. Personal protection and property-level breeding reduction remain the most effective interventions available to individuals.
1. Eliminate Breeding Sites on Your Property
This is the single most impactful step most homeowners can take. Female mosquitoes need standing water to lay eggs — and the egg-to-adult cycle can complete in as little as 5–7 days during peak summer temperatures. Disrupting that cycle early breaks the local breeding loop.
| Item | Action Required | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Flowerpots and saucers | Empty or store upside-down | Weekly |
| Birdbaths | Change water or add circulating pump | Weekly |
| Clogged gutters | Clear debris; ensure drainage | Each rain event |
| Pool covers | Remove standing water | After rain |
| Wheelbarrows, buckets, tarps | Flip or store covered | Ongoing |
| Children’s toys and sandboxes | Empty; keep covered | Weekly |
| Kiddie pools | Drain when not in use | Daily if possible |
| Low spots in lawn | Improve grading or drainage | Property assessment |
2. Personal Protection Measures
- Use EPA-registered insect repellents containing DEET, Picaridin, IR3535, or Oil of Lemon Eucalyptus (OLE) when outdoors.
- Avoid outdoor activity at dawn and dusk when Culex species — the primary WNV vectors — are most active.
- Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants in high-exposure outdoor settings, particularly near wetlands.
- Keep window and door screens in good repair to prevent indoor entry.
Note: The Asian Tiger Mosquito bites during daylight hours — standard dusk-only precautions are insufficient for full protection.
What to Watch for in New Jersey Mosquito Season 2026
Based on the multi-year pattern NJDOH and NJDEP have documented, here are the indicators that matter as this season progresses.
First, detection of WNV in mosquito pools — which in 2025 occurred in April and in 2024 also arrived earlier than the historical norm — is worth tracking. The NJDOH weekly surveillance reports give county-level breakdowns, and early detections in the northeastern counties typically signal broader statewide spread within weeks.
Second, watch Atlantic and Cape May Counties for EEE updates. Southern New Jersey’s coastal wetlands have been the consistent origin point for EEE-positive mosquito pools in recent seasons. EEE doesn’t get the same media coverage as WNV, but the severity warrants attention, particularly for people who spend time near tidal marsh areas.
Third, and this is something public health communicators sometimes underemphasize — the season ending date is variable. In warm years, active mosquito populations and arboviral transmission have persisted into October and occasionally November in New Jersey. The season is not over just because summer ends.
Conclusion: New Jersey Mosquito Season 2026 Demands Early Attention
New Jersey mosquito season 2026 follows a trajectory that public health officials have been tracking carefully: earlier starts, longer duration, and a disease surveillance picture that underscores why complacency is not a great strategy.
The 2024 season’s 41 WNV cases and 8 deaths was a jarring number for a state that historically averaged around 13 annual infections. The 2025 season opened with the earliest mosquito pool positivity on record for the state, spreading across all 21 counties by late summer. Those are data points, not alarmism.
What the NJDOH, NJDEP, and county mosquito control agencies consistently emphasize is that individual action — eliminating standing water, using repellent, being aware of peak activity hours — is meaningful prevention. These agencies operate sophisticated surveillance and control programs, but they are managing public spaces. Your property is your domain.
New Jersey mosquito season 2026 is active. The peak runs July through early September. Disease risk is real but manageable. Use the resources from NJDOH and NJDEP, apply the prevention steps, and check the weekly surveillance reports if you want to stay current on conditions in your county.
