Petroleum Engineers · NH

Licensed Petroleum Engineers in New Hampshire.

Verified Professional Engineer (P.E.) petroleum specialists practicing across New Hampshire, sourced live from the state board.

Petroleum engineering in New Hampshire.

Upstream, midstream and refining engineering across the oil and gas lifecycle.

EngineerMint aggregates live New Hampshire board records alongside claimable, verified profiles so owners, counsel, and contractors can locate qualified petroleum P.E.s and confirm their credentials — without calls to the licensing board.

Browse by city below, post a New Hampshire brief to the marketplace, or run the AI Estimator for an order-of-magnitude cost and schedule.

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Licensed petroleum engineers in New Hampshire

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FAQ

Hiring a petroleum engineer in New Hampshire

How do I find a licensed petroleum engineer in New Hampshire?+

Search EngineerMint's directory of P.E.-licensed petroleum engineers in New Hampshire. Every record links back to the New Hampshire state board for live verification.

Do petroleum engineers in New Hampshire need a P.E. license?+

Any petroleum engineering work submitted to a New Hampshire building department, regulator, or DOT typically must be sealed by a P.E. licensed in New Hampshire.

What does a petroleum engineer do?+

Upstream, midstream and refining engineering across the oil and gas lifecycle.

How much does a petroleum engineer cost in New Hampshire?+

Fees vary by scope. Use the AI Estimator for a rough order-of-magnitude figure, or post a brief to receive proposals from New Hampshire firms.

Licensure

When you need a licensed Professional Engineer for petroleum projects in New Hampshire

Permits, stamped drawings, and code compliance turn on whether a Professional Engineer (P.E.) is on the deliverable. These are the situations where a licensed P.E. is non-negotiable.

Permitted construction & PE-stamped drawings

Any drawing submitted to a building department, AHJ, or utility for permit typically requires a Professional Engineer's stamp in the state the project will be built.

Public safety & code compliance

Life-safety, structural, electrical, and pressure-system work falls under state engineering practice acts. Unstamped work in these scopes is generally illegal and uninsurable.

Owner, lender, and insurer requirements

Owners, AHJs, lenders, and insurers commonly require P.E.-sealed deliverables before they will fund, approve, or insure a project — even on scopes that might otherwise be exempt.

Liability & professional responsibility

A P.E. seal documents professional responsibility for the design. Using a licensed engineer is the standard risk-transfer mechanism owners and contractors rely on.

How EngineerMint helps

Find, compare, and engage the right engineers — faster.

Directory & license lookup

Search a nationwide directory of licensed engineers and firms sourced from official state board rosters — every record verifiable on the issuing board.

AI matching

Describe your scope and let AI shortlist licensed engineers and firms by discipline, jurisdiction, and project type.

Firm comparison

Compare firms side by side on Certificate of Authorization, in-house P.E. roster, signature projects, and credentials before issuing an RFP.

Project posting

Post a brief to the marketplace and receive proposals from licensed engineers and firms within 1–2 business days.