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When is hantavirus risk highest? Is there a peak season?

Hantavirus risk follows rodent population cycles, which vary by region and species. United States (Sin Nombre virus): cases peak in late spring and early summer (May–July) in the US Southwest, correlating with the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) breeding season that drives rodents into human structures — cabins, barns, and outbuildings closed over winter. The CDC notes that 'spring cleaning' of rural cabins without proper precautions (sweeping dry droppings without a mask) is a recurring documented exposure scenario. Scandinavia and Northern Europe (Puumala virus): cases spike in autumn and winter when bank voles (Myodes glareolus) move into homes and farm buildings. Outbreak years correlate with vole population boom cycles every 3–4 years. South America (Andes virus): year-round transmission with no sharply defined peak; cases rise slightly in autumn and winter in Argentina and Chile when cooler temperatures push rodents indoors. The MV Hondius index case was exposed between November 2025 and April 2026 — an autumn-to-early-autumn window in the Southern Hemisphere. Traveler advice: high-risk activities in endemic regions (wilderness camping, cleaning rural structures) carry elevated risk during local rodent breeding seasons. Check CDC country-specific travel advisories before visiting endemic areas.

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Last update Jun 17, 2026 · ⚠ Not medical advice. Information is provided for awareness only; consult a physician for individual health questions.