COVID-19 in Nevada: Latest CDC Hospital Signal

Last updated:

Track the latest available COVID-19 hospitalization signal for Nevada using CDC HHS Protect hospital data. This page shows the week ending Mar 14, 2026, trend direction, and how Nevada compares with the national average and nearby states.

Latest available CDC HHS Protect week: Mar 14, 2026

Low
0.5 per 100K

new COVID-19 hospital admissions in the latest CDC reporting week

Week ending Mar 14, 2026

→ Stable similar to 0.6 per 100K last week
·
0.7 per 100K below the national rate
New admissions: 15
Currently hospitalized: 23
In ICU: 4
% inpatient beds: 0.3%

Fast answer: the latest available CDC hospital-admissions signal for Nevada is low, not a live case count. Use the trend, week ending date, and nearby-state comparison before treating this as a current local spread read.

Key Takeaways

  1. 1 The latest available CDC HHS Protect COVID-19 signal for Nevada is low, with 0.5 new admissions per 100,000 residents for the week ending Mar 14, 2026.
  2. 2 In that reporting week, COVID-19 admissions were similar to 0.6 per 100K last week.
  3. 3 Nevada is 0.7 per 100k below the national rate.

CDC Recommendations at This Level

COVID activity is low — stay current on vaccines

  • Keep your COVID vaccines up to date — check if you're due for an updated booster
  • No special precautions needed at current levels for most people
  • People who are immunocompromised or high-risk should maintain their personal risk management plan

This is general public health guidance based on CDC recommendations — not personal medical advice. Talk to your healthcare provider about what's right for you and your family.

Nevada COVID-19 Trend — 2025-2026 Season

New confirmed COVID-19 hospital admissions per 100,000 population per week.

Is COVID-19 Getting Better or Worse in Nevada?

📉

COVID-19 is declining in Nevada

Good news — covid-19 activity is going down. Based on CDC forecasting data, each case is leading to fewer new cases, which means you should see continued improvement in the coming weeks.

Technical details (CDC Rt estimate)

Reproduction number (Rt): 0.91 (95% CI: 0.68 – 1.02)

Probability of growth: 5%

Rt below 1.0 means each case leads to fewer new cases (declining). Above 1.0 means growing.

Based on CDC forecasting data as of March 31, 2026. Source

Nevada vs. National Average and Nearby States

Nearby States

State Activity Level Per 100K
Low 0.5
Low 0.2
Low 0.4
Low 0.2
Low 0.7

Sources & Methods

COVID-19 data reflects confirmed hospital admissions reported through the CDC's HHS Protect system. Activity levels are based on new admissions per 100,000 population per week. Hospitalization data may undercount total infections as most COVID-19 cases are now managed at home. Learn more about our methods .

More Health Data for Nevada

Best Next Clicks for Nevada

Useful next questions

Questions worth opening from the Nevada COVID page

These are the best next clicks when someone lands here from search and needs the national COVID picture, a level interpretation, or a travel-aware path.

Cities in Nevada

Health data available for these Nevada cities:

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the latest COVID-19 activity level in Nevada?

The latest available CDC HHS Protect COVID-19 signal for Nevada is LOW with 0.5 new hospital admissions per 100,000 people for the week ending Mar 14, 2026. There were 15 total new COVID-19 admissions in that reporting week.

Where does this COVID-19 data come from?

This data comes from the CDC's HHS Protect hospital reporting system. Hospitals across the United States report confirmed COVID-19 admissions, ICU usage, and bed capacity weekly. The metric shown is new admissions per 100,000 population.

How often is this page updated?

This page is updated weekly after the CDC publishes new hospital reporting data. There is typically a 1-2 week lag between when admissions occur and when data appears here.

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Local Health Signal is not affiliated with the CDC or any government agency. Data is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended for clinical decision making. See our methods page for details on data sources and limitations.