South Dakota Hunting Guide 2026-2027 – Seasons, Permits & Public Hunting Lands
Planning a trip for the 2026–2027 South Dakota game calendar? This guide pulls together the latest posted dates, permit basics, major species windows, and public-land planning tips in one place. It’s built for residents, first-timers, and out-of-state visitors who want a practical overview before they apply, buy tags, or start scouting. The dates below reflect the latest 2026 postings from South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks at the time of writing, and you should still do one final check before opening day in case of emergency updates or unit-specific changes.
📅 Quick Reference Points
Here’s the fast version if you just want the highlights first:
- Deer
- Archery: Sep 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027
- Nonresident archery public/private land: Sep 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027
- West River: Nov 14 – Nov 29, 2026
- East River: Nov 21 – Dec 6, 2026
- Black Hills: Nov 1 – Nov 30, 2026
- Muzzleloader: Dec 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027
- Apprentice and mentored deer: Sep 12, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027
- Turkey
- Spring Prairie: Apr 11 – May 31, 2026
- Spring Black Hills: Apr 25 – May 31, 2026
- Fall Prairie: Nov 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027
- Mentored fall: Nov 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027
- Elk
- Black Hills archery: Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026
- Prairie firearms: Sep 1 – Dec 31, 2026
- Black Hills firearms: multiple unit windows from Oct 1 – Dec 31, 2026
- Custer State Park early archery: Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026
- Ducks
- Low Plains North/Middle: Sep 26 – Dec 8, 2026
- Low Plains South: Oct 24, 2026 – Jan 5, 2027
- High Plains: Oct 10, 2026 – Jan 14, 2027
- Geese
- Early Canada goose: Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026
- Unit 1 Canada goose: Oct 1 – Dec 16, 2026
- Unit 2 Canada goose: Nov 2, 2026 – Feb 14, 2027
- Fall light goose: Sep 26, 2026 – Jan 8, 2027
- Spring light goose conservation order: Feb 16 – May 15, 2026
- Youth opportunities
- Youth waterfowl: Sep 12 – Sep 13, 2026
- Youth pheasant: Sep 26 – Oct 4, 2026
- Mentored turkey and deer opportunities are also available in select frameworks
- No bear opener
- There is no bear season listed in the current 2026 big-game regulations.
🦌 Big Game Overview
| Species | Method / Hunt Type | 2026-2027 Dates | Permit / Zone Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deer | Resident Archery | Sep 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027 | Archery license required; municipal archery also runs Sep 1 – Jan 1 in participating areas |
| Deer | Nonresident Archery Public/Private Land | Sep 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027 | Application window: May 20 – Jun 9, 2026 |
| Deer | West River Firearms | Nov 14 – Nov 29, 2026 | Draw-based; separate West River tags |
| Deer | East River Firearms | Nov 21 – Dec 6, 2026 | Draw-based; separate East River tags |
| Deer | Black Hills Firearms | Nov 1 – Nov 30, 2026 | Black Hills unit rules apply |
| Deer | Custer State Park | Nov 1 – Dec 15, 2026 | Park-specific permits |
| Deer | Muzzleloader | Dec 1, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027 | Telescopic sights not allowed in muzzleloader-only hunts |
| Deer | Apprentice / Mentored | Sep 12, 2026 – Jan 1, 2027 | Youth-focused supervised option |
| Elk | Black Hills Archery | Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026 | Resident draw; Black Hills units AEE-H1A to H7A |
| Elk | Prairie Firearms | Sep 1 – Dec 31, 2026 | Resident draw; land access is a big deal because much of it is private |
| Elk | Black Hills Firearms | Oct 1 – Dec 31, 2026 | Unit-specific windows; some tags run Oct only, others split into Oct/Dec segments |
| Elk | Custer SP Early Archery | Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026 | Limited resident draw |
| Elk | Custer SP Firearms | Oct 1 – Oct 31, 2026 | Limited resident draw |
| Elk | Custer SP Special Antlerless | Oct 15 – Oct 31 and/or Dec 1 – Dec 16, 2026 | Unit CU1/CU2 structure |
| Bear | Not applicable | No 2026 season listed | Current big-game rules do not include a bear opener |
A quick antelope note
Even though it is not part of the table above, pronghorn is still one of the state’s headline big-game opportunities:
- Archery antelope: Aug 15 – Oct 31, 2026
- Firearms antelope: Oct 3 – Oct 18, 2026
- Special antelope: Oct 3 – Oct 18, 2026
- Custer State Park antelope: Oct 3 – Oct 18, 2026
For beginners, deer is usually the easier entry point. Elk and antelope planning can get more complicated because unit access, draw odds, and landownership matter a lot.
🦃 Turkey Dates
| Hunt Type | Dates | Bag / License Notes | Method Notes | Restricted-Area Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spring Prairie | Apr 11 – May 31, 2026 | Typically one bird per license; spring tags are generally for male birds | Shotgun and archery; no rimfire, centerfire, or muzzleloading rifle in spring | Standard prairie units |
| Spring Prairie Archery | Apr 11 – May 31, 2026 | One archery tag per license | Bow rules apply | Good Earth State Park and Adams Nature Area need free resident-only access permits plus the archery license |
| Spring Mentored | Apr 11 – May 31, 2026 | One bird; mentored license issued to the youth participant | Supervised hunt | Good option for younger newcomers |
| Spring Black Hills | Apr 25 – May 31, 2026 | Limited nonresident allocation in Black Hills framework | Shotgun or bow | Black Hills units only |
| Spring Black Hills Archery | Apr 25 – May 31, 2026 | Archery license rules apply | Bow only | Black Hills |
| Nonresident Spring Black Hills | Apr 25 – May 31, 2026 | Limited draw for nonresidents | Same spring weapon limits | Apply early |
| Spring Custer State Park | Apr 25 – May 23, 2026 | Separate park opportunity | Shotgun or bow | Park-specific permits |
| Fall Prairie | Nov 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | Tag type can allow broader sex classification depending on unit/license | Firearms, archery, and legal handguns; energy minimums apply | Prairie units |
| Fall Mentored | Nov 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | Youth-focused supervised option | Same fall legal methods | Good for first fall bird |
A couple of easy-to-miss details: you cannot shoot a turkey while it is roosting in a tree, and spring rules are stricter on firearm choice than fall rules. That catches some new hunters off guard.
🦝 Furbearer Opportunities
| Species | Dates | Limit | Special Rules / License Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coyote | Year-round | Unrestricted | Custer State Park has a separate Nov 1 – Apr 30 window |
| Bobcat | Dec 26, 2026 – Feb 15, 2027 | East River: 1; Black Hills: 1; West River: unrestricted | Whole carcass and pelt must be presented for registration/tagging within 5 days |
| Mink & Weasel | Nov 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | Unrestricted | Nonresident window: Dec 1, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 |
| Raccoon | Year-round | Unrestricted | Nonresidents may not use dogs to aid in taking raccoon |
| Beaver | Year-round except Black Hills closed | Unrestricted | Closed within the Black Hills Fire Protection District |
| Muskrat | Year-round West River except BHFPD; Nov 1, 2026 – Apr 30, 2027 in East River/BHFPD | Unrestricted | Dog use not allowed for mink or muskrat |
| River Otter | Nov 1 – Dec 31, 2026 | 1 per resident hunter/trapper | Resident only; must report harvest within 24 hours; season can close early if quota is reached |
| Skunk / Opossum / Badger / Red Fox / Jackrabbit | Year-round | Unrestricted | General predator/furbearer rules apply |
If you plan to trap rather than just pursue predators with a firearm, make sure your license setup matches the activity. South Dakota separates some of these privileges more than people expect.
🐦 Small Game Calendar
| Species | Dates | Daily Bag Limit | Possession Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pheasant – Youth Only | Sep 26 – Oct 4, 2026 | 3 rooster pheasants | 15 |
| Pheasant – Traditional | Oct 17, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | 3 rooster pheasants | 15 |
| Prairie Grouse | Sep 19, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | 3 | 15 |
| Partridge / Chukar | Sep 19, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | 5 | 15 |
| Quail | Oct 17, 2026 – Jan 31, 2027 | 5 | 15 |
| Mourning Dove | Sep 1 – Nov 9, 2026 | 15 | 45 |
| Cottontail Rabbit | Sep 1, 2026 – Mar 31, 2027 | 10 | 30 |
| Tree Squirrel | Sep 1, 2026 – Mar 31, 2027 | 5 | 15 |
| Snipe | Sep 1 – Oct 31, 2026 | 5 | 15 |
For bird hunters, pheasant gets the spotlight, but don’t overlook quail, partridge, and prairie grouse if you enjoy mixed-bag days and less pressure.
🦆 Complete Waterfowl Seasons
| Species / Zone | Dates | Daily Limit / Option | Permit Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Youth Waterfowl | Sep 12 – Sep 13, 2026 | Ducks follow chosen duck option; Canada goose limit depends on unit | Adult must accompany; adult may not hunt ducks; non-toxic shot required |
| Duck – Low Plains North | Sep 26 – Dec 8, 2026 | Traditional 6-duck option or 3-duck option | State Migratory Bird Certification required; Federal Duck Stamp required for ages 16+ |
| Duck – Low Plains Middle | Sep 26 – Dec 8, 2026 | Same as above | Same permits |
| Duck – Low Plains South | Oct 24, 2026 – Jan 5, 2027 | Same as above | Same permits |
| Duck – High Plains | Oct 10, 2026 – Jan 14, 2027 | Same as above | Same permits |
| Canada Goose – Early | Sep 1 – Sep 30, 2026 | 15 daily | Goose rules and non-toxic shot apply |
| Canada Goose – Unit 1 | Oct 1 – Dec 16, 2026 | 8 daily after the early segment | Unit map matters |
| Canada Goose – Unit 2 | Nov 2, 2026 – Feb 14, 2027 | 4 daily | Unit map matters |
| White-fronted Goose | Sep 26 – Dec 8, 2026 | 3 daily | Migratory certification required |
| Light Goose – Fall | Sep 26, 2026 – Jan 8, 2027 | 50 daily; possession unlimited | Fall license rules apply |
| August Goose Management Take | Aug 15 – Aug 31, 2026 | 15 daily | Resident-focused early opportunity |
| Light Goose Conservation Order | Feb 16 – May 15, 2026 | Unlimited daily and possession | Electronic calls allowed; unplugged shotguns allowed; no federal duck stamp needed |
| Sandhill Crane | Sep 26 – Nov 22, 2026 | 3 daily | Migratory certification required; no federal duck stamp needed |
Duck bag structure, simplified
If you choose the traditional duck option, your daily bag is 6 ducks total, with these species caps:
- up to 5 mallards, but only 2 hens
- up to 3 wood ducks
- 1 scaup
- 2 redheads
- 2 canvasbacks
- 3 pintails
- plus 2 bonus blue-winged teal during the first 9 days of a zone opener
If you choose the three-duck option, it’s exactly what it sounds like: 3 ducks of any species or sex.
That choice matters, so don’t rush through the license screen.
🐗 Other Available Game
| Species | Dates | Useful Rule |
|---|---|---|
| American Crow – Spring | Mar 1 – Apr 30, 2026 | No daily or possession limit; electronic calls are legal |
| American Crow – Fall | Sep 1 – Oct 31, 2026 | Same no-limit setup |
| Eurasian Collared Dove | Year-round | No daily or possession limit |
| Jackrabbit | Year-round | Unrestricted |
| Ground Squirrel / Gopher / Marmot | Year-round | Unrestricted |
| Porcupine | Year-round | Unrestricted |
| Prairie Dog | Generally open under state rules | Always check area-specific closures, especially on some federal lands |
This is the stuff many guides leave out, but it can be useful if you want a backup plan for a slow main-species day.
🗺️ Hunting Zones
| Area Type / Unit System | What It Covers | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Deer Zones | East River, West River, Black Hills, Custer State Park, Municipal | Tag type and opener depend on zone |
| Elk Units | Black Hills, Prairie, Custer State Park | Highly unit-specific draw and access rules |
| Waterfowl Zones | Low Plains North/Middle/South, High Plains, Goose Units 1 and 2 | Opener and bag structure depend on your zone |
| Bobcat Zones | East River, West River, Black Hills | Different harvest limits |
| Public Access Types | Walk-In Areas, GPAs, WPAs, School and Public Lands, National Grasslands, BLM parcels | Access rules, vehicle rules, and pressure vary a lot |
Use the official South Dakota Public Hunting Atlas before you go. It covers walk-in parcels, state lands, federal tracts, and other spots open to public use. Also, never assume a parcel is open just because it sits next to another one that is. Public-land boundaries, motor-vehicle restrictions, and private-property edges can get messy fast.
🎟️ Permits, Tags & Licenses
| License / Permit Type | Resident | Nonresident | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small Game | $36 | $142 | Nonresident license covers two 5-day periods |
| Combination (small game + fishing) | $60 | — | Popular all-around option for residents |
| Senior Combination (65+) | $43 | — | Resident senior discount |
| Youth Small Game (12–17) | $5 | $10 | Great low-cost entry point |
| Mentored Small Game | $5 | $10 | For eligible youth participants |
| One-Day Small Game | $15 | — | Useful for short resident trips |
| Habitat Stamp | $10 | $25 | Required for most hunters age 18+ |
| State Migratory Bird Certification | $5 | $5 | Needed for ducks, geese, crane, dove, snipe, coot, and related migratory species |
| Federal Duck Stamp | $29 | $29 | Required for ages 16+ for ducks, geese, tundra swan, mergansers |
| Spring Light Goose License | Use qualifying small-game/combination license | $61 adult / $21 youth | Federal duck stamp not required for spring conservation order |
| Nonresident Military 3-Day Waterfowl | — | Special rate / eligibility rules | Valid only on private land for qualifying active-duty personnel |
| Reduced-Fee Disabled License | Available | — | Resident reduced-fee disability options exist |
Add-ons and practical notes
- Habitat Stamp exemptions include most youth licenses, South Dakota mentored small-game licenses, one-day hunting licenses, some landowner licenses, and certain reduced-fee disability licenses.
- Nonresident fall waterfowl access is limited and distributed through a lottery drawing.
- Big-game tags like deer, elk, turkey, and antelope usually involve separate drawings or species-specific applications.
- Elk draw timing starts early. For 2026, the first draw opened in April and closes in May, with a second draw later if tags remained.
If you’re putting together a broader prairie trip, it can also help to compare nearby rules with this Wyoming season guide before you lock in travel dates.
❓ South Dakota Hunting Quick FAQ
1) Is there a bear season in 2026?
No. The current 2026 big-game regulations do not list bear as an open species.
2) Do nonresidents need a lottery for fall waterfowl?
Yes, for many fall waterfowl opportunities, nonresident access is limited and handled through an application and drawing process.
3) Can I use a rifle during spring turkey?
No. Spring turkey rules do not allow rimfire, centerfire, or muzzleloading rifles.
4) Do I need a Habitat Stamp?
Usually yes if you are 18 or older and buying or applying for most licenses, unless you fall under a listed exemption.
5) Is the federal duck stamp required for crane or dove?
No. It is required for ducks, geese, swan, and mergansers, but not for sandhill crane, mourning dove, snipe, or spring light goose.
6) Can I take raccoon with dogs if I’m from out of state?
No. Nonresidents may not use dogs to aid in taking raccoon.
7) What’s the easiest way to find public ground?
Use the state’s Public Hunting Atlas and confirm parcel boundaries before you leave home.
Conclusion
The short version is pretty simple: deer, turkey, pheasant, ducks, geese, and predator opportunities are all on the board for 2026–2027, but the details change a lot by unit, method, and residency status. Deer and waterfowl are especially zone-driven, elk takes more planning, and public access research matters more here than many newcomers realize.
Before you go, double-check the opener for your exact unit, buy the right permits early, and make sure your access plan is solid. Bookmark this page if you want a working reference for the 2026–2027 cycle and future updates.
