New Mexico Hunter Licenses 2026: Permit Types, Fees & Rules
Getting a New Mexico hunting license in 2026-2027 is straightforward, but the fees have changed significantly. Thanks to Senate Bill 5 (SB5), signed into law during the 2025 legislative session and effective April 1, 2026, New Mexico raised its hunting and fishing license fees for the first time in over 20 years. Resident hunters now pay $25 for a base Game Hunting License, while nonresident hunters pay $90 — along with separate species-specific tags and mandatory stamps. Whether you’re a longtime local hunter or an out-of-state visitor planning your first elk or mule deer trip, understanding exactly what licenses you need, what they cost, and how to get them is critical before you head into the field.
Beyond the base license, every hunter in New Mexico must also carry the correct species tag, a Habitat Management & Access Validation (HMAV), and — for those hunting on federal public land — a Habitat Stamp. The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish (NMDGF, now Department of Wildlife) manages all licensing through both an online system and a statewide vendor network. The 2026-2027 big-game draw deadline was March 18, 2026, with draw results posted around April 22, 2026. Over-the-counter licenses for bear, turkey, cougar, javelina, and private-land species are available year-round. Read on for the complete breakdown of every fee, rule, and step you need to know.
What Changed for the 2026-2027 Season: The SB5 Fee Update
Before diving into tables and numbers, it’s worth understanding why fees look different this year. SB5 was described as the first meaningful fee adjustment in more than two decades. The goal was to fund wildlife conservation programs without relying solely on state appropriations. Fees for nonresidents saw the largest increases — in some cases more than 50% over previous rates. Residents saw modest but real bumps as well. Additionally, annual Consumer Price Index (CPI) adjustments can now modify fees going forward, so expect incremental increases each year.
New Mexico Hunting License Types: Complete Overview
New Mexico uses a layered licensing system. You don’t just buy one license and go — you build a license package depending on your age, residency, species target, and land type.
Required Licenses and Validations for All Hunters
| Document | Who Needs It | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Game Hunting License (base) | All big-game, turkey, upland, migratory bird hunters | Resident $25 / Nonresident $90 |
| Habitat Management & Access Validation (HMAV) | All hunters/anglers/trappers age 18+ | $4 (both) |
| Habitat Stamp | Anyone hunting/fishing on Forest Service or BLM land | $10 (both) |
| Carcass Tag / E-Tag | All big-game and turkey hunters (per animal) | Included with species tag |
| Hunter Education Number | All hunters age 17 and under | Free (required completion of course) |
| HIP Number | All migratory game bird hunters | Free (registration required) |
| Federal Duck Stamp | Waterfowl hunters age 16+ | ~$27 (sold at USPS and license vendors) |
2026-2027 New Mexico Hunting License Fees: Full Breakdown
The tables below reflect the updated fees effective for the 2026-2027 license year under SB5. Always verify the most current figures directly with the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish official license requirements page before purchasing.
Base License Fees by Hunter Category
| License Type | Resident Fee | Nonresident Fee |
|---|---|---|
| Game Hunting License (Adult) | $25 | $90 |
| Game Hunting & Fishing License (Combo) | $40 | Not Issued |
| Junior Game Hunting License (17 & under) | $10 | $15 |
| Junior Game Hunting & Fishing License | $15 | Not Issued |
| Senior/Handicapped Game Hunting License | $15 | Not Issued |
| Senior/Handicapped Hunting & Fishing Combo | $20 | Not Issued |
| Disabled Veteran Game Hunting & Fishing License | $10 | Not Issued |
| Temporary Game Hunting License (4 days) | Not Issued | $33 |
| Nongame Hunting License | Not Issued | $65 |
Over-the-Counter (OTC) Species Tag Fees
| Species Tag | Resident | Nonresident |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Deer Tag | $60 | $398 |
| Quality/High-Demand Deer Tag | $60 | $623 |
| Private-Land Deer (Junior/Senior) | $22 | Not Issued |
| Pronghorn (Antelope) Tag | $70 | $423 |
| Turkey License (Spring or Fall) | $35 | $135 |
| Black Bear License | $47 | $260 |
| Cougar License | $43 | $290 |
| Javelina License | $58 | $165 |
| Barbary Sheep License | $103 | $360 |
| Ibex License | $103 | $1,610 |
| Oryx License (Private-land only) | $153 | $1,610 |
| Trapper License | $20 | $345 |
| Junior Trapper License | $9 | Not Issued |
| Duplicate License/Tag | $6 | $6 |
Note: A $1 vendor fee applies to all purchases made at licensed vendor locations.
Big-Game Draw License Fees for 2026-2027
Draw hunts are for elk, deer, pronghorn, bighorn sheep, Barbary sheep, ibex, oryx, and javelina in controlled units. All draw fees include a nonrefundable application fee of $7 for residents and $13 for nonresidents.
| Species | License Type | Resident | Nonresident |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elk | Standard (Mature Bull / Either Sex) | $90 | $548 |
| Elk | Quality/High-Demand (MB/ES) | $90 | $773 |
| Elk | Antlerless | $60 | N/A (resident only) |
| Deer | Standard | $41 | $283 |
| Deer | Quality/High-Demand | $41 | $368 |
| Pronghorn | Standard | $60 | $283 |
| Javelina | Draw | $65 | $178 |
| Bighorn Sheep | Ram | $160 | $3,173 |
| Bighorn Sheep | Ewe | $85 | $3,173 |
| Oryx | Draw | $160 | $1,623 |
| Ibex | Draw | $110 | $1,623 |
| Barbary Sheep | Draw | $110 | $373 |
Key draw rules to know:
- A minimum of 84% of all draw licenses are awarded to New Mexico residents by law.
- 100% of antlerless elk draw licenses and hunts on Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs) go to residents only.
- Up to 10% of licenses may go to applicants (resident or nonresident) who have accumulated bonus preference points.
- Draw results for 2026-2027 were posted April 22, 2026.
New Mexico Residency Requirements: Who Qualifies as a Resident?
Qualifying for a resident license can save you hundreds — sometimes thousands — of dollars. New Mexico defines “resident” based on five distinct criteria:
| Residency Category | Key Requirement |
|---|---|
| U.S. Citizen | Must have lived in NM for 90 consecutive days immediately before applying; must be domiciled in-state and not claim residency elsewhere |
| Non-U.S. Citizen (Legal Resident) | Legally present in the U.S. and living in NM for at least 90 consecutive days before application |
| Student | Enrolled at any NM educational institution and physically residing in-state for at least one full semester immediately preceding application |
| U.S. Military (Stationed in NM) | Permanently assigned to a military installation within New Mexico; commanding officer letter required; spouses and dependents in the same household qualify |
| Fort Bliss Personnel | Officially stationed at Fort Bliss; this residency status only applies to draw-hunt licenses on Fort Bliss; all other hunts require nonresident fees |
Special License Discounts and Exemptions
New Mexico offers meaningful cost breaks for certain hunters. Here’s what’s available:
| Category | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Active Duty Military (NM Resident) | 50% discount on all licenses, permits, and stamps |
| Honorably Discharged Veterans (NM Resident) | 50% discount on all licenses, permits, and stamps |
| 100% Disabled Veterans (NM Resident) | Free lifetime Game Hunting & Fishing License |
| Youth (Age 17 & Under) | Junior license at reduced rate; must possess Hunter Education number or mentor youth number for big-game and turkey |
| Senior/Handicapped (NM Resident) | Reduced fee license options available (see base license table above) |
For species-by-species season details, including unit-specific rules, be sure to check the complete New Mexico hunting seasons guide — it breaks down dates by weapon type and unit across the state.
What Species Can You Hunt in New Mexico?
New Mexico stands out nationally for the variety of huntable species, including several found nowhere else in the lower 48:
Big Game:
- Mule Deer and Coues Whitetail Deer
- Rocky Mountain Elk
- Pronghorn (Antelope)
- Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep
- Desert Bighorn Sheep
- Black Bear
- Mountain Lion (Cougar)
- Javelina
Exotic and Unique Species:
- Oryx (Gemsbok) — hunted on and around White Sands Missile Range
- Persian Ibex — one of only a handful of free-range populations in the U.S.
- Barbary Sheep (Aoudad) — available in the rugged canyonlands of northeast NM
Small Game and Birds:
- Scaled Quail, Gambel’s Quail, Bobwhite Quail
- Mourning Dove, White-winged Dove
- Rio Grande Turkey
- Ducks (Mallard, Teal, Pintail, and others)
- Canada Goose and Snow Goose
- Pheasant and Chukar (select areas)
How to Buy a New Mexico Hunting License in 2026
Purchasing your license is quick once you know the process. Here are the three ways to do it:
Step-by-Step: Buying Online
- Create or log in to your account at onlinesales.wildlife.state.nm.us
- Verify your residency status and personal information
- Select your license type (base Game Hunting License first)
- Add required validations — HMAV ($4) and Habitat Stamp ($10) if applicable
- Select species tag(s) as needed
- Check out and pay — your license is issued immediately
- Print or download to your device via the NM E-Tag app
Step-by-Step: Buying by Phone
- Call NMDGF at 1-888-248-6866
- Have your customer ID (or Social Security Number for new accounts), payment method, and residency information ready
- Confirm all tags and validations needed
- A $1 vendor fee applies
Buying In Person
- Visit any NMDGF district office statewide
- Visit any authorized license vendor (sporting goods stores, bait shops, big-box retailers)
- A $1 vendor fee applies at all vendor locations
- Use the NMDGF vendor locator tool online to find the nearest location
Pro tip: If you’re also interested in fishing while you’re out, the Game Hunting & Fishing Combo License is the better value for residents at $40 — cheaper than buying both separately. Learn more about New Mexico fishing license requirements and fees if you plan to fish alongside your hunt.
New Mexico Hunting License Rules: What You Must Know Before You Go
Failing to follow these rules can result in citations, license suspension, or even criminal charges. Keep these points in mind:
| Rule | Detail |
|---|---|
| Carry your license at all times | You must have your physical or digital license available for inspection by any game warden |
| E-Tagging | New Mexico allows electronic tagging (E-Tag) via the NMDGF mobile app; complete the tag before leaving the kill site |
| Harvest Reporting | All successful big-game hunters must submit mandatory harvest reports by the deadline (typically mid-March following the season) |
| Landowner permission required | Written permission is mandatory for hunting on any private land — verbal permission is not sufficient |
| Shooting hours | Legal shooting begins 30 minutes before sunrise and ends 30 minutes after sunset unless specifically stated otherwise |
| Wanton waste prohibited | Hunters must make a reasonable effort to retrieve and utilize all edible portions of harvested game |
| Trespass laws strictly enforced | New Mexico’s Open Fields doctrine does not protect trespassers; entering private land without permission is a criminal offense |
| Mentor program for youth | Hunters age 17 and under must hunt under a licensed adult mentor if they have not completed Hunter Education |
Big-Game Draw: Key Dates and Application Tips
If you’re targeting elk, deer, pronghorn, or bighorn sheep in a premium unit, the draw system is your path in. Here’s the timeline that applies to the current license year:
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Draw applications open | Mid-to-late January |
| Main big-game draw deadline | March 18 |
| Application deadline (phone/online) | March 18 at 5:00 p.m. MDT |
| Harvest report deadline (prior year) | March 18 |
| Draw results announced | April 22 |
| Over-the-counter license sale opens | Late March (post-draw) |
| Leftover/second-chance license sales | May–June (varies) |
Application tips that actually help:
- Apply for multiple species — a single application fee per species, so applying for backup choices costs little and increases your chance of drawing something
- Submit all prior-year harvest reports before the deadline or you may be ineligible to apply
- Nonresidents should target units with historically higher draw odds — look for units with less competition in the NMDGF data
- No preference point system — New Mexico operates a pure random draw, so every applicant has the same odds regardless of how many years they’ve applied
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much does a New Mexico hunting license cost in 2026?
The base Game Hunting License costs $25 for residents and $90 for nonresidents in 2026, following the SB5 fee increases effective April 1, 2026. Additional species tags, stamps, and validations are required on top of the base license.
Q: Do I need Hunter Education to get a New Mexico hunting license?
Adults (age 18+) do not need Hunter Education to purchase a license. However, hunters age 17 and under must possess a Hunter Education number or a mentor youth number to hunt big-game or turkey.
Q: Can nonresidents buy a New Mexico hunting license over the counter?
Yes. Nonresidents can purchase over-the-counter licenses for species like bear, cougar, turkey, javelina, Barbary sheep, ibex, and private-land deer without going through the draw. The 4-day Temporary Game Hunting License ($33) is also available exclusively for nonresidents.
Q: Is there a free or discounted hunting license for veterans in New Mexico?
Yes. Active duty military and honorably discharged veterans who are New Mexico residents receive a 50% discount on all licenses and stamps. 100% disabled veterans who are residents can receive a free lifetime Game Hunting & Fishing License.
Q: What is the HMAV and do I really need it?
The Habitat Management & Access Validation (HMAV) costs $4 and is required for all hunters, anglers, and trappers age 18 and older. It funds habitat protection and public land access programs across the state. You cannot legally hunt without it.
Q: How long do I have to live in New Mexico to qualify for a resident license?
You must have lived in New Mexico for at least 90 consecutive days immediately before applying for a resident license, and you must be domiciled in-state with no residency claim in another state.
Q: What happens if I miss the big-game draw deadline?
If you miss the March 18 draw deadline, you lose the chance to apply for controlled hunt units for that year. However, over-the-counter and leftover licenses go on sale after the draw, and many quality opportunities remain available through OTC tags.
Q: Can I use my phone instead of a paper license?
Yes. New Mexico’s NM E-Tag mobile app allows you to display and use your license digitally. You can also complete your big-game tag electronically through the app. However, ensure your phone is charged and accessible — game wardens accept digital licenses.
