Complete Illinois Hunting Calendar 2026-2027: Season Dates & Bag Limits
If you’re planning trips for the 2026-2027 game calendar, this guide pulls together the most current information posted by Illinois authorities for 2026. It covers deer, turkey, migratory birds, furbearers, public access tools, permit basics, and the parts of the calendar that are already confirmed versus the parts that still need a final check when the new digest goes live.
That matters more than usual this year. Illinois has already posted a solid amount of deer and turkey information for 2026-2027, but some waterfowl and small-game details are still tied to standing IDNR scheduling formulas or the most recent published digest. So this post is built to be practical, honest, and easy to use. If you also want a broader state-level overview, you can compare it with other hunting seasons overview before you lock in travel or buy tags.
For locals, this is a good planning sheet. For out-of-state hunters, it’s even more important. Illinois has county-based permits, zone changes for waterfowl, and public-land access rules that can trip people up fast if they assume the setup is the same everywhere.
📅 Quick Reference Points
| Species / Group | 2026-2027 Timing | Legal Methods | Youth Opportunity | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deer archery | Oct. 1, 2026-Jan. 17, 2027, with firearm break in most counties | Bow / crossbow | Youth deer separate | Confirmed |
| Deer firearm | Nov. 20-22 and Dec. 3-6, 2026 | Shotgun, legal single-shot rifle/handgun, private-land archery with permit | Yes | Confirmed |
| Deer muzzleloader | Dec. 11-13, 2026 | Muzzleloading rifle; also usable during second firearm segment with proper permit | Indirectly, via deer structure | Confirmed |
| Youth deer | Oct. 10-12, 2026 | Firearm per youth permit rules | Main youth deer hunt | Confirmed |
| Spring turkey | Late March youth; April-May regular segments | Shotgun, bow, crossbow | Yes | Confirmed |
| Fall turkey | Oct. 24-Nov. 1, 2026 shotgun; Oct. 1, 2026-Jan. 17, 2027 archery | Shotgun / bow / crossbow | No separate youth fall calendar posted here | Confirmed |
| Furbearers | Mostly Nov. 10, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027; coyote year-round | Hunting and trapping rules vary by species | No major youth-specific statewide season | Standing schedule / current rules |
| Squirrel / rabbit / quail / pheasant | Late summer through winter depending on species | Gun or bow depending on species rules | Site-specific youth upland events exist | Standing schedule / latest official formula |
| Dove | Public draw dates Sept. 1-5, 2026 confirmed; full split dates still need annual digest check | Shotgun and other legal migratory methods | Youth / youth-adult permit dates posted | Partly confirmed |
| Ducks / geese / teal | Three-zone structure set for 2026-2030; exact 2026-2027 annual dates should be rechecked | Federal and state migratory rules | Youth opportunities continue | Zone structure confirmed; annual dates pending final check |
🦌 Big Game Overview
Illinois is really a deer-driven destination. As of now, that is the only clearly posted big-game calendar for 2026-2027. I did not find an IDNR-posted public elk or bear season for this cycle, so hunters should not assume either one is available.
Big Game Overview Table
| Species | Segment | 2026-2027 Dates | Methods | Permit / Zone Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deer | Archery – most counties | Oct. 1-Nov. 19, 2026; Nov. 23-Dec. 2, 2026; Dec. 7, 2026-Jan. 17, 2027 | Bow / crossbow | County-based; sign and carry permit |
| Deer | Archery – Cook, DuPage, Lake, Kane east of Route 47 | Oct. 1, 2026-Jan. 17, 2027 | Bow / crossbow | No firearm split interruption listed for these areas |
| Deer | First firearm | Nov. 20-22, 2026 | Legal shotgun, qualifying single-shot rifle/handgun, private-land archery with firearm permit | County quotas and lottery system |
| Deer | Second firearm | Dec. 3-6, 2026 | Same as above | Muzzleloader permit can also be used here with muzzleloading rifle |
| Deer | Muzzleloader-only | Dec. 11-13, 2026 | Muzzleloading rifle | Separate permit structure |
| Deer | Late-winter / CWD | Dec. 31, 2026-Jan. 3, 2027 and Jan. 15-17, 2027 | Firearm structure tied to open counties | Open counties and permit details should be checked again when full page updates post |
| Elk | — | No public season posted by IDNR for this cycle | — | Do not plan a trip around elk unless IDNR posts one |
| Bear | — | No public season posted by IDNR for this cycle | — | No active bear calendar found on current state pages |
A few deer points are worth slowing down for. First, the restricted archery zone includes Champaign, Douglas, Macon, and Piatt counties, except Allerton Park in Piatt County. From Oct. 1 through Oct. 31, only antlered deer may be taken there, regardless of what permits you are carrying.
Second, Illinois keeps the two-antlered-deer annual cap across youth, archery, firearm, and muzzleloader opportunities. That rule matters if you stack permits across the year.
Third, over-the-counter firearm and muzzleloader deer permit sales begin Oct. 20, 2026, in person through designated vendors, subject to remaining quota. Special hunt area permits are lottery only, so don’t count on finding those later.
🦃 Turkey Dates Table
Turkey rules are one of the cleaner parts of the 2026 schedule because Illinois has already posted both spring and fall information.
| Hunt Type | Dates | Bag Limit | Legal Methods | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Youth spring turkey | March 28-29 and April 4-5, 2026 | 1 bird per permit | Shotgun, bow, crossbow | Hunter must be under 18 before opening date |
| South Zone 1 | April 6-10, 2026 | 1 male turkey or bearded hen per permit | Shotgun, bow, crossbow | Max 3 spring permits total |
| South Zone 2 | April 11-16, 2026 | Same | Same | County/zone specific |
| South Zone 3 | April 17-22, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| South Zone 4 | April 23-29, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| South Zone 5 | April 30-May 7, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| North Zone 1 | April 13-17, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| North Zone 2 | April 18-23, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| North Zone 3 | April 24-29, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| North Zone 4 | April 30-May 6, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| North Zone 5 | May 7-14, 2026 | Same | Same | — |
| Fall turkey shotgun | Oct. 24-Nov. 1, 2026 | 1 turkey of either sex per permit | Shotgun only | Max 2 shotgun permits total |
| Fall turkey archery | Oct. 1, 2026-Jan. 17, 2027 | 1 turkey of either sex per permit | Bow / crossbow | Closed during Nov. 20-22 and Dec. 3-6 deer firearm dates in affected counties |
Spring turkey hours run from one-half hour before sunrise until 1 p.m. Illinois also keeps a pretty specific equipment list. Shotguns may run from .410 bore to 10 gauge, and #4 shot is the largest legal shot size for turkey. For bows, the state requires minimum pull weights and broadhead specs, so it’s smart to check your setup before opening week instead of in the parking lot.
Fall permits are simpler to budget for because Illinois has already posted prices for fall shotgun turkey: resident permits are $19 and nonresident permits are $129. Over-the-counter sales for remaining fall shotgun permits begin Sept. 21, 2026.
🦝 Furbearer Opportunities Table
This part of the calendar is mostly stable, but there is one important change: gray fox remains closed under the latest current IDNR listing because of population concerns.
| Species / Group | Dates | Method | License / Permit Notes | Useful Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coyote | Open year-round, except during firearm deer seasons | Hunting | Hunting license; habitat stamp if required | One of the most flexible options in the state |
| Striped skunk | Open year-round, except during firearm deer seasons | Hunting / trapping per rules | Trapping requires trapping license + habitat stamp | Often overlooked row in the rules |
| Raccoon | Nov. 10, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | Hunting / trapping | Standard furbearer requirements | Closed during firearm deer dates when applicable |
| Opossum | Nov. 10, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | Hunting / trapping | Standard requirements | Same timing as raccoon |
| Red fox | Nov. 10, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | Hunting / trapping | Standard requirements | Current listing still active |
| Gray fox | Currently closed on latest IDNR page | None until reopened | Confirm before planning | Do not rely on older digests here |
| Bobcat | Nov. 10, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | Hunting / trapping | Limited permit by lottery; bobcat-specific permit required | One animal limit per permit structure |
| Beaver | Nov. 10, 2026-Mar. 31, 2027 | Trapping | Trapping license + habitat stamp | Longer trapping window than general furbearers |
| Woodchuck | June 1, 2026-Mar. 31, 2027 for hunting; June 1-Sept. 30, 2026 for trapping | Hunting / trapping | Hunting or trapping rules apply | Closed during firearm deer dates for hunting |
If you trap in Illinois, don’t stop at the hunting license page. Trapping requires its own license path, and the habitat stamp still matters. Bobcat is also not a casual add-on. It is a limited entry opportunity with a lottery and extra paperwork.
🐦 Small Game Section
For several upland entries, IDNR’s long-range “rules of thumb” are the latest official framework available right now. That means these dates are the best state-posted planning dates for 2026-2027, but they still deserve one more check when the annual digest updates.
| Species | 2026-2027 Dates | Daily Bag Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squirrel | Aug. 1, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | 5 | Closed during firearm deer dates |
| Rabbit | Nov. 7, 2026-Feb. 15, 2027 | 4 | Based on first Saturday in November formula |
| Quail – North | Nov. 7, 2026-Jan. 8, 2027 | 8 | Standing north-zone schedule |
| Quail – South | Nov. 7, 2026-Jan. 15, 2027 | 8 | Standing south-zone schedule |
| Pheasant – North | Nov. 7, 2026-Jan. 8, 2027 | 2 roosters | Standing north-zone schedule |
| Pheasant – South | Nov. 7, 2026-Jan. 15, 2027 | 2 roosters | Standing south-zone schedule |
| Dove | Public draw period confirmed Sept. 1-5, 2026; full statewide split calendar should be rechecked | 15 | Free permit system applies at selected sites for early dates |
| Woodcock | Expected Oct. 17-Nov. 30, 2026 if annual formula stays the same | 3 | Tied to 45-day formula beginning third Saturday in October |
The dove row needs a little explanation. Illinois has already posted the free dove permit schedule for the first five days of the September opener at certain sites, plus youth and youth/adult permit details. What has not been clearly posted yet on the state pages I reviewed is the full statewide split-dove calendar for 2026-2027. So if dove is your main target, plan around Sept. 1-5 only if you are applying for those site-specific permits, and check again before assuming the later split dates.
🦆 Complete Waterfowl Seasons Table
Waterfowl is the part of the calendar where structure is already known, but annual dates still need a final look.
Illinois has moved into a three-zone setup for 2026-2030: North, Central, and South. The former South-Central and South zones are now combined into one South Zone. IDNR has also confirmed split duck setups in all three zones, and the South Zone now uses a mid-November start, a 23-day first segment, a 12-day break, and a 37-day second segment that runs into late January. That is a real change, so returning hunters should not assume the old four-zone map still applies.
| Category | 2026-2027 Status | Permits / Stamps | What to Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ducks | Split seasons in North, Central, South | Hunting license, HIP, habitat stamp if required, state waterfowl stamp, federal duck stamp for age-qualified hunters | Exact annual dates should be rechecked when posted |
| Canada geese | Zone-based structure continues | Same migratory requirements | Dates vary by zone and annual framework |
| White-fronted geese | Migratory framework applies | Same | Annual dates pending final posting |
| Snow geese | Migratory framework applies | Same | Check regular and conservation-order language separately when posted |
| Early teal | Still tied to annual migratory framework | HIP + migratory requirements | Exact opener not yet posted on the pages reviewed |
| Youth waterfowl | Continues under annual zone setup | Youth hunters still follow licensing/age rules | Final annual site/date posting still worth checking |
| Snipe | State formula ties it to teal opener for 107 days | HIP required | Best treated as pending until migratory posting |
| Rail | State formula ties it to teal opener for 70 days | HIP required | Same caution as snipe |
| Coots / gallinules | Usually concurrent with duck timing | HIP and migratory requirements | Confirm with updated digest |
For permit budgeting, the numbers that are already posted are helpful: the electronic Illinois state migratory waterfowl stamp is $15.50, the federal migratory waterfowl stamp is $25.50, and HIP certification is still part of the process for migratory bird hunters.
🐗 Other Available Game Table
These are the species people usually forget until they’re suddenly interested in them.
| Species | Dates | Limit / Rule | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crow | Oct. 28, 2026-Feb. 28, 2027 | No daily limit listed in latest posted digest | Straightforward calendar, but still read method rules |
| Bullfrog | June 15-Oct. 15 | Regulated under state rules for bullfrogs | Often treated more like a side trip than a planned outing |
| Woodchuck | June 1, 2026-Mar. 31, 2027 | Open except during firearm deer dates | Useful off-season option |
| Sandhill crane | No public 2026-2027 state season posting located on current IDNR pages reviewed | — | Do not assume availability without a fresh state posting |
| Snipe / rail | Tied to annual migratory framework | Zone/date dependent | Check again with waterfowl postings |
If you like oddball opportunities, crow and woodchuck are the easiest rows to use. Bullfrog is legal only during its defined summer window, so it is not a free-for-all, and it is smart to treat it as a regulated activity, not just an after-dark extra.
🗺️ Hunting Zones Table
Public access and zone lines are where a lot of plans go sideways. Illinois has deer county differences, turkey north/south splits, and a changed waterfowl map. Use the official IDNR hunter fact sheets and region map before you pick a wildlife area or assume a public parcel is open for the method you want.
| Zone / Area Type | Current Setup | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Deer archery | Most counties follow split dates; Cook, DuPage, Lake, and Kane east of Route 47 run continuously | Changes your usable weekends in a big way |
| Spring turkey | North Zone and South Zone | You must match your permit to the right zone and segment |
| Waterfowl | North, Central, South for 2026-2030 | Old South-Central references are outdated for this cycle |
| Public upland and waterfowl sites | Property-specific rules | Many locations need windshield cards, site permits, or special fact sheet review |
| Private land | Landowner permission required | Illinois is not a state where you should make assumptions about access |
A simple rule: always separate “statewide dates” from “site access.” Even when the calendar says open, a specific public tract may have drawing requirements, controlled entry, or method restrictions.
🎟️ Permits, Tags & Licenses Details
Here’s the part most hunters actually need when they start adding up costs.
| License / Permit | 2026 Posted Detail | Price / Note |
|---|---|---|
| Resident annual hunting license | Standard resident option | $12.50 |
| Nonresident annual hunting license | Standard nonresident option | $57.75 |
| Nonresident 5-day hunting license | Short-trip option | $35.75 |
| Resident Sportsmen’s Combination hunting/fishing license | Combo license | $26.25 |
| Hunting apprentice license | Entry option for first-timers under apprentice rules | $7.50 |
| State habitat stamp | Required for most hunters age 18+ unless exempt | $5.50 |
| Super senior habitat stamp | Reduced-rate variant | $0.50 |
| State migratory waterfowl stamp | Needed for qualifying waterfowl hunters | $15.50 |
| Federal duck stamp | Needed for age-qualified waterfowl hunters | $25.50 |
| Youth deer season OTC statewide firearm permit | Resident and nonresident youth option | $10.50 |
| Resident deer archery either-sex permit application | Base resident archery permit row | $17.00 |
| Nonresident deer combo archery permit application | Nonresident either-sex + antlerless structure | $410.00 |
| Fall turkey shotgun permit | Resident | $19 |
| Fall turkey shotgun permit | Nonresident | $129 |
| Disability-related access | Qualified disabled veterans and certain Class 2O / 2A card holders may be exempt from hunting license | Permit rules still apply |
| Military | Illinois resident active-duty members on leave may be license-exempt in some situations | Check exact eligibility before buying |
A few license reminders make this easier:
- Youth hunters under 18 need the youth hunting and trapping license unless they fall under the hunter-ed exception tied to supervision rules.
- Disabled hunters may be exempt from the license itself, but not automatically from permits.
- Disabled veterans may also be exempt from the habitat stamp.
- Deer firearm and muzzleloader permits use a lottery schedule first, then in-person OTC sales if quota remains.
- Spring turkey limits are tied to permit count, with a maximum of three permits total.
- Fall turkey shotgun hunters may not exceed two permits total.
❓ Illinois Hunting Quick FAQ
Is Illinois mostly a deer-and-turkey state for traveling hunters?
Pretty much, yes. Those are the cleanest and most consistently posted opportunities, and they are usually what nonresidents build trips around.
Do I need HIP for dove and waterfowl?
Yes, if you are chasing migratory birds such as dove, ducks, geese, woodcock, snipe, rail, coots, or gallinules.
Can I use an unfilled youth deer permit later in the year?
Yes, Illinois notes that an unfilled youth firearm deer permit can carry into certain late-winter and CWD opportunities in open counties, but only for antlerless deer.
Is gray fox open?
Not on the latest current IDNR listing I reviewed. It remains closed because of population concerns, so do not rely on older printed summaries.
Can I archery hunt during deer gun dates?
In some situations, yes, but blaze orange or blaze pink requirements kick in during concurrent gun periods, and archery deer rules stay very specific.
Where should I check public-land details?
Always check the individual site fact sheet or public hunting area report before you go. The statewide calendar does not override site-specific rules.
Can I use a rifle for deer hunting in Illinois?
As of January 1, 2023, centerfire single-shot rifles in certain calibers are legal for deer hunting. However, administrative rules are still being finalized. Check the current regulations before hunting.
How do CWD check stations work?
In mandatory CWD counties (now including Bureau, Ford, Lee, and Peoria), hunters must physically bring harvested deer to designated check stations during firearm seasons. Staff will record permit information and affix tags. CWD testing is available at these locations.
What’s the difference between the north and south turkey zones?
The south zone typically opens one week earlier in spring, allowing hunters there to pursue gobblers when birds may be less pressured. Zone boundaries are clearly marked in the hunting digest.
Can non-residents hunt public land in Illinois?
Yes, non-residents can hunt most public areas with proper licenses. Some special permit areas may have resident-only periods or separate quotas.
When do firearm deer lottery applications open?
Lottery applications for 2026 seasons open March 3, 2026, and close April 30, 2026. Both online and paper applications are accepted for residents, while non-residents should apply online when possible, similar to the process used in Colorado.
Do I need hunter education to hunt in Illinois?
Yes, all hunters born after January 1, 1980, must complete hunter education certification. This applies to both residents and non-residents.
Conclusion
Illinois already has enough 2026-2027 information posted to let you plan deer and turkey trips with confidence. Deer archery, firearm, muzzleloader, youth deer, spring turkey, and fall turkey dates are all out. Waterfowl zone changes are also set, and that matters because the old four-zone map is no longer the right mental picture for this cycle.
The main caution is simple: not every bird and small-game row has been posted in final annual form yet. Where IDNR has only provided standing formulas or partial permit pages, this guide marks that clearly instead of pretending the schedule is locked. That’s the safest way to plan.
Before you go, double-check the final digest, buy permits early, and make sure your site access is legal before you drive across the state. Bookmark this page if you want a working reference you can revisit once the remaining 2026-2027 updates land.
