Kentucky deer hunting season calendar - showing archery and firearms

Kentucky Hunting Season Guide for 2026-2027 – Dates, Regulations & Game Management Areas

If you’re getting your 2026–2027 game calendar together, this guide gives you a solid planning base without making you dig through a dozen state pages. Below, you’ll find the main dates, permit rules, public-land tools, youth opportunities, and the zone details that matter most before you make travel plans, buy tags, or scout a new area. One important note up front: migratory bird dates can still be adjusted under federal flyway frameworks, so early planners should always re-check the final state updates before opening day.

Whether you live in-state or you’re coming in for deer, elk, ducks, or late-winter small game, the smart move is the same: verify the exact dates for your weapon type, make sure your license year is current, and confirm the rules for the specific WMA or private property you plan to use. Kentucky has a lot of opportunity, but it also has a lot of zone-based rules that can trip people up if they only look at the statewide overview.


📅 Quick Reference Points

Here’s the fast version for people who want the broad picture before getting into the tables.

Species / Group2026–2027 DatesLegal MethodsYouth Notes
DeerArchery: Sept. 5, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027; Crossbow: Sept. 19, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027; Muzzleloader: Oct. 17–18 and Dec. 12–20, 2026; Modern gun: Nov. 14–29, 2026Archery, crossbow, muzzleloader, modern gun, qualifying air gunYouth-only firearms: Oct. 10–18, 2026; Free youth weekend: Dec. 26–27, 2026
TurkeySpring youth: Apr. 4–5, 2026; Spring general: Apr. 18–May 10, 2026; Fall shotgun: Oct. 24–30 and Dec. 5–11, 2026; Fall archery: Sept. 5, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027; Fall crossbow: Oct. 1–18 and Nov. 14–Dec. 31, 2026Shotgun, archery, crossbowYouths 15 and under can take part in spring youth days and all general open dates with supervision rules
ElkArchery/crossbow: Sept. 12–25 and Dec. 5–11, 2026; Bull firearm: Sept. 26–30 and Oct. 3–7, 2026; Cow firearm: Nov. 28–Dec. 2, 2026 and Jan. 2–6, 2027Archery/crossbow, firearmYouth elk entries are available through the quota system
BearChase-only: June 1–Aug. 31 and Sept. 9–30, 2026; hunt periods vary by zone in Oct.–Dec.Dogs, archery/crossbow, firearm by zoneYouth bear permits are available; supervision rules apply with firearms
Ducks & GeeseEarly teal/wood duck: Sept. 19–23, 2026; duck split: Nov. 26–29, 2026 and Dec. 7, 2026–Jan. 31, 2027; regular goose: Nov. 26, 2026–Feb. 15, 2027Shotgun with nontoxic shot; falconry windows also existYouth waterfowl: Nov. 21, 2026 and Feb. 14, 2027
Small gameSquirrel opens May 16, 2026 in spring and Aug. 15, 2026 in fall; rabbit, quail, grouse vary by zoneRimfire, shotgun, archery, air gun, falconry, dogs where legalFree Youth Small Game Week: Dec. 26, 2026–Jan. 1, 2027
FurbearersCoyote: year-round; raccoon/opossum: Oct. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027; bobcat: Nov. 21, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Day/night rules vary by species; trapping license required for trappers 12+Youths can join free youth furbearer week Dec. 26, 2026–Jan. 1, 2027

These dates and summaries are compiled from official deer, turkey, elk, bear, furbearer, migratory bird, and seasons-planner pages. A good starting point is the official Kentucky Fish & Wildlife seasons planner.


🦌 Big-Game Overview Table

Big-game planning is where most mistakes happen, especially with deer zones, elk unit assignments, and bear-zone differences. Here’s the simplified version.

SpeciesMethodDatesBag / Permit SnapshotWhere It Matters Most
DeerArcherySept. 5, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027Statewide deer permit required unless exempt; one antlered deer statewideZone bag rules still apply
DeerCrossbowSept. 19, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027Youths 15 and under and resident seniors 65+ get the longer crossbow windowWMAs may have special weapon rules
DeerMuzzleloaderOct. 17–18 and Dec. 12–20, 2026Hunter orange requiredCheck zone antlerless limits
DeerModern gunNov. 14–29, 2026Hunter orange required; magazines capped under legal-method rulesPublic land access can tighten during gun dates
ElkArchery/CrossbowSept. 12–25 and Dec. 5–11, 2026Draw permit requiredAssigned elk unit in the 16-county elk zone
ElkBull firearmSept. 26–30 and Oct. 3–7, 2026Draw permit requiredUnit assignment matters
ElkCow firearmNov. 28–Dec. 2, 2026 and Jan. 2–6, 2027Draw permit requiredOut-of-zone permit needed outside elk zone
BearChase-onlyJune 1–Aug. 31 and Sept. 9–30, 2026Bear chase permit requiredZones 1–3
BearDogsZone 1: Oct. 19–23; Zone 2: Oct. 19–23 and Oct. 29–Nov. 6, 2026Bear permit plus annual licenseZone-specific
BearArchery/CrossbowZone 1: Oct. 24–26; Zone 2: Oct. 24–28; Zone 3: Sept. 19–Oct. 2 and Oct. 24–28, 2026One bear per license yearZone-specific
BearFirearmZone 1: Dec. 12–14; Zone 2: Dec. 12–16, 2026Hunter orange required in firearm periodsZone-specific

For deer, the big takeaway is the zone structure. Only one deer with visible antlers may be taken statewide, but antlerless opportunity changes a lot by zone: Zone 1 allows unlimited antlerless harvest with the proper permits, Zone 2 allows up to four total deer, Zone 3 also allows up to four total deer, and Zone 4 caps the harvest at two deer total, with only one antlerless. The deer page also notes a special CWD surveillance-zone firearm date is still listed as TBA for 2026, so that one deserves an extra check later in the year.

Elk is quota-based and more structured than many first-timers expect. The elk zone covers 16 southeastern counties, and drawn hunters get a second draw for unit assignment. You can’t just pull a tag and roam the full elk range without paying attention to your unit. Bear planning works the same way in principle: zone first, then method, then exact dates.


🦃 Turkey Dates Table

Turkey regulations are straightforward once you separate spring from fall.

PeriodDatesLegal MethodsBag Limit / Notes
Spring youthApr. 4–5, 2026Shotgun, archery, crossbowCounts toward spring limit
Spring generalApr. 18–May 10, 2026Shotgun, archery, crossbowTwo bearded birds max for spring; one per day; only one bearded bird per WMA
Fall shotgunOct. 24–30 and Dec. 5–11, 2026ShotgunFall limit is two total
Fall archerySept. 5, 2026–Jan. 18, 2027ArcheryFall permit required
Fall crossbowOct. 1–18 and Nov. 14–Dec. 31, 2026CrossbowFall permit required

Spring rules are tighter than many people realize. Only gobblers or birds with a visible beard are legal in spring, electronic calls are out, baiting is prohibited, and one bird per WMA is the cap during the spring run. Fall is more flexible and lets you spread effort across archery, crossbow, and shotgun windows, but the annual fall bag limit is still two.

If you also travel south for similar terrain and timing, this neighboring Tennessee hunting seasons guide can help you compare dates and permit structure.


🦝 Furbearer Opportunities Table

This is where day-versus-night rules and telecheck details really matter.

Species / GroupDatesTime / Method NotesExtra Permit or Check-In
CoyoteYear-roundDay or night; no bag limit; some night restrictions on certain public landsNo special coyote permit
Raccoon & OpossumOct. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Day or night, except during modern gun deer dates when only night take is allowedRegular license; trapping license for traps
BobcatNov. 21, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Daylight onlyBobcat permit required; telecheck required
River otterNov. 16, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Daylight onlyTelecheck required; CITES rules apply if sold/exported
Beaver, mink, muskrat, red fox, gray fox, weasel, striped skunkNov. 16, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Daylight-only take under hunting datesTrapping license for traps
Water-set trapping extensionThrough Mar. 31, 2027Applies to water sets onlyTrapping license required

The easy way to remember this category is that coyotes are the outlier. They stay open all year with no bag limit, while most other fur species tighten down into winter windows and, in some cases, daylight-only rules. Bobcats and otters also bring extra paperwork: telecheck by midnight on the recovery day, plus CITES tagging if the pelt will be sold or exported internationally.


🐦 Small Game Dates Table

For a lot of hunters, this is the most underrated part of the state’s outdoor calendar.

SpeciesDatesDaily LimitNotes
Squirrel (spring)May 16–June 19, 20266Nice starter option for new hunters
Squirrel (fall)Aug. 15–Nov. 13, 2026; Nov. 16, 2026–Feb. 28, 20276Closed first two days of modern gun deer opener
Rabbit (Eastern Zone)Nov. 1–13, 2026; Nov. 16, 2026–Jan. 31, 20274Zone matters
Rabbit (Western Zone)Nov. 16, 2026–Feb. 10, 20274Later close date than east
Quail (Eastern Zone)Nov. 1–13, 2026; Nov. 16, 2026–Jan. 31, 20278Closed first two days of modern gun opener
Quail (Western Zone)Nov. 16, 2026–Feb. 10, 20278Good late-winter option
GrouseNov. 1–13, 2026; Nov. 16, 2026–Feb. 28, 20274Grouse zone only
DoveSept. 1–Oct. 26, 2026; Nov. 26–Dec. 6, 2026; Dec. 19, 2026–Jan. 10, 202715Migratory permit rules apply for older hunters
Pheasant quota huntsGreen River WMA: Nov. 20–22, 2026; Clay WMA: Dec. 4–6, 2026; Yellowbank WMA: Dec. 4–6, 2026Quota-basedApply in advance

Small game is also where beginners can build confidence without the pressure of a one-tag trip. Squirrels are especially beginner-friendly, rabbit and quail give you good dog-work opportunities, and dove opener stays one of the more social field traditions in the state. If you’re focusing on public ground, scout well before opening day because field quality can vary a lot from one area to the next.


🦆 Complete Waterfowl Seasons Table

This is the part of the guide you really do want to double-check close to opening day, because migratory frameworks can shift.

Species / GroupDatesDaily LimitNotes
Teal & early wood duckSept. 19–23, 20266 total; max 2 wood ducksNontoxic shot required
September Canada goose – Western ZoneSept. 1–15, 20265Zone-specific
September Canada goose – Eastern ZoneSept. 16–30, 20265Zone-specific
DucksNov. 26–29, 2026; Dec. 7, 2026–Jan. 31, 20276 totalSpecies sublimits apply
Canada/cackling goose, white-fronted goose, brantNov. 26, 2026–Feb. 15, 20275 combinedNo more than 3 Canada, 2 white-fronted, 1 brant
Snow/Ross’ gooseNov. 26, 2026–Feb. 15, 202720Light goose order follows after regular close
Youth-only waterfowlNov. 21, 2026 and Feb. 14, 2027Same as regularScaup daily limit 2
Military/Veteran-only waterfowlNov. 22, 2026 and Feb. 8, 2027Same as regularSpecial access days
Falconry – ducks/coots/mergansersNov. 26, 2026–Feb. 22, 20273Separate falconry rules apply
Falconry – geeseNov. 26, 2026–Feb. 15, 2027Same as regularSeparate falconry rules apply
Light Goose Conservation OrderFeb. 16–Mar. 31, 2027No daily bagFree permit and reporting required

Duck sublimits matter, so don’t stop at the total number. The state page lists six ducks total, but that basket is still limited by species: mallards, wood ducks, pintails, black ducks, canvasbacks, redheads, mottled ducks, and scaup each have their own ceilings. On the permit side, hunters 16 and older chasing ducks or geese need a valid state hunting license unless exempt, a Kentucky Migratory Bird/Waterfowl Permit, a HIP confirmation, and a signed Federal Duck Stamp. A handy official reference for that federal piece is the Federal Duck Stamp page.

Kentucky also notes that duck and goose frameworks are built within Mississippi Flyway and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service rules, so treat this table as a strong planning guide, not permission to skip the final pre-trip check.


🐗 Other Available Game Table

These odds-and-ends are easy to overlook, but they’re worth knowing.

SpeciesDatesLimit / Restriction
CrowSept. 1–Nov. 7, 2026 and Jan. 4–Feb. 28, 2027No daily or possession limit; no migratory permit required
BullfrogNoon May 16–midnight Oct. 31, 2026Daily 15, possession 30
GroundhogYear-roundNo bag limit
Turtles (snapping except alligator snapping, soft-shell)Year-round, day or nightNo bag limit; no commercial harvest
Wild pigsProhibitedHunting and trapping are prohibited as an eradication policy

That wild-pig rule surprises people every year. In Kentucky, pigs are treated as an invasive problem, and the state’s position is that casual pursuit makes eradication harder, not easier. So if you see damage or sign, report it instead of trying to turn it into a do-it-yourself hog trip.


🗺️ Zones, Units, and Wildlife Areas

Before you pick a county, figure out which regulatory system affects your trip.

Zone / SystemWhat It CoversWhy It Matters
Deer Zones 1–4Deer bag structureAntlerless opportunity changes sharply by zone
Elk Zone16 southeastern countiesDrawn hunters get assigned units
Bear Zones 1–3Bear methods and datesDates vary by zone and weapon
Rabbit & Quail Eastern / Western ZonesSmall game close datesWestern zone runs later
Grouse ZoneGrouse accessNot statewide
September Goose East / WestEarly goose timingEast and west use different date blocks
Public Lands / WMAsArea-specific rulesSome WMAs have separate access, quota, baiting, or weapon restrictions
Official map toolUse WMA & Public Lands SearchBest first stop for maps, access notes, and area details

If you want public ground, don’t stop at a county line on a road atlas. Kentucky manages more than 85 WMAs and also has access areas with special rules that may differ from statewide law. Practical places to research first include Ballard WMA for waterfowl, West Kentucky WMA for deer and birds, Big Rivers WMA for broad opportunity, Green River Lake WMA and Clay WMA for pheasant quota events, and Peabody WMA for waterfowl-related planning.


🎟️ Permits, Tags & Licenses Details

Here’s the clean breakdown for the 2026–2027 license year, which starts March 1, 2026.

License / PermitResidentNonresidentNotes
Annual hunting license$28.54$169.12Base license for many trips
1-day hunting license$7.40$26.43Not valid for deer, elk, turkey, or bear
7-day hunting license$68.71Not valid for deer, elk, turkey, or bear
Youth annual hunting (12–15)$10.57$10.57Covers small game/furbearers/migratory birds base need
Sportsman’s license$100.42Includes base hunting/fishing plus deer, spring/fall turkey, migratory permit
First-time buyer Sportsman’s$37.00Great value for beginners
Senior or Disabled Sportsman’s$12.68Resident only
Youth Sportsman’s (12–15)$31.71Includes youth deer/turkey/migratory privileges
Deer permit$37.00$248.40Four deer permit
Youth deer permit$10.57$15.86Four deer
Additional deer permit$15.86$15.86Adds two deer
Spring turkey permit$31.71$116.27Two birds
Fall turkey permit$31.71$116.27Two birds
Youth turkey permit$10.57$15.86One turkey, spring or fall
Migratory Bird/Waterfowl Permit$15.86$15.86Needed for older migratory-bird hunters
Federal Duck Stamp$25.00$25.00Required for waterfowl hunters 16+
Bobcat permit$10.57$10.57Required for bobcat hunters
Bear permit$31.71$422.80Annual base license also needed
Youth bear permit$10.57$105.70For youth hunters
Bear chase permit$31.71$52.85Purchased through MyProfile
Elk application$10.00$10.00Drawing entry, not the full permit

A few details make life easier:

  • Kids under 12 generally do not need licenses or permits, except in limited quota-style situations such as elk application rules.
  • Nonresident landowners still pay nonresident rates.
  • Resident landowners, spouses, dependent children, and qualifying tenants can be license-exempt on their own farmland.
  • Kentucky residents 65+ can use the Senior Sportsman’s license.
  • Residents with qualifying disability documentation can use the Disabled Sportsman’s option.
  • Resident service members on furlough longer than three days can be exempt with proper papers.
  • HIP is mandatory for migratory bird participation, even for some people who otherwise qualify for exemptions.

Kentucky Hunting Quick FAQ

Do kids under 12 need licenses or tags?

Usually no, but there are exceptions tied to elk and certain special drawings. Even when exempt, young hunters still have to follow bag limits, orange rules where applicable, and check-in rules for species that require reporting.

Are short-term licenses good enough for deer or turkey?

No. Kentucky’s 1-day and 7-day base licenses are not valid for deer, elk, turkey, or bear. Those trips require the proper annual base license and species permit unless you qualify for an exemption.

Do nonresident landowners get resident pricing?

No. Owning land does not turn a nonresident into a resident for licensing purposes.

Which animals must be telechecked?

Deer, turkey, elk, bear, bobcat, river otter, and sandhill cranes all require check-in. Small game like squirrel and rabbit do not.

What do I need for ducks and geese if I’m 16 or older?

You need a valid state hunting license unless exempt, a Kentucky Migratory Bird/Waterfowl Permit, HIP confirmation, and a Federal Duck Stamp.

Can I just walk onto private land to recover an animal?

No. You need permission from the landowner or person in authority before entering private property.

Do I need hunter education?

If you were born on or after Jan. 1, 1975, yes, unless you are covered by an allowed exemption such as the temporary hunter education exemption permit.


Conclusion

For 2026–2027, Kentucky gives hunters a lot to work with: long deer archery dates, strong turkey structure, real elk and bear opportunities, good waterfowl variety, and a solid mix of public-land options. The key is matching your target species with the correct zone, permit, and method window instead of assuming one statewide rule covers everything.

Before you head out, double-check the exact dates, buy permits early, and confirm the rules for the county or WMA you plan to use. That extra ten minutes can save you a wasted drive or a ticket. Bookmark this page if you like having everything in one place, then refresh with the state’s final updates as fall gets closer.


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