HuntingSeasons.Org

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2026-2027 Nebraska Hunting: New Dates & Bags & More!

Nebraska keeps things interesting for hunters. In one season, you can chase whitetails in river bottoms, look for mule deer in the western half of the state, work a turkey setup in spring, and still have room on the calendar for pheasants, prairie grouse, ducks, geese, and furbearers. That variety is a big reason Nebraska stays on the radar for both locals and traveling hunters.

The state is especially well known for deer, turkey, upland birds, and waterfowl. Nebraska also stands out because it still gives hunters long big-game windows, solid public-access tools, and a mix of public and walk-in private land opportunities. If you are trying to plan a full fall, there is a lot here to work with.

This guide was reviewed against the latest official Nebraska Game and Parks pages available. Nebraska has already approved 2026 big-game seasons and 2026–2027 waterfowl dates. If you want extra background, see Nebraska deer regulations or Nebraska turkey hunting regulations.


Nebraska Hunting Season Overview

CategoryDetails
Licensing RequirementSpecies-specific permits for deer, turkey, elk, antelope and other regulated hunts; small-game permit for upland/waterfowl/small game
Main Game SpeciesWhitetail deer, mule deer, turkey, pheasant, quail, prairie grouse, ducks, geese
Public Hunting Areas1.2+ million acres of publicly accessible land shown in the Public Access Atlas
Online Harvest ReportingTelecheck required for turkey, elk, antelope, and deer outside November firearm season; November firearm deer may use Telecheck or check stations
Youth Hunting OpportunitiesYouth deer permits, youth turkey seasons, youth waterfowl days, youth pheasant days
Public Land ProgramsWildlife Management Areas, Open Fields and Waters, Managed Access Program, Platte River Recreation Access Program
Hunter Education RequirementAges 12–29 need hunter education or an apprentice exemption, depending on weapon and species
Public Land ProgramsOver 250 WMAs, federal lands, OFW private walk-in access, and reservation-based managed access

Nebraska is beginner-friendly in some ways, but only if you read the current rules. Permit type, unit, season, weapon, and harvest reporting all matter here. Hunters should treat the annual guide as mandatory reading, not optional homework.

Public access matters more in Nebraska than many beginners realize. The state is mostly private land, but hunters still have access to a large amount of ground through wildlife management areas, federal land, and walk-in programs. The official Nebraska Game and Parks Commission hunting seasons page and the Nebraska Public Access Atlas are the two most important planning tools to check before you leave home.


Big Game Hunting Seasons

Nebraska’s big-game lineup is still led by deer, with elk available through a much tighter permit system. The 2026 season structure was formally approved by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, and there are a few changes worth watching, especially with deer permit structure and elk permit numbers.

Deer Hunting Season

Season TypeDatesBag LimitNotes
ArcherySept. 1–Dec. 31, 2026Permit-specific harvestLongest deer season; common choice for both resident and traveling hunters
Firearms (November firearm)Nov. 14–22, 2026Permit-specific harvestNine straight days starting on the Saturday closest to Nov. 13
MuzzleloaderDec. 1–31, 2026Permit-specific harvestHunter orange rules apply
Youth HuntNo separate statewide youth deer season listedYouth permits availableYouth ages 10–15 may hunt during open deer seasons with youth permits
Special HuntsOct. 1–15, 2026 (October River Antlerless Firearm); Nov. 7–9, 2026 (Special Landowner); Jan. 1–15, 2027 (Late Antlerless Only Firearm)Permit-specificState park antlerless opportunities also exist by special access permit

Nebraska does not treat deer hunting as one simple statewide setup. The state uses units, permit types, and species restrictions. White-tailed deer are found statewide, with stronger densities in eastern Nebraska and along river corridors. Mule deer are strongest across the western two-thirds of the state. For 2026, Nebraska also reworked River Antlerless permits into four units: Niobrara, Lower Platte, Blue, and Lower Missouri.

On antlers, Nebraska is more permit-driven than antler-point-rule driven. In plain English, the permit you buy matters more than a single statewide antler restriction. Buck permits, antlerless permits, whitetail-only buck permits, and restricted statewide buck permits all have different uses. Hunters also should remember the state’s personal limit: two deer permits that allow buck harvest in a year.

Reporting is not optional. Deer taken outside the November firearm season must be reported through Telecheck within 48 hours. During the November firearm season, hunters may use Telecheck or an in-person check station. All checked big game must be reported before leaving Nebraska.

Special opportunities are a nice bonus here. Nebraska still offers state park antlerless hunts in selected areas by application, plus the Antlerless Hunter Database that helps connect hunters with landowners needing deer removed.

Deer Hunting Rules

RegulationRequirement
Hunter OrangeBig-game firearm and muzzleloader hunters must wear at least 400 square inches of hunter orange on head, chest, and back
Legal WeaponsUse only the legal method for your permit; semi-autos may hold no more than six cartridges; full-metal-jacket and incendiary bullets are prohibited
Reporting DeadlineWithin 48 hours for deer outside November firearm season; all big game must be checked before leaving Nebraska
Baiting RulesIllegal to hunt big game within 200 yards of a baited area; area remains baited for 10 days after bait is removed
Tagging RequirementsCarry your permit; complete Telecheck or check-station process and provide required harvest details

Elk Hunting Season

Nebraska elk hunting is tightly controlled and mostly for draw applicants, not casual over-the-counter buyers.

SeasonDatesPermit Type
Archery BullSept. 1–Oct. 31 and Dec. 16–31, 2026Draw permit
Firearm BullSept. 21–Oct. 31 and Dec. 16–31, 2026Draw permit
AntlerlessAug. 1, 2026–Jan. 31, 2027Draw permit
Antlerless, Private Land OnlyAug. 1–Sept. 20, 2026Draw permit
Early General AntlerlessAug. 1–Oct. 31, 2026Draw permit
Late General AntlerlessNov. 1, 2026–Jan. 31, 2027Draw permit

All elk permits are draw permits. Nebraska’s official elk page says applicants must apply through the drawing system, and nonresidents are not generally eligible except certain nonresident landowners with property in an elk management zone.


Bear Hunting Season

Nebraska does not list a bear hunting season in its official 2026–2027 season materials reviewed for this article.

SeasonDatesUnit/Zone
BearNo open season listedN/A

Turkey Hunting Seasons

Turkey remains one of Nebraska’s best hunts for beginners because the season is long and the permit system is fairly easy to understand. The biggest reminders for 2026 are the two-permit spring limit, the one-bird-per-day rule in spring, and mandatory Telecheck reporting.

Spring Turkey Season

SeasonDatesBag Limit
Spring ArcheryMarch 25–May 31, 2026One male or bearded female turkey per permit per calendar day
Youth ShotgunApril 11–May 31, 2026Same as spring permit class
Regular ShotgunApril 18–May 31, 2026One male or bearded female turkey per permit per calendar day

Fall Turkey Season

SeasonDatesBag Limit
ArcheryOct. 1–Nov. 30, 2026One turkey of either sex
FirearmsOct. 1–Nov. 30, 2026One turkey of either sex
Youth Fall Archery/ShotgunOct. 1–Nov. 30, 2026One turkey of either sex

Turkey Hunting Regulations

RuleRequirement
Shotgun RestrictionsShotgun or legal archery equipment only; rifles are not allowed
Hunter Orange RequirementSpring: recommended; Fall: required during the November firearm deer season if turkey hunting then
Legal Hunting Hours30 minutes before sunrise to sunset
Youth RequirementsHunters ages 12–29 need hunter education or apprentice exemption; firearm hunters 11 or younger must be accompanied by a licensed adult age 19+

A few turkey rules catch hunters every year. Nebraska allows up to two spring permits total, but you may not take more than one turkey in a calendar day during spring. All turkey harvests must be reported through Telecheck. Nebraska also says it is illegal to hunt big game or turkeys within 200 yards of a baited area, and creating a baited area on Commission-owned or controlled lands is illegal.


Waterfowl Hunting Seasons

Nebraska’s 2026–2027 waterfowl framework includes a move to a three-duck-zone setup, plus early teal and special youth/veteran days. This is one of the strongest parts of the Nebraska hunting calendar.

Duck Seasons

ZoneDates
Zone 1Oct. 24–Dec. 6, 2026 and Dec. 19, 2026–Jan. 17, 2027
Zone 2Oct. 3–Dec. 15, 2026 and Jan. 6–27, 2027 (High Plains portion)
Zone 3Oct. 24, 2026–Jan. 5, 2027 and Jan. 6–27, 2027 (High Plains portion)

Goose Seasons (official Nebraska units)

Unit/SeasonDates
Dark Goose – Platte River UnitOct. 28, 2026–Feb. 9, 2027
Dark Goose – Niobrara UnitOct. 28, 2026–Feb. 9, 2027
Dark Goose – North Central UnitOct. 3, 2026–Jan. 15, 2027
White-fronted Goose – StatewideOct. 17–Dec. 27, 2026 and Jan. 25–Feb. 9, 2027
Light Goose – Regular SeasonOct. 3–Dec. 30, 2026 and Jan. 25–Feb. 9, 2027
Light Goose Conservation OrderEast: Feb. 10–April 15, 2027; West/Rainwater Basin: Feb. 10–April 5, 2027

Special Waterfowl Hunts

Hunt TypeDates
Youth WaterfowlZone 1: Oct. 17–18, 2026; Zone 2: Sept. 26–27, 2026; Zone 3: Oct. 17–18, 2026
Veteran/Active-Duty WaterfowlSame dates as youth hunt
Early TealLow Plains: Sept. 5–13, 2026; High Plains: Sept. 5–13, 2026

Waterfowl Requirements

RequirementDetails
HIP RegistrationRequired for waterfowl hunters; residents under 16 are generally exempt unless selecting Tier II duck bag rules
Federal Duck StampRequired for adult waterfowl hunters where applicable
State StampNebraska waterfowl stamp required in addition to hunt permit and habitat stamp

Small Game Hunting Seasons

Nebraska’s upland picture for 2026–2027 is already visible for the headline species. For some other small-game and webless migratory birds, the latest fully readable public guide still reflected the prior annual booklet at the time of review, so hunters should double-check the final 2026–2027 guide before opening day.

SpeciesSeason DatesDaily Limit
SquirrelVerify in final 2026–2027 guideVerify in final guide
Rabbit (Cottontail)Verify in final 2026–2027 guideVerify in final guide
PheasantOct. 31, 2026–Jan. 31, 20273 daily / 12 possession in aggregate with quail and partridge
QuailOct. 31, 2026–Jan. 31, 20273 daily / 12 possession in aggregate with pheasant and partridge
Grouse (Prairie Grouse)Sept. 1, 2026–Jan. 31, 2027Latest published guide showed 3 daily / 3 possession east of U.S. 81
DoveVerify in final 2026–2027 guideLatest published guide showed 15 daily / 45 possession aggregate
WoodcockVerify in final 2026–2027 guideVerify in final guide
SnipeVerify in final 2026–2027 guideLatest published guide showed 8 daily / 24 possession
CrowOct. 10–Dec. 10, 2026 and Jan. 9–March 11, 2027No daily or possession limit listed

Regional note: Prairie grouse hunters east of U.S. 81 need a free special permit. Jackrabbits are only legal west of U.S. 81. For small game, shooting hours are generally 30 minutes before sunrise to sunset, except crow rules should always be checked in the annual guide.


Furbearer Hunting and Trapping Seasons

SpeciesDatesNotes
CoyoteYear-roundResidents need no permit; nonresidents need a hunt permit
FoxNov. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Hunt and trap
RaccoonHunt only: Sept. 1–Oct. 31, 2026; Hunt and trap: Nov. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Running, no harvest: March 1–Aug. 17, 2026
OpossumHunt only: Sept. 1–Oct. 31, 2026; Hunt and trap: Nov. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Running, no harvest: March 1–Aug. 17, 2026
BeaverNov. 1, 2026–March 31, 2027Trap only
BobcatDec. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Hunt and trap; running/no harvest outside season
OtterNov. 1, 2026–Feb. 28, 2027Trap only; one river otter per valid permit holder

Adult trappers usually need a Fur Harvest permit, and most also need a Habitat Stamp unless exempt. Nonresident fur-harvest permits are available, but the permit system notes nonresidents must contact the Lincoln office for them.


Additional Hunting Opportunities

SpeciesSeason Dates
CrowOct. 10–Dec. 10, 2026 and Jan. 9–March 11, 2027
FrogVerify current 2026–2027 rules before take
TurtleVerify current 2026–2027 rules before take
Other Legal SpeciesCoyotes, porcupines, prairie dogs, and woodchucks may be hunted statewide year-round with no bag or possession limit

Hunting Licenses and Fees

Important fee note: Nebraska’s permit system may show checkout totals that include issuing or application fees. The table below uses the current posted permit pricing for the common hunt permits reviewed online.

Resident License Fees

License TypeFee
Annual Hunting License$20
Deer Permit$42
Turkey Permit$34
Waterfowl-related stamp/add-onsRequired; verify current stamp checkout in permit portal
Trapping License$18

Nonresident License Fees

License TypeFee
Annual Hunting License$128
Deer Permit$372
Turkey Permit$158
Waterfowl-related stamp/add-onsRequired; verify current stamp checkout in permit portal
Trapping License$227

Youth and Senior Licenses

License TypeFee
Youth LicenseResident small-game youth (15 and under): Free; nonresident youth hunt permit: $20
Senior LicenseResident age 69+ annual small game/hunt-fish-fur option: $5
Apprentice LicenseApprentice Hunter Education Exemption Certificate: $5

Most annual permits are valid Jan. 1–Dec. 31, 2026. Big-game permits are valid only for the season and method printed on the permit.


Hunter Education Requirements

RequirementDetails
Minimum AgeDeer hunters must be at least 10; elk and antelope applicants must be at least 12
Hunter Safety CourseAges 12–29 need firearm hunter education when hunting with firearm/air gun; bowhunter education needed for deer, elk, antelope, and similar big game with bow/crossbow
Apprentice OptionAges 12–29 may buy a $5 apprentice exemption certificate, valid through Dec. 31 and renewable once
Online Course AvailabilityNebraska offers classroom, hybrid, and online options; online-only certification is available for ages 16–29

Nebraska also has accompaniment rules. Firearm hunters age 11 or younger must be with a licensed adult age 19 or older. Big-game hunters age 15 or younger must also be accompanied.


Public Hunting Land in Nebraska

Public hunting is better in Nebraska than many first-time visitors expect, but you need to map it carefully because the state is still more than 97% privately owned.

Major Public Hunting Areas

Area NameAcresPopular Species
Public Access Atlas statewide lands1.2+ million acresDeer, turkey, pheasant, waterfowl
Valentine National Wildlife Refuge71,516 acresPrairie chickens, sharp-tailed grouse, deer, waterfowl
Open Fields and Waters enrolled lands (fall 2025 level)471,000+ acresPheasant, quail, deer, turkey, waterfowl
Platte River Recreation Access Program6,200+ acresWalk-in hunting and other seasonal access

Nebraska also has 250+ Wildlife Management Areas, plus federal lands, state recreation areas, and selected state park hunting tracts. OFW lands are walk-in only, while the Managed Access Program uses reservations on participating private lands.


Special Hunting Programs

Access Programs

ProgramDescription
Walk-In AccessOpen Fields and Waters gives public walk-in access on enrolled private land
Private Land AccessManaged Access Program uses reservations and landowner-selected hunt dates/species
Youth HuntsYouth pheasant, youth turkey, youth waterfowl, and mentored youth opportunities
Draw HuntsElk and some limited big-game permits are draw-based; some state park deer hunts require application

Application periods matter here. Elk is draw-only, and some landowner/state park opportunities have their own deadlines.


Important Hunting Regulations

General Hunting Rules

RegulationRequirement
Hunter OrangeRequired for big-game firearm and muzzleloader hunts; fall turkey hunters need it during November firearm deer season
TrespassingPermission is required before hunting private land not enrolled in a public-access program
BaitingIllegal to hunt big game or turkey within 200 yards of a baited area
DronesAircraft, including drones, may not be used to hunt, recover, drive, chase, molest, or harass game
SpotlightingVerify current annual guide and statutes before nighttime scouting or use of artificial light
Party HuntingIllegal; each hunter must take his or her own game
Road HuntingIllegal to shoot from a bridge or public road, including the traveled surface and right-of-way
SuppressorsCheck current statutes and equipment rules before use; this was not clearly detailed in the source excerpts reviewed

A few of these rules deserve emphasis. Nebraska is strict about baiting for deer and turkey. The road-hunting rule is also straightforward: if you are on a public road or right-of-way, do not shoot. And because Nebraska is so private-land heavy, trespass mistakes can become expensive very quickly.


Hunting Hours

SpeciesLegal Hunting Hours
Deer30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset
Turkey30 minutes before sunrise to sunset
Waterfowl30 minutes before sunrise to sunset; Light Goose Conservation Order extends to 30 minutes after sunset
Small GameGenerally 30 minutes before sunrise to sunset

Harvest Reporting Requirements

SpeciesReporting Deadline
DeerWithin 48 hours outside November firearm season; November firearm deer must be checked via Telecheck or at check station
TurkeyTelecheck required within 48 hours
BearN/A
ElkTelecheck required within 48 hours

Nebraska’s Telecheck system is one of the easiest parts of the process, but you still need your permit number, county of kill, weapon type, sex/age details, and public-area name if you hunted public land.


Penalties for Hunting Violations

ViolationPossible Penalty
Hunting Without LicenseUnlawful under Nebraska law; may lead to citation, fines, and suspension of hunting privileges
TrespassingHunting without permission may result in fines, possible jail time, and loss of hunting privileges
Exceeding Bag LimitsCitation, fines, restitution, and possible privilege suspension
Illegal HarvestMisdemeanor exposure, fines, restitution, and permit loss
Failure to Report HarvestCitation and additional enforcement action for noncompliance

Nebraska statutes and guide language make it clear that game violations are not treated lightly. If you are unsure whether a tract is public, whether a permit is valid in that unit, or whether a harvest must be checked, stop and verify it first.


Nebraska Hunting Tips for the 2026–2027 Season

  1. Build your hunt around the Public Access Atlas before you buy fuel, not after.
  2. If you are deer hunting rivers, study the new River Antlerless unit names carefully.
  3. In western Nebraska, scout for mule deer and prairie birds separately; habitat shifts fast.
  4. Don’t assume all public ground is first-come, first-served—MAP and PRRAP use reservations.
  5. If you hunt OFW land, remember it is walk-in only unless posted otherwise.
  6. Carry orange even when hunting fall turkey if your dates overlap the November firearm deer season.
  7. For November deer, decide before opening day whether you will use check stations or Telecheck.
  8. Prairie grouse hunters east of U.S. 81 should get the free special permit early.
  9. Waterfowl hunters should double-check the new three-zone duck setup so they do not use old maps.
  10. Nonresident spring turkey hunters should buy early; the 10,000-permit cap sells fast.
  11. On private land, get permission in writing if possible—Nebraska is mostly private ground.
  12. If you plan an elk hunt, apply early and do not expect an over-the-counter backup.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need hunter education to hunt in Nebraska?

If you are age 12–29, usually yes, unless you buy the $5 apprentice exemption and follow the mentor rules.

Is there a separate youth deer season in Nebraska?

Nebraska does not list a separate statewide youth deer season, but youth deer permits are available.

How many spring turkeys can I buy in Nebraska?

Up to two spring permits total.

Can I shoot a hen turkey in spring?

Only a male or bearded female is legal in the spring season.

Do I have to report my turkey online?

Yes. Turkey harvests must be reported through Telecheck.

Are deer permits over the counter in Nebraska?

Many deer permits are widely available, but some permit classes are quota-based or structured by unit.

Is elk hunting over the counter?

No. Nebraska elk permits are draw permits.

Do nonresidents need a habitat stamp?

Yes, for many hunts including deer, turkey, small game, and waterfowl.

Can I hunt coyotes without a permit?

Residents may hunt coyotes year-round without a permit; nonresidents need a hunt permit.

Is baiting legal for deer in Nebraska?

No. Hunting big game or turkeys within 200 yards of a baited area is illegal.

Can I hunt public land in Nebraska without a reservation?

Yes on many areas, but some programs like MAP and PRRAP use reservations.

What orange do I need for deer hunting?

At least 400 square inches of hunter orange on your head, chest, and back during applicable firearm and muzzleloader hunts.

Are ducks hunted on one statewide season?

No. Nebraska uses duck zones, and the 2026–2027 setup uses three zones.

Is there a bear season in Nebraska?

No bear season was listed in the official materials reviewed for 2026–2027.


Final Thoughts

Nebraska remains one of the better all-around hunting states in the Great Plains because it offers more than just one headline hunt. Deer is the anchor, but turkey, upland birds, waterfowl, furbearers, and year-round predator opportunities give hunters a long calendar.

The biggest thing to understand for 2026–2027 is that Nebraska is a permit-and-unit state. You cannot treat deer, elk, turkey, and waterfowl like simple statewide seasons and hope everything works out. The right permit, the right unit, the right method, and the right reporting step all matter.

Licensing is still reasonably approachable for residents, while nonresidents should budget more carefully, especially for deer and turkey. Youth hunters have good opportunities, and Nebraska’s apprentice route makes it easier for newcomers to get started legally with supervision.

Public access is stronger than many people think, but it takes planning. The Public Access Atlas, OFW lands, WMAs, and reservation-based access programs can open a lot of ground if you do your homework first.

Finally, hunt safely and stay current. Seasons, permit quotas, and small-game booklet details can change from year to year. Before any trip, verify the final 2026–2027 regulations, season dates, unit maps, and permit requirements with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

John Lewis
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