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2026-2027 Massachusetts Hunting New Season Dates, Licenses & More!

Massachusetts offers more hunting variety than many people expect. In one season, hunters can chase whitetails in the hill towns, work stocked pheasants on public land, call spring gobblers, hunt coastal ducks, or spend late winter on predators and furbearers. That mix makes the Bay State a good fit for both experienced hunters and beginners.

White-tailed deer, wild turkey, black bear, pheasant, rabbit, squirrel, coyote, fox, woodcock, and waterfowl are the main draws. Public access is a real strength too, thanks to Wildlife Management Areas, Wildlife Conservation Easements, many state forests, and select watershed properties.

Licensing is fairly straightforward, but Massachusetts is also a detail-oriented state. Stamps, species permits, youth rules, orange requirements, and harvest reporting deadlines all matter. That is especially true for deer, turkey, bear, and migratory birds.

The biggest reason to review the rules every year is simple: dates, permit costs, and method restrictions do change. For 2026, deer seasons in Zones 13 and 14 remain expanded, and the latest 2026–2027 waterfowl dates available online are still tied to MassWildlife’s spring draft migratory proposal, so hunters should recheck before opening day. If you want a broader regional comparison, see Massachusetts hunting regulations.

Massachusetts Hunting Season Overview

CategoryDetails
Licensing RequirementHunting license required at age 15+; ages 12–14 hunt only with a licensed adult
Main Game SpeciesDeer, turkey, black bear, pheasant, rabbit, squirrel, waterfowl, coyote, fox
Public Hunting AreasWMAs, WCEs, many DCR forests, Quabbin off-reservation lands by permit
Online Harvest ReportingMassFishHunt for deer, bear, turkey, coyote, fox, and several furbearers
Youth Hunting OpportunitiesYouth deer day, youth turkey hunt, youth pheasant program, youth waterfowl days
Public Land ProgramsMassWildlife Lands Viewer, Quabbin permits, controlled public hunts
Hunter Education RequirementRequired for first-time adult hunters unless qualified by pre-2007 license history

Massachusetts is not a “buy one license and forget it” state. Deer may require season stamps and antlerless permits, turkey needs its own permit, waterfowl needs HIP plus state and federal requirements, and pheasant/quail hunters age 15+ need the upland permit. That is why checking species-specific rules before each hunt matters.

Big Game Hunting Seasons

Big game in Massachusetts centers on deer, black bear, and turkey. Deer gets the most attention, but bear hunting in the western and central parts of the state remains important, and turkey hunting is one of the most beginner-friendly hunts in New England.

Deer Hunting Season

Season TypeDatesBag LimitNotes
Youth HuntOct. 3, 20261 deer on youth permitExtra antlerless deer allowed with valid zone permits
Early Deer SeasonSept. 21–Oct. 1, 2026By tag/permitWMZ 13 & 14 only
ArcheryOct. 5–Nov. 28, 20262 antlered deer annually statewideArchery stamp required
Paraplegic HuntOct. 29–31, 2026By permit rulesSpecial hunt details apply
Firearms (Shotgun)Nov. 30–Dec. 12, 20262 antlered deer annually statewideNo deer stamp required
MuzzleloaderDec. 14–31, 2026By tag/permitPrimitive firearms stamp required
Winter Deer SeasonJan. 1–Feb. 14, 20261 additional deer with winter permitWMZ 13 & 14 only

Massachusetts deer hunting runs by Wildlife Management Zone. Zones 13 and 14, which include Martha’s Vineyard, Nantucket, and nearby islands, have extra early and winter deer seasons because of high local deer numbers. Antlered deer means at least one antler 3 inches or longer. Hunters get 2 antlered deer tags with the proper deer-capable license, while antlerless harvest depends on valid antlerless permits for the correct zone.

Deer must be tagged immediately and reported within 48 hours. A major extra rule in Massachusetts is that every deer taken during the first week of shotgun season must go to a physical check station so biologists can collect data. That is easy to overlook if you usually rely on online reporting.

Deer Hunting Rules

RegulationRequirement
Hunter Orange500 sq. in. on chest, back, and head during youth, shotgun, primitive firearms, winter, and early deer seasons
Legal WeaponsShotgun during shotgun season; muzzleloader during primitive season; archery allowed in all deer seasons with proper stamp/permit
Reporting DeadlineWithin 48 hours; first week of shotgun season requires physical check station
Baiting RulesDeer baiting prohibited from 10 days before archery opener through day after primitive season closes
Tagging RequirementsAttach tag immediately; keep carcass intact except field dressing until reported

Elk Hunting Season

SeasonDatesPermit Type
ElkNo open season in MassachusettsNot applicable

Massachusetts does not have an open elk hunting season, and there is no elk draw system for 2026–2027.

Bear Hunting Season

SeasonDatesUnit/Zone
Segment 1Sept. 7–Oct. 3, 2026Zones 1–14
Segment 2Oct. 5–Nov. 28, 2026Zones 1–14
Segment 3Nov. 30–Dec. 12, 2026Zones 1–14

There is no statewide bear quota posted for 2026. The bag limit is 1 bear per calendar year. Bear baiting is illegal, dogs are not allowed, and harvested bears must be reported within 48 hours. Massachusetts also asks bear hunters to submit a tooth for age data, which helps biologists track the population.

Turkey Hunting Seasons

Turkey hunting is one of Massachusetts’ best hunts for new hunters because access is good and the rules are clear once you learn the season split.

Spring Turkey Season

SeasonDatesBag Limit
Youth HuntApr. 25, 2026Program/permit rules apply
Regular SeasonApr. 27–May 23, 20262 bearded birds

Fall Turkey Season

SeasonDatesBag Limit
ArcheryOct. 5–17, 20261 turkey of either sex
Firearms / Muzzleloader / ArcheryOct. 19–31, 20261 turkey of either sex
ArcheryNov. 2–28, 20261 turkey of either sex

Turkey Hunting Regulations

RuleRequirement
Shotgun RestrictionsNo larger than 10 gauge; no shot larger than #4
Hunter Orange RequirementNot required in spring; orange cap required on stocked WMAs during fall pheasant/quail season
Legal Hunting HoursYouth: ½ hour before sunrise to 5 p.m.; Spring: ½ hour before sunrise to noon; Fall: ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset
Youth RequirementsBasic Hunter Education plus youth turkey seminar/program rules

Turkey hunters using a shotgun or muzzleloader also need the Massachusetts safety sticker visible on the firearm. Spring hunters may take 2 bearded birds, and both can be taken the same day. Fall hunters get 1 bird of either sex. Turkey harvest must be reported within 48 hours.

Waterfowl Hunting Seasons

Massachusetts waterfowl hunting is shaped by inland marshes, river systems, and big coastal habitat. The state uses Berkshire, Central, and Coastal zones rather than a simple north/central/south layout. As of early June 2026, the latest 2026–2027 duck and goose dates online come from MassWildlife’s draft migratory proposal, so treat them as the latest available dates and verify the final brochure before you hunt.

Duck Seasons

ZoneDates
BerkshireOct. 12–Nov. 28, 2026; Dec. 14, 2026–Jan. 2, 2027
CentralOct. 10–Nov. 28, 2026; Dec. 15, 2026–Jan. 2, 2027
CoastalOct. 10–17, 2026; Nov. 27, 2026–Jan. 27, 2027

Goose Seasons

ZoneDates
Early Canada Goose (statewide)Sept. 1–25, 2026
BerkshireOct. 12–Nov. 14, 2026; late goose Dec. 15, 2026–Feb. 13, 2027
CentralOct. 10–Nov. 28, 2026; Dec. 15, 2026–Jan. 2, 2027; late goose Jan. 16–Feb. 13, 2027
CoastalOct. 10–17, 2026; Nov. 27, 2026–Jan. 27, 2027; North Coastal late goose Jan. 28–Feb. 13, 2027

Special Waterfowl Hunts

Hunt TypeDates
Youth WaterfowlSept. 26 & Oct. 3, 2026
Veteran WaterfowlSept. 26 & Oct. 3, 2026
Early TealNo separate early teal season listed in the latest draft

Waterfowl Requirements

RequirementDetails
HIP RegistrationRequired every year for ducks, geese, woodcock, snipe, rails, and coots
Federal Duck StampRequired for hunters age 16+ hunting ducks, geese, or brant
State StampMassachusetts Waterfowl Stamp required; resident $10, nonresident $30

Duck hunters should also remember the 6-duck daily limit is an aggregate limit with species sub-limits. Geese, ducks, and sea ducks all have their own restrictions, and non-toxic shot is mandatory for waterfowl. If you need the federal side of the rule, review U.S. Fish & Wildlife duck stamp requirements before the opener.

Small Game Hunting Seasons

Small game is where many Massachusetts hunters get their start. Stocked birds, accessible public land, and long squirrel and rabbit seasons make it a practical category for learning.

SpeciesSeason DatesDaily Limit
SquirrelJan. 1–Feb. 28, 2026; Sept. 2, 2026–Feb. 27, 20275
RabbitJan. 1–Feb. 28, 2026; Oct. 17, 2026–Feb. 27, 20275
PheasantOct. 17–Dec. 31, 20262
QuailOct. 17–Dec. 31, 20264
GrouseOct. 17–Nov. 28, 20263
DoveCheck final 2026–2027 migratory bird brochureTBA
WoodcockOct. 1–Nov. 21, 20263
SnipeSept. 1–Dec. 15, 20268

Regional differences are limited for most small game, but stocked pheasant and quail areas have extra orange requirements, and migratory birds fall under separate federal-season frameworks.

Furbearer Hunting and Trapping Seasons

SpeciesDatesNotes
CoyoteJan. 1–Mar. 8, 2026; Oct. 17, 2026–Mar. 8, 2027No bag limit; report within 48 hours
FoxJan. 1–Feb. 28, 2026; Nov. 2, 2026–Feb. 27, 2027No bag limit; closed during shotgun deer season
RaccoonJan. 1–31, 2026; Oct. 1, 2026–Jan. 30, 2027Closed during shotgun deer season
OpossumJan. 1–31, 2026; Oct. 1, 2026–Jan. 30, 2027Closed during shotgun deer season
BeaverJan. 1–Apr. 15, 2026; Nov. 1, 2026–Apr. 15, 2027Trapping season; sealing/reporting required
BobcatJan. 1–Mar. 7, 2026; Dec. 21, 2026–Mar. 8, 2027Zones 1–8 only; physical check required
OtterNov. 1–Dec. 15, 2026Trapping season; physical check required

Trappers age 12+ need a trapping license, and trapping on another person’s land requires a trap registration certificate. Massachusetts is strict about trap types, daily trap checks, and pelt sealing. Bobcat and otter cannot be reported online and must go to a physical check station.

Additional Hunting Opportunities

SpeciesSeason Dates
CrowJan. 1–Apr. 10, 2026; July 1, 2026–Apr. 10, 2027 (Mon., Fri., Sat. only)
FrogJuly 16–Sept. 30 for bullfrog/green frog under freshwater rules
TurtleJan. 1–Apr. 30 and July 17–Dec. 31 for snapping turtle under freshwater rules
Other Legal SpeciesYear-round except shotgun deer season for species such as woodchuck, porcupine, skunk, chipmunk, red squirrel, starling, and English sparrow

Hunting Licenses and Fees

Resident License Fees

License TypeFee
Annual Hunting License$40.00
Deer PermitAntlerless permit $10.00 if issued
Turkey Permit$10.00
Waterfowl Stamp$10.00
Trapping License$40.00

Nonresident License Fees

License TypeFee
Annual Hunting License$112.00 big game / $78.00 small game
Deer PermitAntlerless permit $30.00 if issued
Turkey Permit$30.00
Waterfowl Stamp$30.00
Trapping License$215.00

Youth and Senior Licenses

License TypeFee
Youth LicenseResident minor hunting license $6.50
Senior LicenseResident hunting age 65–69: $20.00
Apprentice LicenseNo separate statewide apprentice hunting license listed

Massachusetts also adds a $5 Wildlands Conservation Stamp to the first resident license purchased each year and to all nonresident licenses. State hunting licenses run on a calendar-year basis, while the federal duck stamp runs July 1 through June 30.

Hunter Education Requirements

RequirementDetails
Minimum Age12
Hunter Safety CourseRequired for first-time adult hunters unless they held a license before Jan. 1, 2007
Apprentice OptionNo separate apprentice license; youth mentoring/supervision rules fill that role
Online Course AvailabilityOnline study plus field-day/blended options are available

Adults 18 and older must either have hunter education from any jurisdiction or qualify through older hunting-license history. Youth rules are different: ages 12–14 hunt with a licensed adult, while ages 15–17 may hunt alone only if they have a hunter education certificate.

Public Hunting Land in Massachusetts

Massachusetts has a strong public-land system for a relatively small state. MassWildlife says almost all of its more than 200,000 acres are open to hunting, fishing, and trapping.

Major Public Hunting Areas

Area NameAcresPopular Species
Frances A. Crane WMA2,466Pheasant, quail, woodcock, grouse, deer, turkey
Martin H. Burns WMA2,135Deer, turkey, pheasant, woodcock, waterfowl
Eugene D. Moran WMA1,870Pheasant, woodcock, grouse, deer, turkey, black bear

WMAs are the backbone of public hunting. WCEs add more access on protected private land, and many DCR forests also allow hunting with extra property-specific setbacks. Quabbin off-reservation lands add another important option, but they require watershed permits and do not allow waterfowl hunting.

Special Hunting Programs

ProgramDescription
Walk-In AccessNo major statewide lease-style walk-in program; focus instead on WMAs, WCEs, and DCR lands
Private Land AccessHunting access exists on private land, but written permission is strongly recommended
Youth HuntsYouth deer, turkey, pheasant, and waterfowl opportunities statewide
Draw HuntsQuabbin controlled deer hunts operate by lottery; watch DCR/MassWildlife summer notices

Hunters interested in Quabbin should watch for annual permit and lottery announcements, usually posted in summer. Massachusetts also offers a special January–March permit program for privately purchased pheasant and quail hunts on selected WMAs.

Important Hunting Regulations

General Hunting Rules

RegulationRequirement
Hunter OrangeRequired in several seasons and on stocked WMAs
TrespassingNo hunting on posted land without permission
BaitingProhibited for deer, bear, turkey, and migratory birds
DronesNot listed as a legal hunting aid; verify with MassWildlife before any use
SpotlightingArtificial lights prohibited except for raccoon and opossum
Party HuntingEach hunter must meet individual licensing/tagging rules; no casual shared-tag system
Road HuntingNo shooting across or within 150 feet of a hard-surfaced highway
SuppressorsCheck Massachusetts firearms law before use; not addressed as a standard hunting aid in season summaries

Massachusetts also bans Sunday hunting, prohibits hunting under the influence, restricts hunting within 500 feet of an occupied dwelling without permission, and bars rifles/handguns in the woods during shotgun deer season.

Hunting Hours

SpeciesLegal Hunting Hours
Deer½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset
TurkeySpring to noon; fall to ½ hour after sunset; youth day to 5 p.m.
Waterfowl½ hour before sunrise to sunset; early goose to ½ hour after sunset
Small GameUsually ½ hour before sunrise to ½ hour after sunset, with species exceptions

Harvest Reporting Requirements

SpeciesReporting Deadline
DeerWithin 48 hours
TurkeyWithin 48 hours
BearWithin 48 hours
ElkNot applicable

Coyote and fox also require reporting within 48 hours, while several trapped furbearers follow pelt-check and sealing deadlines.

Penalties for Hunting Violations

ViolationPossible Penalty
Hunting Without LicenseLicense revocation, fines, restitution, possible criminal penalties
TrespassingCitation, fines, possible license consequences
Exceeding Bag LimitsFines, restitution, and possible suspension/revocation
Illegal HarvestSerious violations can bring large fines and possible jail time
Failure to Report HarvestTagging/reporting violations may lead to fines and license action

MassWildlife states that hunting violations can lead to license loss for up to 5 years, fines up to $10,000, restitution, and in serious cases jail time. Enforcement is handled by the Massachusetts Environmental Police.

Massachusetts Hunting Tips for the 2026–2027 Season

  1. Know whether your deer hunt is in a regular zone or WMZ 13–14 before buying stamps and planning dates.
  2. If you hunt the first week of shotgun deer season, plan ahead for a physical check station, not just online reporting.
  3. Carry your pheasant/quail permit if you are 15 or older and chasing stocked birds on public land.
  4. On stocked WMAs, keep an orange cap handy even if you are mainly after rabbits, grouse, or squirrels.
  5. Coastal duck hunters should recheck the final migratory bird brochure before opener because 2026–2027 dates were still in draft form in spring 2026.
  6. Quabbin hunters should apply early and confirm whether their area is general access or lottery-only.
  7. Turkey hunters using a shotgun or muzzleloader should make sure the Massachusetts safety sticker is on the gun before leaving home.
  8. Predator hunters should remember coyote season stays open through shotgun deer season, but their method rules change during that window.
  9. Do not assume bear season means any weapon all season; Massachusetts splits legal implements by segment.
  10. If you are a youth hunter, get your free deer permit or youth-program paperwork early through MassFishHunt.
  11. Watch local town rules and posted boundaries when hunting private land, especially in eastern Massachusetts.
  12. If you trap, label gear correctly and keep daily trap-check routines tight because Massachusetts trapping laws are strict.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a hunting license in Massachusetts if I am 14?

No. Hunters ages 12–14 do not need a license, but they must hunt with a licensed adult and share one firearm or bow and one bag limit.

Can I hunt on Sundays in Massachusetts?

No. Sunday hunting is still prohibited.

How many antlered deer come with a Massachusetts hunting license?

A qualifying deer-capable hunting license includes 2 statewide antlered deer tags.

Do I need a separate permit for antlerless deer?

Yes. Antlerless deer require a valid antlerless permit for the proper zone.

Is there an elk season in Massachusetts?

No. Massachusetts does not have an open elk season.

Do I need hunter education to buy my first adult hunting license?

Usually yes, unless you previously held a hunting license before January 1, 2007.

Can I use a rifle for deer in Massachusetts?

No. Massachusetts deer hunting uses shotguns, muzzleloaders, or legal archery equipment, depending on season.

Do waterfowl hunters need HIP registration?

Yes. HIP is required every year for ducks, geese, woodcock, snipe, rails, and related migratory birds.

Is a federal duck stamp required in Massachusetts?

Yes, for hunters age 16 and older hunting ducks, geese, or brant.

Can I hunt pheasants on public land in Massachusetts?

Yes. MassWildlife stocks pheasants on many public and private lands open to hunting.

Do I have to report a turkey harvest online?

You can report online or at a check station, but it must be done within 48 hours.

Are there public lands open to hunting in Massachusetts?

Yes. WMAs, WCEs, many state forests, and some watershed lands offer public access.

Final Thoughts

Massachusetts gives hunters a surprisingly wide menu of options. Deer remains the headline season, but turkey, pheasant, woodcock, waterfowl, black bear, and predator hunting all add real depth to the calendar.

The key to a good season in this state is paying attention to the details. Orange rules, Sunday closures, youth requirements, stamps, and reporting deadlines can all affect whether a hunt is legal.

Licensing is manageable once you break it down by species. Start with the correct base license, then add only the permits or stamps your hunt actually requires. That keeps things simple and avoids expensive last-minute mistakes.

Public access is another strong point. WMAs and other MassWildlife lands give hunters a lot of room to work, and areas like Crane, Burns, and Moran show how diverse Massachusetts habitat can be.

Safety matters just as much as access. Dense populations, small parcels, occupied homes, and heavy mixed recreation mean hunters should be especially careful with setbacks, orange requirements, and property lines.

Before you head afield, verify the final season dates and regulations with the state wildlife agency—especially for migratory birds and any hunt on special-access land. This article was checked against the latest MassWildlife season, fee, and access information available in early June 2026, but annual updates can still occur.

John Lewis
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