Read this important notice
Unless otherwise specified, all dates and information on this page apply to the 2022 season, which is closed. Details for 2023 will be available Aug. 1. Season dates for 2023-2028 are available by browsing to the deer section of the hunting and trapping season dates page.News & notices
Lottery results available
Check online in the firearm or muzzleloader lotteries to see if you were selected in this year's antlerless lottery. Winners should receive a notification postcard by the middle of October.
Make a plan; share the fun
Every hunter needs a plan. Before you head off to deer camp, use this tool to help make yours. Also consider sharing your deer camp and hunting photos and logging your deer sightings.
Surplus permits sold out
Surplus permits are sold out for all deer permit areas, including those listed below:
- DPA 234: 0 permits
- DPA 238: 0 permits
- DPA 294: 0 permits
Seasons & hunts
Season | Dates |
---|---|
Archery | Sept. 17 - Dec. 31 |
Firearm (A) - 100 Series | Nov. 5-20 |
Firearm (A) - 200 Series | Nov. 5-13 |
Firearm (A) - 300 Series | Nov. 5-13 |
Firearm (B) - 300 Series | Nov. 19-27 |
Muzzleloader | Nov. 26 - Dec. 11 |
Metro deer management zone (701) | Nov. 5-27 |
Youth - Statewide | Oct. 20-23 |
Early antlerless | Oct. 20-23 |
Hunt | Dates |
Special hunts | Varies |
CWD hunt | Dec. 16-18 |
2023-2027 deer seasons |
Permit areas
Chronic wasting disease
CWD testing
CWD sampling is mandatory for all deer one year and older that are harvested on the opening weekend (Saturday, Nov. 5, to Sunday, Nov. 6,) of the A firearms deer season in DPAs designated as a CWD zone. The sampling requirement applies to all CWD management, control and surveillance zones.
Exceptions: Sampling is voluntary in DPAs 213, 256, 257, 262, 265 and 273 until sampling goals are reached. Sampling stations, either staffed or self-service, will be available in these CWD surveillance zones.
Carcass movement restrictions are in effect for all CWD management and control zones.
Detailed maps and corresponding information are available in the CWD information section and on the fold-out deer map, which is distributed with the printed regulations booklet.
Test for CWD yourself
There are several options, including a free mail-in kit for hunters, to test for CWD. These options are available to all hunters – even those outside a CWD zone.
Deer permit areas affected
Zone | Area(s) |
---|---|
Management zones | 604, 605, 643, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 655, 6611 (was 261), 6791 (was 179) |
Control zones | 255, 343, 344 |
Surveillance zones | 110, 157*, 159, 184, 169*, 197, 213, 225*, 273 |
1 New CWD designation | |
* Only a portion of this deer permit area is within the surveillance zone. |
CWD zone definitions
- Surveillance: CWD has been found in captive deer in this zone or in wild deer in an adjacent deer permit area or state. The DNR is gathering information to determine if CWD has infected any wild deer in these deer permit areas. Some precautionary management actions are in place.
- Control: This zone borders a management zone where CWD in wild deer persists or a slight spread has been documented. These areas are designated to help prevent further disease spread.
- Management: CWD has been found in wild deer in these areas. Multiple management actions designed to help mitigate disease spread are in place.
Licenses
All deer licenses (archery, firearms, muzzleloader and bonus permits) go on sale Monday, Aug. 1. Once on sale, licenses may be purchased at any time before or during the season.
After a deer season is open, all licenses and permits are valid the same day of purchase if purchased before legal shooting hours. If the license or permit is purchased after legal shooting hours have begun, it is valid the following day.
- A person may purchase no more than one firearms, muzzleloader and archery deer license in a calendar year.
- Bonus, early antlerless season and disease management permits may be purchased in addition to regular licenses. Bonus permits may be purchased throughout the season but must be in possession when taking deer. Regular licenses and bonus permits may be used in any order.
- A person may not take or tag deer without the appropriate license or permit. The term “take” includes attempting to take deer, deer drives, spotting or otherwise assisting another person in taking deer.
Landowner licenses are available to those who allow public deer hunting on their agricultural land. Review the requirements and details on page 68 of the hunting regulations booklet.
Tagging your deer
Your deer license and site tag comes as a two-part form. The upper half is the site tag for tagging the deer in the field. The lower half is the deer license and registration slip. Hunters must do the following:
- Detach the site tag from the deer license/registration slip.
- Before moving the deer, the hunter whose name is on the license validates the tag by using a knife or similar sharp object to cut out the notches indicating the month, date and time of day the deer was killed (AM/PM).
- If more than one month, date or time is cut out or marked, the tag becomes invalid.
Regulations
Download the 2022 Hunting & Trapping Regulations book.
General
- Hunters may not take deer with the aid or use of bait.
- Ensure you are using legal equipment for taking big game.
- Hunters using firearms to take big game must use legal ammunition.
- Legal bucks have one antler at least 3 inches long.
- Fawn bucks, sometimes called button bucks, are not legal bucks.
- Antlerless deer are deer without an antler at least 3 inches long.
- Know the difference between a deer and an elk.
New for 2022
- Special CWD regulations, including mandatory disease testing and carcass movement restrictions are in effect in a number of areas. See page 69-82.
- Deer permit area 179 is now 679 and deer permit area 261 is now 661. Both 679 and 661 have been added to the CWD management zone. See page 70.
- There are two ways for hunters to submit samples for CWD testing throughout the hunting seasons no matter where they hunt.
- The early antlerless deer season has been expanded to include more deer permit areas and the bag limit has changed from five deer to three deer. Hunters are no longer required to purchase an early antlerless permit to participate. Find details on page 84.
Special hunts
DNR, municipalities and organizations across Minnesota offer opportunities to hunt at special times and in areas that might regularly be closed to hunting.
Participation in these hunts is limited and often requires special registration. Consult the information contained in regulations book and the links below to register and participate in these hunts.
Earn-a-buck regulations apply during some special hunts. The regulation requires that a hunter harvest and tag an anterless deer with his or her own tag before harvesting a antlered deer.
Learn to hunt
Do you value strong connections to your outdoors and the food you eat? Are you looking for a new way to interact with the fields, woods, and waters around you?
Then view our series of 10 free, one-hour Learn To Deer Hunt lunchtime webinars. These classes offer an introduction and explanation of deer hunting and how to do it.
You also can view our series of short videos designed to help make you a better deer hunter. From sighting in your gun to managing land to reading deer sign and setting up your stand, these videos are intended to help regardless of your experience level.
Discover fall fields and forests with help from our archery and firearms how-to-hunt-deer guides.
Management
Hunting is only one aspect of the DNR's effort to manage deer for the public trust. We are committed to socially and ecologically responsive and responsible deer management for the benefit of all Minnesotans now and into the future. Visit our deer management page to learn about the many things we do to manage one of Minnesota's most popular animals.