Arizona Hunting License: Cost, Requirements & How to Apply (2026)
Complete guide to Arizona hunting license costs, requirements, seasons, and regulations for the 365 days from purchase season.
Arizona Hunting License Fees 2026
Current hunting license costs for residents and non-residents. License year: 365 days from purchase.
Resident Licenses
Non-Resident Licenses
Tags & Permits
Endorsements & Stamps
How to Buy a Arizona Hunting License
Multiple convenient options to get your license quickly.
Buy Online (Recommended)
Visit azgfd.com and create a portal account. Purchase hunting or combo license. Apply for draw permits during application periods (Feb for elk/pronghorn, Jun for deer). Purchase OTC archery deer tags starting November 3. Check draw results on your portal account. Print or save licenses and permit-tags
Buy In Person
AZGFD offices statewide (Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, Mesa, Pinetop), Walmart stores, Local sporting goods stores, Authorized license agents
Buy By Phone
Call 602-942-3000. Service fee may apply
Shop for hunting gear at our partners:
The easiest way to buy your Arizona hunting license is online through the Arizona Game & Fish Department. You'll get your license instantly and can start hunting right away.
Hunter Education Requirements in Arizona
Who Can Hunt for Free (or at a Discount) in Arizona?
Arizona Hunting Seasons 2026-2027
Key hunting season dates and weapon restrictions.
Arizona Bag Limits
Daily and seasonal harvest limits for major game species.
How Arizona Compares to Neighboring States
See how hunting license costs stack up in the region.
Frequently Asked Questions About Arizona Hunting Licenses
How much is a hunting license in Arizona?
Resident general hunting costs $37, or $57 combo (hunt + fish). Non-residents must purchase the $160 combo — no standalone NR hunting license exists. Youth (10-17) pay only $5 regardless of residency. Short-term: $15/day (res) or $20/day (NR).
How does the Arizona draw system work?
Most big game requires lottery draw. Application fee: $13 (res) / $15 (NR) per species, non-refundable. Elk/pronghorn deadline: early February. Deer/sheep/bison deadline: early June. Bonus points increase odds. Results posted on your AZGFD portal account.
How hard is it to draw an elk tag in Arizona?
Very competitive — premium bull elk units take 15-20+ bonus points. Cow elk is easier (1-5 points). Arizona bulls average 330+ B&C — among North America's largest. Non-residents capped at 10% of tags per hunt code.
Can non-residents hunt OTC archery deer in Arizona?
Yes, Arizona offers 2,785 OTC archery deer tags for non-residents at $300 + $160 license ($460 total). Tags go on sale November 3 online. Units may close when harvest limits are met. No draw needed — first-come-first-served.
What is a Coues deer?
The Coues deer is Arizona's native whitetail subspecies, smaller than eastern whitetails (mature bucks 100-120 lbs). Arizona is THE premier Coues deer destination worldwide. They inhabit oak-juniper woodlands in the southeastern sky islands.
What is PointGuard in Arizona's draw system?
PointGuard ($10/species) lets you surrender a drawn permit-tag and retain your accumulated bonus points if you can't hunt that year. PointGuard Plus ($25) covers all species for 3 draw cycles. A smart insurance policy for serious applicants.
Can I hunt javelina in Arizona?
Yes, javelina hunting is available by draw — tags cost $28 (res) / $115 (NR). They're unique to the American Southwest. Spring and fall hunts in southern desert units. Some units offer OTC archery-only javelina. Application fee: $13/$15.
Can I buy an Arizona hunting license online?
Yes, at azgfd.com. Create a portal account first. All draw applications, OTC purchases, and license transactions are online. Youth ($5) and military licenses available online. Arizona licenses are valid 365 days from purchase date.