2026 Alligator Season Dates by State (All 9 States)

When can you hunt alligators in 2026? Here are the application windows and season dates for all nine states with a regulated season — at a glance.

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Nine U.S. states run a regulated alligator season, and every one has different application windows, dates, and legal methods. This page puts the 2026 dates side by side and links to a full rules guide for each state. Because seasons and rules change every year, treat this as a starting point and confirm the specifics with each state’s wildlife agency.

⚠️ Always verify with the state agency.
Application windows, season dates, fees, legal weapons, and tag rules change yearly and can be amended on short notice. Use the table below to plan, then confirm every detail with the official agency — links are in each state’s guide.

2026 alligator application & season dates by state

State 2026 application window 2026 season Method & notes
Alabama June 2 – July 14 (draw July 15) Aug 13, 20 & Sep 10 (night) Catch-and-restrain; 260 tags, 5 zones
Arkansas July 1 – July 31 Last two weekends of September (night) Catch-and-restrain; Zones 1 & 2
Florida Phased May–June (Phase I ~May 18) Aug 15 – Nov 1 Hand-capture; bangstick only; ~7,000 permits
Georgia June 1 – July 15 Quota season, late Aug–Oct Capture-alive; ≥48 in (≥96 in Zone 1A)
Louisiana Lottery / landowner tags East Aug 26 · West Sep 2 – Dec 31 Baited hook-and-line; firearms OK (no shotguns)
Mississippi June 1 – June 12 Aug 28 (noon) – Sep 7 (noon) Catch-and-restrain; public-water draw
North Carolina Early-summer lottery (verify) Sep 1 – Oct 1 Permit-only, very limited; SE counties
South Carolina June 1 – July 15 ($10) Sep 12 (noon) – Oct 10 (noon) Restrain-first; 4–8 ft “slot tag” option
Texas Landowner / CITES tags Core counties Sep 9–29 · non-core Apr 1 – Jun 30 Firearms in non-core only; hook-first in core

Tap a state to open its full rules guide. Sources: state wildlife agencies (FWC, LDWF, TPWD, GADNR, SCDNR, MDWFP, Outdoor Alabama, Arkansas Game & Fish, NCWRC) and 2026 season announcements.

How alligator applications work

Most states award alligator tags by lottery or quota draw with an application window in early summer (often June–July) for a season that opens in late summer or fall. A few — notably Louisiana and Texas — are largely tag- and landowner-driven, where access to land with tags matters more than a draw. Methods split sharply too: the Southeast (MS, AL, GA, SC, AR, and Florida) requires you to catch and restrain the gator before dispatching it, while Louisiana and non-core Texas allow firearms. Each state guide spells out the details.

Full alligator rules guide for each state

New to it all? Start with our complete guide to alligator hunting across the Southern states, then gear up with budget heavy spinning combos, heavy braided line, and treble snag hooks.

Frequently asked questions

How many states have an alligator hunting season?

Nine: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas. Each has its own season dates, application process, and legal methods.

Which states let you use a firearm to hunt alligators?

Louisiana (rifles and handguns, but never shotguns) and the non-core counties of Texas. Most Southeastern states require you to catch and restrain the gator first, then dispatch it; Florida allows only a bangstick on a restrained gator.

When do alligator applications usually open?

Most states open applications in early summer — often June or July — for seasons that run late summer into fall. Florida uses a phased drawing starting in May. Always confirm the exact 2026 window with the state agency.

The bottom line

Nine states offer alligator hunting in 2026, each with its own dates, draw, and legal methods. Use the table to compare at a glance, open the state guide for the details, and always verify the current rules with the official agency before you apply or hunt.

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