Alligator Hunting in Georgia: Rules, Quota & Methods (2026)

In Georgia it’s unlawful to kill an unrestrained alligator. Here’s how the 2026 quota hunt works, zone by zone — and what gear it demands.

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Georgia runs a quota-draw alligator season across nine zones, hunted largely after dark using the capture-alive method. This guide explains the 2026 application window, legal methods, and size rules — always confirm the current details with Georgia DNR before you hunt.

It is unlawful to kill an unrestrained alligator in Georgia.
You must capture the gator alive and get a restraining line on it first, then dispatch it with a handgun, bangstick, or by severing the spine. No shooting free-swimming gators, and no baited hooks.

2026 quota application

Georgia’s alligator quota applications are accepted June 1 through 11:59 p.m. July 15, 2026 via GoOutdoorsGeorgia.com. You may make up to three selections; hunters who aren’t drawn earn a priority point for future years. The quota season runs in late summer into fall (roughly late August through early October), with exact dates set by the DNR.

Zones & size limits

Tags are allocated by quota across nine zones. Legal alligators must be at least 48 inches long in Zones 1–9; on Lake Walter F. George (Zone 1A) the minimum jumps to 96 inches. Each successful hunter may take one alligator.

Legal methods & weapons

You must first secure a restraining line to the gator using hand-held ropes or snares, snatch hooks, harpoons, gigs, or arrows. Only after it’s captured alive may you dispatch it — with a handgun, a bangstick, or by severing the spinal cord. Most hunting happens after dark, though some hunters use snatch hooks during twilight.

Licenses & permits

Selected hunters need a Quota Alligator Harvest Permit and a Harvest Record, in addition to the appropriate Georgia hunting license. Everything is handled through GoOutdoorsGeorgia.com.

What makes Georgia’s hunt unique

Georgia spans coastal marsh and inland reservoirs, so the experience ranges from tidal creeks to big lakes — and the 96-inch minimum on Lake Walter F. George makes it a true trophy zone. The capture-alive rule rewards hunters with strong tackle and a steady boat crew.

Gear for the hunt

A snag-style alligator hunt demands heavy tackle: a budget heavy spinning combo built for 50–80 lb braided line (braid beats mono on a gator’s scutes), strong treble snag hooks, and a bright spotlight for working after dark. See our full guide to alligator hunting across the South.

⚠️ Verify before you hunt. Alligator rules change yearly and this guide is a plain-English overview, not legal advice. Confirm every current date, method, size limit, and license requirement with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources before you apply or hunt.

Frequently asked questions

When do I apply for a Georgia alligator quota hunt in 2026?

Applications are accepted June 1 through 11:59 p.m. July 15, 2026, at GoOutdoorsGeorgia.com. You can make up to three selections, and hunters who aren’t drawn receive a priority point.

What is the minimum alligator size in Georgia?

Legal alligators must be at least 48 inches long in Zones 1–9. On Lake Walter F. George (Zone 1A), the minimum is 96 inches.

Can you shoot an alligator in Georgia?

Not while it’s free-swimming — it’s unlawful to kill an unrestrained alligator. You must capture it alive on a restraining line, then dispatch it with a handgun, bangstick, or by severing the spine.

The bottom line

Georgia’s quota hunt is capture-alive, mostly after dark, across nine varied zones — with a 96-inch trophy minimum on Lake Walter F. George. Apply June 1–July 15, 2026, bring heavy snag tackle, and verify the season’s exact dates and rules with Georgia DNR.

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