Alligator Hunting in Mississippi: Rules, Season & Methods (2026)

Mississippi is a catch-first, restricted-weapon state with a short public-waters season. Here’s how it works in 2026 — and how it differs from its neighbors.

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Mississippi runs one of the South’s most sought-after public-waters alligator hunts: a short, draw-only season on big river systems, hunted at night, using the hands-on catch-and-restrain method. This guide covers the 2026 dates, how to apply, and exactly what’s legal — always confirm the current rules with the state before you go.

You must catch and restrain the gator before you kill it.
Mississippi is a restricted-weapon state. You legally capture a live alligator with hook-and-line, a weighted snatch hook, a hand-held snare, or a harpoon and keep it on a restraining line, then dispatch it at close range. You cannot shoot a free-swimming alligator.

2026 season & how to apply

The Mississippi public-waters season is short — for 2026 it runs from noon on August 28 to noon on September 7. Applications for the public-waters draw are accepted June 1–12, 2026 through the MDWFP Hunt/Fish License System. There’s no fee to apply, and the draw is open to residents and lifetime-license holders. If you’re drawn, you have seven days to purchase your possession permits, which are tied to a specific hunting zone. (A separate private-lands season runs on its own schedule.)

Legal methods & weapons

Mississippi requires you to capture the alligator alive. Legal capture gear includes hook-and-line / rod-and-reel with weighted snatch hooks, hand-held snares, and harpoons — all with a restraining line attached. Once the gator is restrained and brought close, it’s dispatched with a handgun, bangstick, or by severing the spinal cord. Baited hooks and shooting free-swimming gators are not allowed. This is why heavy braid and strong hooks matter so much here.

Size, tags & limits

Public-waters permits authorize a set number of alligators per permit, generally with a minimum-length requirement, and are restricted to the zone you were drawn for. Exact bag and length rules vary by season and zone, so confirm the current numbers with MDWFP before you hunt.

Licenses & permits

You’ll need the appropriate Mississippi hunting license plus the alligator possession permits issued after the draw. The public-waters draw is limited to residents and lifetime-license holders.

What makes Mississippi’s hunt demanding

Mississippi gators run big, and the hunt happens at night on large, current-driven systems like the Pascagoula and Pearl rivers and Mississippi River oxbows. The catch-and-restrain method means you have to physically wrangle a powerful animal boat-side — a test of tackle, teamwork, and nerve. It’s a true Southern snag hunt.

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 Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries & Parks before you apply or hunt.

Frequently asked questions

When can you hunt alligators in Mississippi in 2026?

The public-waters season runs from noon August 28 to noon September 7, 2026. Applications for the draw are accepted June 1–12, 2026, through the MDWFP Hunt/Fish License System.

Can you shoot an alligator in Mississippi?

Not while it’s free-swimming. You must first capture and restrain the gator on a line using a snatch hook, snare, or harpoon, then dispatch it at close range with a handgun, bangstick, or by severing the spine.

Who can apply for the Mississippi public-waters alligator draw?

The public-waters draw is open to Mississippi residents and lifetime-license holders. There is no application fee, but if drawn you have seven days to buy your zone-specific possession permits.

The bottom line

Mississippi offers a classic Southern snag hunt: a short, night-time, draw-only public-waters season using catch-and-restrain methods on big-river gators. Apply June 1–12, 2026, bring heavy tackle, and verify the current zone rules with MDWFP before you launch.

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