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Wild Hog Hunting in Arkansas: Season, Rules & Public Land (2026)

Arkansas treats feral hogs as an unprotected, unwanted species on private land — there’s no season, no bag limit, and no special permit needed beyond a standard hunting license. On public land, the state takes a more structured approach, folding hog harvest into existing deer, bear, and elk seasons rather than allowing a free-for-all.

Arkansas Wild Hog Hunting Rules

Rule Detail
Private land season Year-round, no closed season, no bag limit.
License A valid Arkansas hunting license is required. The Resident Sportsman’s Hunting License (around $25) covers all game species, including feral hogs, and bundles in deer and turkey tags.
Public land (WMAs) Feral hogs may be taken by hunters who are legally hunting deer, bear, or elk during an open firearms or archery season, using weapons legal for that season. A WMA permit is required on many wildlife management areas.
Key limitation Arkansas does not offer a standalone, year-round public-land hog season the way some other states do — public-land hog hunting is tied to specific October–December windows that overlap with deer, bear, and elk seasons.

Source: Arkansas Game & Fish Commission (AGFC). Regulations current as of mid-2026 — always confirm current WMA-specific rules and dates before hunting public land, as the AGFC periodically issues temporary WMA closures for feral hog control operations.

Where to Hunt

Southern and eastern Arkansas — the Delta region and the bottomland hardwood forests along the Arkansas, White, and Ouachita rivers — carry the state’s heaviest hog populations, driven by agricultural row crops and dense river-bottom cover. Public hunters targeting hogs incidentally during deer season should focus WMA scouting on the same river-bottom and agricultural-edge habitat that draws deer.

Fall forest landscape in Arkansas, typical wild hog habitat

Methods That Work

Because Arkansas’s public-land hog opportunity rides along with deer, bear, and elk seasons rather than standing on its own, the most reliable strategy for public-land hunters is simply to stay ready for a bonus hog encounter while deer hunting — keep a hog-appropriate load in your rifle if legal for the season you’re hunting. Private-land hunters have far more flexibility and can hunt hogs specifically, year-round, without waiting on any other season to open.

See our caliber and rifle guide for cartridge choices that double effectively for both deer and hogs on the same public-land hunt.

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