Wild Hog Hunting Cost: DIY vs. Guided (2026)
Wild hog hunting is unusual among American big-game hunts because it doesn’t require a tag, a draw, or a fixed season — which means the price range for a hog hunt is wider than almost any other hunt you can plan. A DIY hunt on land you or a friend already has access to can cost nothing beyond ammunition, while a guided night hunt with thermal-equipped guides can run several hundred dollars per person, per outing. Here’s how the two paths actually compare.
DIY Wild Hog Hunting Costs
| Cost item | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hunting license (where required) | $15–$75 | Varies by state and residency — Florida requires none on private land; Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, and Louisiana require a standard license; Texas requires one for non-landowners. |
| Night hunting permit (where applicable) | $0–$51 | Alabama’s dedicated nighttime feral swine license runs about $15 resident / $51 nonresident. Texas, Florida, Georgia, and Louisiana don’t require a separate night permit on private land. |
| Ammunition | $20–$60 per range/hunt trip | Depends heavily on caliber — see our caliber guide for cartridge-specific recommendations. |
| Thermal or night-vision optic (one-time) | $600–$3,500+ | The single biggest DIY investment if you plan to hunt at night regularly; entry-level thermal scopes have come down significantly in price but still represent real money upfront. |
| Land access | Free–$500/season | Many landowners in hog-heavy areas allow free access specifically because hog damage is a real cost to them; some charge a modest day rate or season lease. |
For a hunter who already has land access and basic rifle gear, a DIY hog hunt can genuinely cost close to nothing beyond a box of ammunition. The main variable is whether you invest in thermal optics for night hunting, which is where most of the real cost lives.
Guided Wild Hog Hunting Costs
| Hunt type | Typical price | What’s included |
|---|---|---|
| Day hunt, daytime, small group | $150–$350 per hunter | Guide, land access, and usually field dressing; typically no lodging or meals. |
| Guided night hunt with thermal optics | $300–$600 per hunter | Guide-owned thermal/night-vision equipment, which is the main reason night hunts cost more than daytime hunts. |
| Multi-day guided package (lodging included) | $800–$2,000+ | Usually 2–3 days, meals and lodging bundled, higher hog encounter volume than a single day hunt. |
| Helicopter hog hunt (Texas only) | $1,500–$3,500+ per hunter | A Texas-specific option for landowners managing severe hog damage over large acreages; priced per flight hour and typically booked through specialized outfitters. |

Which Option Makes Sense?
If you already have land access through family, a friend, or a landowner willing to let you hunt for free, DIY is by far the better value — the only real investment is a night-hunting optic if you want after-dark hunts, and even that’s optional if you’re happy hunting daytime hours. A guided hunt makes the most sense for hunters without land access, hunters visiting from out of state who want a higher-odds trip in a short window, or anyone who wants to try thermal night hunting without buying $1,000+ in optics first.
Whichever path you choose, confirm current licensing and night-hunting rules for your specific state before you go — see our state-by-state wild hog hunting guide for the full breakdown.
