Home to bountiful public land, fewer than 600,000 residents, and productive hunting for sought-after western big game species, Wyoming is on most hunters’ bucket lists. Whether you’re after mule deer, elk, moose, bighorn sheep, mountain goat, or antelope, Wyoming is a state worth building points in as a hunter.
TL;DR: For non-residents, Wyoming awards 75% of deer, elk, and antelope licenses through the preference point draw and 25% through a random draw, meaning points matter over time, but every applicant still has a chance each year. Only non-resident elk application information is available for 2026 so far, with the non-resident elk deadline on February 2. Info on other species will become available in May (after the Commission’s April meeting). Applications are online only, fees are relatively reasonable, and license costs are refundable if you don’t draw.
What’s New in Wyoming’s Draw for 2026
Editor’s Note: This reflects information available as of January 2026, and will be updated as additional information becomes available in May 2026 after the Commission’s April meeting.
- Wyoming continues to issue type 8 unlimited cow/calf elk licenses in several elk units throughout the state.
- New elk hunts, including some new type 9 archery licenses, are being recommended for 2026 to help spread out hunting pressure.
- More non-resident elk licenses were issued in 2025 between general elk licenses being split in three regions and unlimited type 8 cow/calf licenses issued in multiple units.
- There was one random draw bighorn sheep license in the 2025 drawing. Applicants with fewer than 25 sheep points had exactly 0% chance of drawing a sheep license, except for the random license.
Looking for more? Huntin’ Fool’s Wyoming page is a thorough, updated resource for ongoing Wyoming draw changes. Hunters should also review the 2026 Wyoming Game and Fish Department Hunting Licence Information booklet.

Your Complete System for Securing Tags
Whether you’re chasing a once-in-a-lifetime hunt or just looking to fill the freezer, your season starts with onX Hunt’s application tools—all included with an Elite Membership:
- Hunt Research Tools: Draw odds, tag trends, and harvest stats for 11 western states (Washington is not yet available) to help you decide where to apply.
- Huntin’ Fool: In-depth insights to navigate state-specific systems and build better strategies.
- HuntReminder: Text and email alerts so you never miss a deadline.
One membership, every tool you need to make 2026 the year.

Wyoming Hunt Application Deadline Overview
Application deadlines for non-resident elk close on Monday, February 2, 2026, and the remaining tags for resident elk, as well as other big game species, are drawn in April and May. Wyoming only accepts online applications.
The deadline to modify or withdraw your non-resident elk application is May 8, 2026. Finalized hunt structures, seasons, and potential license quotas will become publicly available on May 1, 2026, after the April Commission meeting.
WYOMING DEADLINES
Non-Resident Elk
Moose, Sheep, Bison, & Mtn. Goat
Deer, Antelope, & Resident Elk
Leftover Draw
Points Only
Wyoming Application Season Cost Overview
Wyoming charges a non-refundable application fee of $5 for residents and $15 for non-residents. There is also a non-refundable 2.5% processing fee.
From there, Wyoming hunting license fees vary depending on residency, species, sex, and license type (e.g. youth, special, landowner), and range from a couple of dollars for certain resident licenses to upwards of $6,000+ for non-resident licenses.
For any non-residents just beginning their research, to give a sense of pricing, most license fees fall in the hundreds of dollars. For example, non-resident antelope is currently $326, and non-resident elk is $692. A full list of hunting license fees is available on the Wyoming Game and Fish website. Unlike the application fee, Wyoming’s hunting license fees are refundable if you don’t draw a tag.
If you successfully draw, in addition to the relevant hunting license, you’ll also need a $21.50 conservation stamp. And, archery hunters need an archery permit (exception: type 9 archery-only tags), which costs $72 for adult non-residents and $16 for adult residents.
Wyoming Application Season Species

Wyoming Draw Process Basics
There is no point system for Wyoming residents applying for elk, deer, and antelope; tags are issued via a random draw.
For non-resident elk, deer, and antelope, Wyoming uses a preference point system. In Wyoming’s draw, preference point drawing accounts for 75% of available licenses in each hunt area. The remaining 25% go to a random draw, so it’s worth applying even if you haven’t been building points for years.
- Preference points are like a place in line—first in, first out. The applicants with the most preference points draw before applicants with fewer points.
- Non-residents buy species-specific preference points during an application window in the late summer; you do not buy points at the time of your tag application.
- You can’t buy preference points for a species if you successfully drew your first choice for that species in the same year.
- If you draw your first choice for your species, your preference points are purged back to zero.
- If non-residents fail to apply for or buy a preference point for a particular species for two consecutive years, they lose all accumulated preference points for that species.

Wyoming Big Game Draw Resources
- Review the Application Season Tools you get with an onX Hunt Elite Membership, including Hunt Research Tools.
