Black Bear · State-by-state

Black Bear hunting regulations.

Black bears are the most widely distributed bear species in North America, occupying most of Canada and Alaska plus a patchwork of states from Maine to Florida and across the West. Mature boars range from 150 pounds in food-poor regions to over 600 pounds where berries, mast, and ag waste are abundant. Coat color varies dramatically — true black is the namesake, but cinnamon, chocolate, blonde, and silver-tipped bears all occur, especially in the West.

Huntable in 31 US states

Bear hunting splits into spring and fall seasons in most jurisdictions, with regional variation in baiting, hounds, and spot-and-stalk methods. Spring hunts target boars emerging from dens before sows leave with cubs, hitting riparian green-up. Fall hunts intersect bears packing on weight before hibernation, hitting oak mast and berry production. Population status varies by state — some run general OTC seasons, others impose draws or unit-quota restrictions.

State-by-state legal status

50 states + DC

Tap a state to view black bear regulations and other species huntable there. Bield Hunt does not yet publish specific season dates or bag limits — verify with your state F&W agency before hunting.

Status legend

  • YGeneral season
  • DDraw / limited entry
  • PPrivate land / specific zones
  • SSpecial permit / depredation
  • RRestricted (subspecies / units)
  • -Not huntable

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