Frequently Asked Questions
What does Oregon hunting land cost per acre in quality elk units?
According to the 2025 USDA National Agricultural Statistics Service Oregon farm dirt averages $3,210 per acre and premium hunting dirt pushes those prices higher. Properties in the premium Blue Mountains lottery units that qualify for Landowner Preference tags run $1,500 to $4,000 per acre for ranch dirt in Wallowa Grant and Union counties.
Properties in the Coast Range with great Roosevelt elk hunting run $2,000 to $5,000 per acre. Eastern Oregon open range dirt holding mule deer and pronghorn runs $800 to $1,800 per acre. Oregon hunting dirt is usually cheaper than similar land in Montana and Colorado simply because Oregon has so much public land that hunters do not have to buy private dirt just to find a place to hunt.
What makes the Oregon Cascade and Blue Mountain elk hunting distinctive?
The Blue Mountains in northeast Oregon grow massive Rocky Mountain elk in steep canyons dark timber benches and open mountain meadows that look exactly like the wild Idaho backcountry. Wallowa County is often called the Swiss Alps of Oregon and it produces incredible bulls because the elk eat great food and see very few hunters in the remote mountains.
Private dirt sitting in the foothills of the Wallowa and Eagle Cap Wilderness gives you direct access to incredibly wild elk country. Over on the coast and in the western Cascades hunters chase Roosevelt elk which are a massive subspecies that only live in the thick Pacific Northwest rainforest.
What is the non resident hunting situation in Oregon?
According to the 2026 Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife regulations out of state hunters can easily buy general season elk and deer tags over the counter for certain broad hunting zones which makes Oregon much easier to hunt than strict lottery states. However if you want to hunt the premium limited entry units Oregon places a strict cap on non resident tags allowing them a maximum of only 5 percent of the total tags for the unit.
This creates a massive bottleneck for out of state hunters trying to draw premium tags. If you buy hunting land in a general season zone you can easily hunt your dirt the very first year but if you buy in a premium zone you will be fighting terrible lottery odds just to get a tag.
