Frequently Asked Questions
Where does Tennessee produce its best trophy whitetail deer?
The Western Highland Rim counties of Stewart Houston Humphreys and Benton constantly grow the biggest bucks in the entire state because the deep rich dirt thick woods and huge farm crops give the deer everything they need to thrive. The Red River area in Robertson and Montgomery counties is also totally famous for growing giant deer.
West Tennessee river bottom counties along the Forked Deer Hatchie and Loosahatchie rivers grow huge deer because the thick bottomland woods sit right next to massive cotton and soybean fields. Any property in these areas that mixes thick creek woods with open farm fields is the absolute most wanted hunting dirt in the state.
What does hunting land cost per acre in Tennessee and how active is the lease market?
According to the 2025 USDA Land Values Summary prime hunting dirt has jumped in price. Great Tennessee deer hunting dirt in the Western Highland Rim runs $3,500 to $7,000 per acre if it has thick creek woods and a proven history of holding massive bucks. Cumberland Plateau hunting dirt runs $2,000 to $5,000 per acre.
West Tennessee river bottom hunting dirt runs $2,500 to $6,000 per acre. Hunters happily pay $10 to $20 per acre every single year to lease great hunting dirt. The hunting lease market is completely on fire especially in Middle Tennessee where city hunters from Nashville will pay massive prices just to rent good hunting land within a two hour drive.
What makes Tennessee black bear hunting valuable for private land buyers?
The Tennessee black bear herd has grown massively from a tiny group in the Great Smoky Mountains into a massive statewide population of around 6000 bears roaming across the Cumberland Plateau and the East Tennessee mountains. The state wildlife agency tightly controls the hunting through special zones and strict quotas.
Buying private dirt inside these bear zones especially in Morgan Scott Fentress and Pickett counties on the Cumberland Plateau gives you an incredible hunting bonus that most other Southeastern states simply cannot match. Properties sitting right next to big public forests pull the bears right onto the private dirt during hunting season.
