Frequently Asked Questions
How is deer hunting structured in Virginia and what are the regulations?
According to the 2025 and 2026 Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources hunting guides the state offers a massive deer season. The statewide early archery season kicks off on the first Saturday in October and an early muzzleloader season opens later in the fall. The massive general firearms season starts in November for most of the state.
Virginia actually lets hunters use high powered centerfire rifles for deer hunting which is a massive advantage over nearby states like Maryland or Ohio that force hunters to use shotguns or straight walled rifle cartridges. The state gives hunters generous bag limits often allowing up to six deer per year in the eastern zones. Virginia also does not use strict lottery caps for out of state hunters so you can buy land here and hunt it your very first season.
What makes Virginia black bear hunting notable?
According to the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources the state holds one of the absolute biggest black bear populations in the eastern United States and hunters constantly shoot massive trophy bears in the Blue Ridge and western mountains. The Shenandoah Valley counties of Bath Highland Augusta Rockingham Shenandoah and Warren pump out the biggest bears in the state.
Virginia gives hunters both an archery and a firearms bear season. Properties sitting right next to the massive George Washington and Jefferson National Forests are absolutely perfect for bear hunting because the bears walk out of the public woods to eat farm crops on the private dirt every single fall.
What hunting lease rates can Virginia landowners expect?
Leasing land to hunters is a massive business across Virginia especially in the Southside farming counties and the western mountains. Based on 2026 local hunting lease trends farmers usually charge $5 to $14 per acre every year just to let people hunt deer and turkeys.
Properties that have a proven history of growing huge bucks and feature planted food plots easily demand $10 to $18 per acre. If your land sits near Northern Virginia you can easily charge $12 to $20 per acre because wealthy city hunters will pay top dollar for a quick drive to the woods. Virginia hunting lease prices sit lower than Maryland but usually beat North Carolina and West Virginia.
