Nevada (NV)
Nevada is known for mule deer and desert mountain tag draws.
Agency links, deadlines, unit maps, and species opportunities are tied to official sources below.
Huntable species in NV
Pick a species to assemble the available permit/tag opportunities for this state.
Unit Map / Units
Official GIS polygon layers render here when available. Click a unit polygon to ask Jeremiah for practical hunting background; seeded unit cards appear only when no GIS layer has been imported yet.
Nevada Game Management Units
Official GIS sourcePrimary statewide management or hunt-unit boundaries.
Cream/white gaps are places not covered by this active district layer, such as reservations, national parks, lakes/water, or other excluded/non-district areas. Colors separate hunting-district number series for readability; always verify exact rules, species, and season dates against the official source.
Agency source
1
medium confidence
Opportunities
15
researched nonresident paths
Applications
0
public research mode
Unit map
GIS
ArcGIS REST
Mountain goat opportunities
First-pass official-source research package for nonresident applications, draw/OTC paths, odds, harvest stats, and map linkage. Retrieved 2026-05-13.
Nevada is a draw-first western state for nonresident big game. All big-game applications go through the NDOW licensing portal. The 2026 main draw application period opened March 23 and closed May 13 at 11 p.m. PDT, with results scheduled for May 29. A second draw for remaining big-game tags opened June 8 and closed June 15, with results June 26. Nonresident guided mule deer had a separate application period from February 9 to March 9, with results March 20. Applicants may choose up to five unit/season choices per species and sex class where available. Nevada uses random numbers; bonus points add chances by squaring the bonus point total and adding one for the current year. Commission policy allocates quotas approximately 90 percent resident and 10 percent nonresident. Tags left after the main draw can move to alternates, the second draw, and finally first-come first-served purchase.
Hunt codes: mountain goat category; specialty tag if available
Units: limited Nevada mountain goat units; 2026 Silver State mountain goat listed as Unit 102 only
Deadlines: Main draw deadline May 13, 2026; specialty tag timing depends on tag type
Fees: Nonresident Rocky Mountain goat tag: $1,200 • Application and processing fees apply
Open map layer- • Create/use an account in the NDOW licensing portal at ndowlicensing.com; all big game applications are submitted online.
- • Anyone 12 or older who hunts game birds or mammals in Nevada must hold a hunting license; nonresidents normally use the adult combination license ($155) or youth combination license ($15).
- • A license is valid for 365 days from purchase; bonus point eligibility depends on having an active hunting or combination license.
- • Anyone born after January 1, 1960 must provide proof of hunter education to purchase a Nevada hunting license.
- • Applicants who are required by federal law to have a Social Security number must provide it for licensing.
- • Applicants may choose to purchase the hunting license only if successful, but that option does not award a bonus point after an unsuccessful application.
- • Applicants who failed to submit a required hunt survey questionnaire for a prior-year tag are blocked from applying until they complete the questionnaire and pay the penalty fee identified by NDOW.
- • Successful applicants have seven days after draw results to complete tag payment; failure to pay is treated as receiving the tag for waiting-period and bonus-point purposes.
Create or recover an NDOW licensing account, confirm hunter education and license status, then review current eRegulations, quotas, unit maps, and status books before submitting up to five choices.
Nevada assigns random numbers, and bonus points add extra chances using points squared plus one. The lowest random number on the application is used in the draw.
Mountain lion tags are sold over the counter. Other big game tags generally go through main draw, alternates, second draw, and first-come first-served if tags remain.
NDOW application-process materials state quotas for resident and nonresident allocations are set at approximately 90 percent resident and 10 percent nonresident under Commission Policy 24.
The separate nonresident guided mule deer draw, second draw/FCFS returned tags, mountain lion OTC tags, and specialty tags such as Silver State/PIW/Dream/Heritage are distinct from the regular main draw.
Agency portals
Official agency, license/application, regulations, draw odds, and harvest stats.
NDOW official pages and help center direct hunters to ndowlicensing.com; public hunt statistics include draw and harvest PDFs by species.
Deadlines
Application, draw, reporting, and point purchase reminders.
No deadlines seeded yet.
Unit boundary source
Official map/GIS source for the future clickable unit-level map.
Format: ArcGIS REST
Conversion: Query layer 0 as GeoJSON; import unit/area attributes.
License/source notes: Official NDOW ArcGIS hosted service.
Open boundary sourceSpecies available
Starter list for this jurisdiction.
No species data yet.
Applications
State/province-specific plans, submitted applications, draw status, and spend.
No applications yet.