Not available
Wild Turkey Population
Eastern
Turkey Subspecies
126,032 (estimate)
Number of Licenses Sold Annually
$66
Hunting and fishing combination, $33; annual big-game gun, $33; permit fees required for some public properties
Cost of Resident License and Permit
$214 to $305
Seven-day all-game license, $214; annual all-game license, $305; permit fees required for some public properties
Cost of Non-Resident License and Permit
Photo by Bruce MacQueen.
With abundant public land, Tennessee offers room to roam for spring gobblers. Wildlife management areas are good places to start, though for some, hunting pressure is high.
If you can picture a Mid-South setting in which to chase gobblers, Tennessee probably has it. Low-lying river bottoms are found throughout western Tennessee. Middle Tennessee is full of crop fields, cattle pastures, and rolling hills. Eastern Tennessee is mountain country. Recent hunting regulation changes have been based on turkey population declines. The state saw solid reproduction in 2021 and 2022 but hasn’t had a really good hatch since 2023. Central Tennessee has traditionally held the most turkeys. Numbers in the eastern part of the state look down this year. Western Tennessee seems to have rebounded from recent declines. During Spring 2024, Tennessee hunters took 31,647 birds.
Hunters should be aware that Tennessee's season opens April 12 this year and runs through May 25. That opening date is two weeks later than the traditional timing of the Saturday closest to April 1. Fanning and reaping are prohibited on WMAs, and calling to mimic turkey sounds is prohibited on WMAs from March 1 until the opening of spring turkey hunts.