Axis Deer in Hawaii
hunting regulations.
Hunting regulations change. The information on this page reflects what we know about species presence and hunt availability based on state agency listings. For current season dates, bag limits, weapon restrictions, tag requirements, and reporting obligations, verify directly with Hawaii Division of Forestry and Wildlife. You are responsible for confirming current regulations before hunting.
Axis Deer is general season in Hawaii. The agency above sets season dates, bag limits, and zone boundaries — those change yearly. Verify before you hunt.
About the species
Axis deer (chital) are a mid-sized Indian deer species established as feral free-range populations in Texas Hill Country and as an established huntable population on the Hawaiian Islands of Maui, Lanai, and Molokai. Bucks carry simple three-tined antlers and weigh 150-250 pounds. They're spotted year-round (unlike whitetail which lose spots after fawnhood), giving the species its distinctive look.
Texas axis hunting is overwhelmingly on private ranches, often year-round with no closed season since they're considered exotic livestock under state law. Hawaii runs general-season axis hunts on public lands with conservation-focused harvest goals — the deer are an introduced species disrupting native ecosystems. Hawaiian axis venison is widely considered the best venison in North America, free of CWD risk and processed to taste closer to high-grade beef than typical wild deer.
Want the picture for this species across every state? See Axis Deer regulations by state. Or browse every huntable species in Hawaii.