Sika Deer
hunting regulations.
Huntable in 3 states — 1 with general season. Click any state for the state-specific page.
Sika deer are a small Asian deer species established in the Eastern United States primarily on Maryland's Eastern Shore (where they were introduced in 1916) and on Texas ranches from earlier game-ranching releases. The Maryland population is wild and self-sustaining, with general-season tags issued through the standard deer license. The Texas population is largely behind high fence on private ranches.
Sika behave more like elk than whitetail — they bugle during the rut, group in herds, and use marshes and cypress swamps that other deer avoid. Maryland's marsh hunting can be physically punishing — knee-deep mud, no good shooting lanes — but produces a unique trophy at a price most non-residents can afford. Virginia has a small population with strictly private-land access. Their meat is regarded as among the best of any deer.
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 your state wildlife agency. You are responsible for confirming current regulations before hunting.
Where sika deer can be hunted
3 statesBrowse all species or download Bield: Hunt to start tracking sits and patterns by species and zone.