Bowfishing in Ohio draws anglers who want something more hands-on than a rod and reel — and the Buckeye State offers plenty of rivers, lakes, and reservoirs where the action is real. Before you string up your bow and head to the water, though, you need to understand exactly what Ohio law allows and where the hard lines are drawn.
Ohio’s bowfishing rules fall under the state’s broader fishing regulations, which means the same ODNR framework that governs hook-and-line fishing applies to your bow. Get the rules wrong and you risk fines, gear confiscation, and the loss of your fishing privileges. This guide walks you through every major regulation category so you can focus on the fish.
Important Note: Ohio fishing regulations run on a March-to-February cycle. The information in this article reflects the 2026-27 regulation period, effective March 1, 2026 through February 28, 2027. Always verify current rules at wildohio.gov before you go out.
Is Bowfishing Legal in Ohio?
Yes, bowfishing is legal in Ohio. The state explicitly permits archery equipment as a method of take for certain fish species, and it has done so for many years under the Ohio Division of Wildlife’s sport fishing regulations.
Ohio archery anglers may use bows of any draw weight, and a fishing license is required. That straightforward framework means bowfishing is treated as a form of fishing under Ohio law — not hunting — and the standard fishing license is your primary credential for getting on the water legally.
Ohio has specific regulations regarding bowfishing seasons, species limits, and fishing methods, and they may vary depending on the location and time of year. That variability is important. What is legal on one river stretch may not be legal on another, so always cross-reference the statewide rules with any site-specific regulations for your target water.
If you want to explore other Ohio outdoor activity laws before your next trip, the hunting laws in Ohio guide covers the broader regulatory landscape worth knowing as an outdoor enthusiast.
What Fish Can You Bowfish for in Ohio?
Ohio does not permit bowfishing for game fish. The law restricts archery take to a specific category of species known as forage fish, along with a handful of other non-game targets. Knowing exactly which fish fall into that legal category is essential before you ever draw your bow.
Forage fish in Ohio means freshwater drum (sheepshead), common carp, grass carp (in waters not stocked by the Ohio Division of Wildlife for vegetation control, as indicated by signs), bighead carp, silver carp, black carp, quillback, suckers, bowfin, gar, buffalo, gizzard shad, and goldfish.
Archery equipment may be used to take bullfrogs and green frogs in addition to forage fish. That opens up a secondary seasonal opportunity for bowfishers who want to target amphibians during the legal frog season window.
Pro Tip: Grass carp rules carry an important caveat. You cannot bowfish for grass carp in waters where the Ohio Division of Wildlife has stocked them for vegetation control — look for posted signs at the water before targeting this species.
The following table summarizes the legal and prohibited targets for Ohio bowfishers:
| Legal Bowfishing Targets | Not Legal for Bowfishing |
|---|---|
| Common carp | Largemouth bass |
| Bighead carp, silver carp, black carp | Smallmouth bass |
| Grass carp (where not stocked for vegetation control) | Walleye / saugeye / sauger |
| Gar (all species) | Muskellunge |
| Buffalo (all species) | Trout and salmon species |
| Freshwater drum (sheepshead) | Catfish (except as forage fish) |
| Suckers and quillback | Yellow perch |
| Bowfin | Crappie / bluegill / sunfish |
| Goldfish | Protected species (immediate release required) |
| Bullfrogs and green frogs (during season) | Brook trout (in specific tributaries) |
These forage fish species may be taken by any method except by means of explosives, poisons, firearms, electricity, chemicals, nets (other than cast nets), seines, traps, or by snagging within 1,000 feet downstream of a posted dam or dam on the Muskingum River. A bow and arrow with a line attached is a fully permitted method under this framework.
You also need to be aware of protected species. The following species are protected in Ohio and must be immediately returned if caught, including brook trout, which are only prohibited in the Ashtabula, Chagrin, Conneaut, and Grand rivers and their tributaries. Even if you accidentally arrow a protected fish, you are required to release it immediately.
Bowfishing License Requirements in Ohio
There is no separate bowfishing license in Ohio. Your standard fishing license covers archery take of legal species, which keeps the process simple for both residents and non-residents.
An Ohio fishing license is required for anyone 16 years or older who fishes in public waters, ensuring that Ohio’s fish populations remain healthy and sustainable through responsible management funded by license fees. That requirement applies equally whether you are using a rod, a hand line, or a bow.
Those under the age of 16 do not need to purchase a fishing license. If you are bringing a younger bowfisher along, they can participate without a license as long as they stay within all other legal requirements.
As of the 2026-27 regulation period, an annual resident permit costs $25.00 for adults, $10.00 for seniors (65+), and $76.96 for non-residents. A one-day resident permit is $14.00.
Ohioans born on or before December 31, 1937, qualify for a free license. There are also exemptions for certain mobility-impaired individuals and veterans — check with the ODNR directly for the full list of qualifying conditions.
Fishing licenses are categorized into four groups: resident youth, resident, resident senior, and nonresident. Resident licenses can be purchased for one day, several-year periods, or for life.
Ohio makes it easy to obtain a fishing license online through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife — visit their website at ohiodnr.gov and follow the prompts to buy a license. You can also purchase through the HuntFish OH mobile app or at authorized retail agents across the state.
Key Insight: Annual fishing licenses in Ohio are valid for 365 days from the date of purchase — not on a calendar-year basis. A license bought in May 2026 is valid through April 2027.
All Ohio residents are welcome to fish without a license on June 20 and 21, 2026. All size and daily catch limits still apply during those free fishing days, so you still need to follow all bowfishing species and gear rules even without a license on those dates.
For a broader look at how Ohio structures its animal and wildlife regulations, the roadkill laws in Ohio article offers an interesting parallel look at how the state handles wildlife possession rules.
Legal Bowfishing Equipment in Ohio
Ohio gives bowfishers considerable flexibility when it comes to equipment, but there are a few specific rules about what types of bows and accessories are allowed depending on what you are targeting.
Ohio fishing regulations state that archery anglers may use bows of any weight pull, a fishing license is required, and longbows may be used to take bullfrogs, green frogs, snapping and softshell turtles, and forage fish.
Crossbows may be used to take forage fish under Ohio regulations, making crossbows a legal option specifically for the forage fish category. However, if you want to target bullfrogs, green frogs, or turtles with archery equipment, you need a traditional longbow or compound bow — not a crossbow.
The regulations specify “longbow” in several places, but in practice the term is interpreted broadly to include compound bows and recurve bows for forage fish. Ohio archery anglers may use bows of any draw weight, which confirms that draw weight minimums are not imposed for bowfishing the way they are for deer hunting.
Beyond the bow itself, your arrow setup must include a barbed tip and a retrieval line attached to the bow. These are standard bowfishing configurations and are required to retrieve fish after a shot. Standard hunting broadheads or field points are not appropriate for bowfishing — use purpose-built bowfishing points.
| Equipment Type | Legal for Forage Fish | Legal for Frogs/Turtles |
|---|---|---|
| Compound bow | Yes | Yes |
| Recurve bow | Yes | Yes |
| Longbow | Yes | Yes |
| Crossbow | Yes | No (forage fish only) |
| Barbed bowfishing tip with retrieval line | Required | Required |
| Lights/illumination on boat | Permitted (check local rules) | Permitted during frog season |
Common Mistake: Do not assume your crossbow is legal for every bowfishing target. Ohio limits crossbow use to forage fish only. If you plan to arrow frogs or turtles, you need a traditional or compound bow.
Where You Can and Cannot Bowfish in Ohio
Ohio has a large network of public waters open to bowfishing, but access is not unlimited. Certain river stretches, dam zones, and protected areas come with restrictions that apply to all fishing methods — including archery.
Most Ohio lakes, rivers, and reservoirs are public access and require a valid fishing license. State parks like Alum Creek, Caesar Creek, and Salt Fork offer boat ramps, fishing piers, and shore access. These public state park waters are generally open to bowfishing for legal forage fish species.
Some of Ohio’s most productive bowfishing waters include the Maumee River, Scioto River, Great Miami River, and the Sandusky River system — all of which hold healthy populations of carp, gar, and drum. Inland reservoirs with shallow coves are also prime spring bowfishing territory when carp move into the shallows to spawn.
However, certain river stretches carry time-of-day or access restrictions. It is unlawful for any person to engage in fishing at any time other than from sunrise to sunset daily from March 1 through April 30, in the Maumee River from the Ohio Turnpike Bridge upstream to the easternmost point of Missionary Island in Lucas County. That restriction applies to all fishing methods during that window, including bowfishing.
It is unlawful for any person to take or possess paddlefish in or within two thousand feet of Deer Creek Reservoir and dam, Paint Creek Reservoir and dam, Caesar Creek Reservoir and dam, and East Fork Reservoir and dam. Paddlefish are not a legal bowfishing target anywhere in Ohio.
Important Note: Private land access is a separate issue from public water access. Even if a river or lake is public water, the banks on either side may be private property. Always confirm access rights before wading or launching from a shoreline you do not own.
Areas to avoid or approach with caution include:
- Within 1,000 feet downstream of a posted dam on the Muskingum River (snagging prohibited, and archery activity in this zone should be confirmed with ODNR)
- Waters stocked with grass carp for vegetation control (posted with signs)
- Specific tributary stretches with seasonal closures or gear restrictions
- Waters within wildlife refuges or areas with posted no-fishing signs
- Lake Erie — bowfishing in open Lake Erie is uncommon and subject to all standard Lake Erie regulations
Named lakes and rivers often have special regulations beyond statewide defaults, and border waters with neighboring states may add more rules. Always match the species, water body, and date you plan to fish to the correct table.
If you fish the Ohio River boundary waters, Ohio has made deals with West Virginia and Kentucky to make fishing the boundary waters of the Ohio River simpler — you can fish here with your Ohio fishing license, as long as you abide by local regulations. That reciprocity applies to bowfishing for legal species as well, but always confirm the specific rules for each state’s bank and tributary waters.
For more on how Ohio handles animal-related regulations in different contexts, the emotional support animal laws in Ohio and hedgehog ownership laws in Ohio pages are useful reads for understanding how the state approaches different categories of wildlife law.
Night Bowfishing Rules in Ohio
Night bowfishing is one of the most popular ways to target carp and gar in Ohio, and the state does allow it — but with important location-based restrictions you need to understand before heading out after dark.
Ohio’s statewide fishing regulations do not impose a blanket prohibition on night fishing for forage fish species. Bowfishing at night on most inland lakes and rivers is permitted as long as you hold a valid fishing license and target only legal species. The real restrictions kick in on specific river stretches and during certain seasons.
It is unlawful for any person to engage in fishing at any time other than from sunrise to sunset daily from March 1 through April 30, in the Maumee River from the Ohio Turnpike Bridge upstream to the easternmost point of Missionary Island in Lucas County. This sunrise-to-sunset rule effectively bans night bowfishing on that stretch of the Maumee during the spring window.
Lighting is a key component of night bowfishing, and Ohio does not prohibit the use of lights on boats or floating platforms for this purpose. Bowfishers commonly use high-powered LED lights mounted on their boats to illuminate shallow water and spot fish near the surface. There is no statewide rule banning this practice for forage fish, but individual state parks or managed areas may have their own after-hours access rules.
- Always check whether a specific state park or wildlife area has posted hours that restrict after-dark access
- Carry your fishing license at all times — conservation officers do conduct nighttime patrols
- Observe all boating safety requirements, including navigation lights, when operating after dark
- Be aware that the Maumee River sunrise-to-sunset restriction runs March 1 through April 30 — plan your night trips outside that window on that river
- Confirm local rules for any reservoir or managed lake before setting up a night bowfishing operation
Pro Tip: Spring and early summer nights are the most productive for Ohio bowfishing. Carp move into shallow, warm water during and after the spawn, making them easy to spot under boat-mounted lights in water depths of one to four feet.
Ohio offers bowfishing opportunities all year round, but certain seasons provide more favorable conditions and species to target. Night trips during May and June, after the Maumee River restrictions lift, tend to produce the highest action for carp and drum on most inland waters.
Saltwater Bowfishing Rules in Ohio
Ohio is a landlocked state with no ocean coastline, so there are no saltwater bowfishing regulations to follow. The state’s entire fishable water system consists of freshwater bodies — rivers, inland lakes, reservoirs, and Lake Erie.
All statewide regulations apply to Ohio waters of Lake Erie except for those specifically listed in the Lake Erie section of the regulations. Lake Erie is the closest thing Ohio has to open-water fishing on a large scale, and it operates under its own distinct regulatory framework within the ODNR system.
Bowfishing on Lake Erie itself is uncommon due to the depth and water clarity conditions of open lake water, but it is not categorically prohibited for legal forage fish species. Lake Erie has its own set of rules, often adjusted annually based on population surveys, and a Lake Erie Permit is required in addition to a fishing license. If you plan to bowfish from a boat on Lake Erie proper, you need both your standard fishing license and the Lake Erie Permit.
The tributaries and near-shore areas of Lake Erie can offer productive bowfishing for carp and drum, particularly in the shallower western basin. These waters fall under the Lake Erie tributary regulations, so check the specific rules for any creek or river mouth you plan to access.
Key Insight: If someone advertises “saltwater bowfishing” in Ohio, it is almost certainly a marketing term for open-water Lake Erie fishing — there is no actual saltwater in the state. All Ohio bowfishing is freshwater bowfishing under ODNR jurisdiction.
For bowfishers visiting from neighboring states who are curious about how Ohio compares to other Midwest regulations, Kentucky and Pennsylvania both share border waters with Ohio, and each state has its own approach to bowfishing on shared rivers. Always carry the correct license for the state whose bank or tributary you are fishing from.
The bottom line on Ohio bowfishing: the state is genuinely welcoming to the sport. With its diverse fish species, beautiful waterways, and ample fishing opportunities, Ohio is a bowfishing paradise. Stick to legal forage fish species, carry your fishing license, know the restricted river stretches, and you will find plenty of productive water across the Buckeye State.
For more on Ohio’s animal and wildlife laws, explore the backyard chicken laws in Ohio, goat ownership laws in Ohio, and United States laws on exotic pets for a broader look at how Ohio and other states regulate animals and outdoor activities.