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Birds · 14 mins read

Kansas Duck Hunting Laws: Season Dates, Bag Limits, and Zone Rules You Need to Know

Duck hunting laws in Kansas
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Kansas sits at the heart of the Central Flyway, making it one of the most productive duck hunting states in the country. The state is a natural magnet for migrating ducks heading south from Canada each fall, drawing mallards, teal, pintails, gadwalls, and wigeons by the hundreds of thousands during peak migration periods. Whether you are a first-time waterfowler or a seasoned hunter planning your season, understanding Kansas duck hunting laws is not optional — it is the difference between a legal hunt and a costly violation.

The regulations covering duck hunting in Kansas span licensing, zone-specific season dates, bag limits, permitted equipment, and access rules. This guide breaks down every layer of those requirements so you can focus on the hunt, not the paperwork. Always verify the most current details with the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (KDWP) before you head afield, as waterfowl hunting regulations are set annually.

Pro Tip: Purchase your hunting license, state waterfowl stamp, and HIP permit early. Licenses are valid for 365 days from the date of purchase, not on a calendar-year basis, so timing your purchase matters.

Duck Hunting Season Dates in Kansas

Kansas does not run a single statewide duck season. The state divides duck hunting into four distinct zones based on geography and migration timing. Each zone runs a split season — two separate segments with a closure in between — designed to align with the natural movement of migrating birds.

Kansas uses split seasons across all zones because ducks migrate in waves rather than arriving all at once. The first segment catches early migrants, then a closure happens while the main migration moves through, and the second segment reopens when peak numbers arrive.

Based on KDWP data for the 2025–26 season, the zone-by-zone dates are as follows:

ZoneFirst SegmentSecond Segment
High PlainsOct 11 – Dec 7, 2025Jan 16 – Jan 25, 2026
Low Plains EarlyOct 11 – Dec 7, 2025Dec 20, 2025 – Jan 4, 2026
Low Plains LateNov 1 – Jan 4, 2026Jan 17 – Jan 25, 2026
Low Plains SoutheastNov 8 – Jan 4, 2026Jan 10 – Jan 25, 2026

Dates are based on current KDWP projections and are subject to final commission approval. Always cross-reference with the official KDWP seasons page before your hunt.

Shooting hours for waterfowl in Kansas follow the standard migratory bird schedule. Shooting hours typically run from half an hour before sunrise until half an hour after sunset.

Duck Hunting License and Stamp Requirements in Kansas

Duck hunting in Kansas requires multiple documents, and you must carry all of them while you are in the field. Missing even one can result in a citation. Here is a breakdown of what you need before you pull the trigger.

Hunting License

All resident hunters age 16 through 74 must have a resident hunting license unless exempt by Kansas law. Nonresident hunters, regardless of age, must have a nonresident hunting license. You can purchase licenses through the KDWP online portal, through licensed agents, or at any KDWP regional office.

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Federal Duck Stamp

All waterfowl hunters 16 years of age and older must have a Federal Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp (Federal Waterfowl Stamp). Physical Federal stamps are available at a US Post Office, and Federal stamps must be signed across the face of the stamp. An electronic stamp option is also available through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Kansas State Waterfowl Stamp

All hunters who are required to obtain a hunting license must also have a Kansas State Waterfowl Stamp before hunting ducks, geese, or mergansers. All waterfowl stamps and licenses can be bought at any license agent, Pratt Operations Office, or online, and all waterfowl stamps are good through the season.

Kansas HIP Permit

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If you hunt doves, ducks, geese, sandhill cranes, coots, snipe, rail, or woodcock, you are required to participate in the Harvest Information Program (HIP). If you are required to buy a Kansas hunting license and plan to hunt any migratory game birds in Kansas, you are required to acquire a Kansas HIP permit — and even if you hold a lifetime license, you still are required to acquire a HIP permit.

Proof of HIP must be carried with the hunter in the field and, like a hunting or fishing license, must be presented to a wildlife officer upon request.

Important Note: Waterfowl stamps are not required to hunt coot, dove, rail, snipe, or woodcock — but HIP registration is still required for all of those species.

Exemptions

Those not required to have a Kansas hunting license include people hunting their own land and residents 15 years of age and younger. Exemptions from HIP include those not required to have a Kansas hunting license, such as people hunting their own land and residents 15 and younger and 75 and older.

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For a broader look at how Kansas structures its hunting license requirements across all species, see our guide on hunting laws in Kansas.

Daily Bag Limits and Possession Limits in Kansas

Kansas enforces species-specific sub-limits within the overall daily bag limit. Knowing these restrictions before you hunt is essential — exceeding any sub-limit is a violation even if you have not hit the total daily cap.

The daily bag limit is any combination of six ducks and/or mergansers, which may include no more than five mallards (only two of which may be hens), three wood ducks, two redheads, two canvasbacks, one scaup, and one pintail.

The possession limit is three times the daily bag limit. The possession limit indicates the maximum number you can have in your possession at any time, including at home in your freezer.

SpeciesDaily Bag Sub-Limit
Ducks (total, any combination)6
Mallards5 (no more than 2 hens)
Wood Ducks3
Redheads2
Canvasbacks2
Scaup1
Pintail1
MergansersCount toward the 6-bird total

The possession limit equals three times your daily bag limit. For coots, the rules are different. The daily bag limit for coots is 15, with a possession limit of 45.

Key Insight: Mergansers count toward your six-bird daily duck limit. Factor this in before you take a shot at a merganser late in the day when your bag is already filling up.

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If you hunt ducks in neighboring states, it helps to understand how Kansas compares. Check out our guides on hunting laws in Arkansas and hunting laws in Tennessee for side-by-side context on how regulations differ across the region.

Legal Hunting Methods and Equipment in Kansas

Kansas law is specific about what equipment you may use to take waterfowl and what is strictly prohibited. Violating these equipment rules carries serious consequences, so review them carefully before you head out.

Legal Methods

Legal methods of taking waterfowl include bow and arrow, falconry, or shotgun no larger than 10-gauge. Shotguns shall not be able to hold more than three shells.

Non-Toxic Shot Requirement

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Non-toxic shot is required for all waterfowl hunting, with electronic calls prohibited except during the light goose conservation order. Non-toxic shot is required statewide. Using lead shot while duck hunting is a federal and state violation.

Prohibited Methods

No person shall take migratory game birds with a shotgun capable of holding more than three shells in the magazine and chamber combined. Federal law extends this list further. You cannot hunt waterfowl with a trap, snare, net, rifle, pistol, swivel gun, shotgun larger than 10 gauge, punt gun, battery gun, machine gun, fish hook, poison, drug, explosive, or stupefying substance.

Baiting Rules

Baiting is one of the most commonly misunderstood rules in waterfowl hunting. Baiting is the direct or indirect placing, exposing, depositing, distributing, or scattering of salt, grain, or other feed that could lure or attract waterfowl to, on, or over any areas where hunters are attempting to take them.

A baited area remains off limits to hunting for 10 days after all salt, grain, or other feed has been removed. Even if you did not place the bait yourself, hunting over a baited area is still a violation.

You can hunt waterfowl in fields of unharvested standing crops, over standing crops that have been flooded, and you can flood fields after crops are harvested and use these areas for waterfowl hunting.

Using a well-trained retriever can make a significant difference in recovering ducks legally and efficiently. Our guide on duck hunting dogs covers breed selection, training fundamentals, and what to look for in a waterfowl retriever.

Common Mistake: Hunters sometimes assume that because grain was scattered by a combine during harvest, the field is automatically legal for waterfowl hunting. The grain must be scattered solely as a result of normal agricultural harvesting — intentional manipulation to attract ducks is baiting, regardless of how it looks.

Zones and Split Seasons in Kansas

Understanding the zone system is essential for hunting legally in Kansas. The zone system can confuse first-time Kansas duck hunters because the state is split into four areas with different season dates. Each zone reflects the timing of migration through that part of the state.

High Plains Zone

This zone covers the western portion of Kansas, west of U.S. Highway 283. The daily bag limit here is 6 total for any combination of teal — blue-winged, green-winged, or cinnamon teal — with a possession limit of 18 total. The High Plains Zone runs its first segment from October 11 through December 7, 2025, followed by a second segment from January 16 through January 25, 2026.

Low Plains Early Zone

The Low Plains Early Zone covers north-central Kansas and gets the first major waves of puddle ducks. Marshes here fill with teal in September, followed by gadwalls and pintails in October and November. The season runs October 11 through December 7, 2025, with a second segment from December 20, 2025 through January 4, 2026.

Low Plains Late Zone

The Low Plains Late Zone covers central and southern Kansas, including major wetland complexes like Cheyenne Bottoms. Season dates align with peak mallard migration in December when numbers reach their highest point. The first segment runs November 1 through January 4, 2026, and the second segment runs January 17 through January 25, 2026.

Low Plains Southeast Zone

The Low Plains Southeast Zone covers the southeastern corner along the Missouri border, with river bottoms, flooded timber, and backwater areas. Wood ducks thrive here in the early season. The first segment runs November 8 through January 4, 2026, with a second segment from January 10 through January 25, 2026.

If you hunt waterfowl across multiple states, our guides on hunting laws in Minnesota and hunting laws in Montana can help you compare zone and split-season structures in other Central Flyway states.

Special and Youth Duck Hunting Seasons in Kansas

Kansas sets aside dedicated hunting days for youth hunters, veterans, and active military members. These special seasons give younger hunters and those who have served access to the field under slightly different rules than the regular season.

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Youth Waterfowl Season

In each of the duck zones, two days are set aside for youth waterfowl hunting (ducks and dark geese). Based on KDWP data for the 2025–26 season, the youth season dates by zone were:

  • High Plains Zone: October 4–5, 2025
  • Low Plains Early Zone: September 27–28, 2025
  • Low Plains Late Zone: October 18–19, 2025
  • Low Plains Southeast Zone: October 25–26, 2025

Hunters 15 and younger may hunt under the supervision of an adult 18 or older, and the adult may NOT hunt.

Veteran and Active Military Season

Veterans and active military members hunt alongside youth hunters during the special season weekend in each zone. The bag limits and zone dates mirror those of the youth season.

Stamp and License Requirements for Special Seasons

Resident youth hunters under 16 years of age do not need any stamps or permits. The possession limit is the same as regular seasons. Nonresident youth need a nonresident hunting license, a Kansas HIP Permit, and State Waterfowl Permit.

Youth hunters under 16 do not need the Federal or State Waterfowl stamps, but they must possess a valid Kansas HIP Permit.

Pro Tip: The supervising adult during a youth hunt cannot hunt. Make sure the adult accompanying a young hunter is prepared to serve as a mentor and spotter rather than an active participant on those special season days.

If you are exploring youth hunting programs in other states, our guides on hunting laws in Indiana and hunting laws in Ohio outline how different states structure youth seasons and license exemptions.

Where You Can Hunt Ducks in Kansas

Kansas offers a variety of public and private land options for duck hunters. Knowing where you are legally allowed to hunt — and what rules apply to each type of land — helps you avoid trespassing violations and access the best habitat.

Public Wildlife Areas

Kansas has over 350 state-managed wildlife areas totaling hundreds of thousands of acres. These areas are managed for wildlife habitat and provide hunting for deer, turkey, waterfowl, upland birds, and small game. Some wildlife areas require special use permits or have draw hunts.

Popular wildlife areas include Cheyenne Bottoms, Quivira, and Milford Wildlife Area. Cheyenne Bottoms in particular is one of the most significant interior wetlands in North America and a premier destination for Kansas duck hunters.

National Wildlife Refuges and Federal Reservoirs

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Quivira National Wildlife Refuge and Flint Hills National Wildlife Refuge both offer limited hunting opportunities, primarily for waterfowl and upland birds. Federal reservoirs such as Milford, Tuttle Creek, Clinton, and Perry have Army Corps of Engineers land open to hunting, and these reservoir properties can be excellent for waterfowl.

Private Land and Walk-In Access

You must have written permission before hunting on private property. Posted signs mark land where you cannot enter without permission, and ignoring these signs results in trespassing charges.

Kansas also operates a Walk-In Hunting Access (WIHA) program that opens private land to public hunting during the season. The Walk-In Hunting Access program provides thousands of acres of private land access for hunters. These areas supplement public hunting lands and offer excellent opportunities for both resident and nonresident hunters.

Some public wildlife areas have additional restrictions on motorized boats and require online check-in before hunting. Always review the specific rules for any area you plan to hunt before you arrive.

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For more on accessing public and private land for hunting across the region, see our overview of hunting laws in South Carolina and hunting laws in Virginia.

Duck Hunting Penalties in Kansas

Kansas enforces its duck hunting regulations through both state and federal mechanisms. Because ducks are migratory birds protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, violations can carry both state-level fines and federal charges simultaneously.

General Violations

All permits and tags must be carried while hunting, with penalties for non-compliance including fines up to $500, license suspension, or criminal charges. Penalties for violations get serious fast.

The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks primarily lists hunting regulations in Chapter 115, which covers everything from bag limits to prohibited practices. Breaking these rules can result in fines, loss of hunting privileges, or criminal charges.

Trespassing

Trespassing and regulation violations carry fines up to $500 plus potential license suspension. Hunting on private land without written permission is treated as a separate violation from any other regulation breach.

Protected Species

One of the most serious risks for Kansas duck hunters involves endangered whooping cranes, which migrate through the state. Shooting a whooping crane can carry fines up to $100,000 and/or up to one year in prison. Endangered whooping cranes have been observed in north-central and northwest Kansas — be aware of potential closures and restrictions, and always know your target before taking a shot.

Federal Violations

A violation of a state waterfowl hunting regulation is also a violation of federal law. This dual-violation structure means a single illegal act can result in both state and federal prosecution, compounding fines and potential penalties significantly.

Important Note: Using lead shot for waterfowl is prohibited under both Kansas and federal law. Carrying lead shot in the field during a duck hunt — even if you do not use it — can be treated as a violation. Use only approved non-toxic shot types such as steel, bismuth, or tungsten.

Baiting Violations

If you bait or direct that an area be baited and allow waterfowl hunting to proceed, you risk being charged with an offense that carries significant penalties. Ignorance of baiting is not a legal defense — it is your responsibility to know the status of any area before you hunt it.

For a broader look at how hunting violations are handled across different states, our guides on hunting laws in Idaho and bow hunting laws in Kansas provide useful context on how enforcement and penalties are structured throughout the region.

Duck hunting in Kansas rewards hunters who do their homework. The zone system, split seasons, stamp requirements, and species-specific bag limits all exist to protect the resource and ensure sustainable hunting for generations to come. Confirm your licenses and stamps are in order, know which zone you are hunting, and always verify the current KDWP regulations before opening day.

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