Keep Your Land. Make It Pay.

Hunting Leases.
Passive Income.
Zero Hassle.

You don't have to sell your land to make money from it. Landowners across the country are earning thousands of dollars a year simply by letting hunters access their property.

$15–$50
Per Acre / Per Year Average
$0
Out of Pocket to Get Started
1
Simple Agreement — That's It
Why Landowners Choose to Lease

Your Land Is Already
Worth More Than You Think.

Timber, fields, creek bottoms, and wooded ridges are exactly what hunters are searching for. If your property sits unused most of the year, you're leaving money on the table — and there's a simple, legal way to change that.

💵
Steady Annual Income
Hunting leases typically run one to three years and pay upfront. A 50-acre tract can generate $750–$2,500 or more per season depending on location, game, and access.
🔒
You Stay In Control
You set the rules — hunting dates, number of hunters, which areas are off limits, and any conditions you want included. Your land, your terms.
🌿
Land Stays Yours
Nothing changes on the deed. No sale, no subdivision, no development. You lease the hunting rights — not the land itself. You can sell it tomorrow if you choose.
🛡️
Liability Protection
A properly written hunting lease agreement transfers liability to the lessee. You are protected. Most states also have recreational use statutes that further limit landowner liability.
🦌
Wildlife Management
Quality hunters often improve the land — maintaining food plots, removing invasives, and managing deer populations. Your property can actually get better while generating income.
📅
Seasonal Only
Hunting season is a few months. The rest of the year the land is yours alone. You're not giving up access — you're monetizing the season you weren't using anyway.
Whitetail buck in field
What Hunters Are Looking For

If You Have This,
You Have a Lease.

Hunters pay for access to land with deer sign, turkey habitat, duck ponds, squirrel timber, or hog country. You don't need a manicured property — raw, wild ground is exactly what they want. Creek bottoms, hardwood ridges, pine thickets, open fields, and swamps all have value to the right hunter.

The Process

How It Works

We make it simple from start to first check.

01
Tell Us About Your Land
Fill out our short form. Location, acreage, and a few details about the property — that's all we need to get started.
02
We Assess the Value
We review the property and give you a realistic range of what your hunting lease could generate per season based on comparable leases in your area.
03
We Find the Hunter
We connect your property with vetted, serious hunters. We handle the matching so you don't have to post ads or field calls from strangers.
04
Sign & Get Paid
One simple lease agreement. You review it, sign it, and collect payment. No surprises, no ongoing management headaches.
What Kinds of Property Qualify

More Land Qualifies
Than You'd Expect.

You don't need 1,000 acres or a trophy-managed deer operation. Small tracts of 5–20 acres near suburbs are in high demand from bow hunters. Timber tracts with minimal management are leased for turkey and small game. Ponds and creek bottoms attract waterfowl hunters. Overgrown fields with brush edges are goldmines for deer hunters. If there's wildlife, there's a hunter willing to pay.

Wild turkey in field
Common Questions

Frequently Asked

Do I have to be present when hunters are on the property?
No. The lease agreement gives hunters permitted access during agreed-upon dates and times. You don't need to be there — most landowners never see the hunters at all.
What if something gets damaged on my land?
The lease agreement includes provisions requiring hunters to leave the property in the condition they found it. Any damage is their liability, not yours. We also recommend requiring hunters to carry their own liability insurance.
Can I still use my land during hunting season?
Yes — the lease defines exactly which access rights are being leased. You can carve out dates, times, or areas of the property that remain exclusively yours. Many landowners continue farming, timber work, or recreational use alongside an active hunting lease.
How much can I realistically earn?
It varies by state, acreage, game species, and property quality. Nationally, hunting leases average $15–$50 per acre per year. A 40-acre wooded tract in Alabama might bring $800–$2,000 per season. A managed whitetail operation in the Midwest could bring significantly more.
Does this affect my property taxes?
In many states, leasing land for hunting actually helps you maintain agricultural or wildlife management tax exemptions. Check with your local tax assessor — it may actually lower your tax burden.
Can I cancel the lease if I decide to sell?
Lease terms are negotiated upfront. Most include provisions for early termination if the property is sold. We make sure your lease doesn't lock you in to anything that would complicate a future sale.
Hunter in snow field
Ready to Get Started?

Your Land Could Be
Paying You This Season.

It takes about five minutes to tell us about your property. From there we handle everything — valuation, matching, paperwork, and payment setup. No selling required.

Tell Us About Your Land →

Don't Let Your Land Sit Idle.

Hunters are looking for exactly what you have. Let's put it to work.

Submit Your Property →