Furbearer trapping and hunting
Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations
Trapper Education
All first-time Oregon trappers need to complete an approved trapper education course. The course is not required if you're trapping on land you own or lease. This also applies to your immediate family, or an agent you have authorized to control damage to livestock or agricultural crops on your property.
Procedures for completing trapper course
- Review the Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations.
- Register and complete the online Oregon Trapper Exam.
State trapper exam
- The exam consists of 60 multiple choice, and animal identification matching questions.
- Students must achieve a minimum score of 80% (can only miss 12 questions).
- Exam takes approximately 1 hour to complete.
- The test is scored when the student completes the exam.
- Student will receive a certificate upon completion, please bring a printed copy to an ODFW office to apply for a Furtaker license. ODFW will maintain a record of your successful completion of the course.
- A furtaker's license and brand number will be issued by the ODFW Salem headquarters office after the exam is successfully completed and the license application with payment has been processed.
License requirements and fees
Furtakers need either a Furtaker's License or a Furbearers Hunting License. A Furtaker's License allows you to trap, hunt and pursue. A Furbearers Hunting License allows for only hunting and pursuing.
A general hunting license allows you to only hunt unprotected mammals (see list below), this does not include trapping, hunting or pursuing furbearers.
Juveniles younger than 12 years of age are not required to purchase a license, except to hunt or trap bobcat and river otter. However, they must register to receive a brand number through the Salem Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife office (ODFW). To trap bobcat or river otter, juveniles must complete the trapper education course. Juveniles 17 and younger must have completed hunter education to obtain a furtaker's license.
Landowners can get either a Furtaker's License, a Hunting License for Furbearers, or a free License to Take Furbearers on land they own and on which they reside. To receive the free license, the landowner must obtain from the ODFW Headquarters office a receipt of registration for the property.
Landowner Furtaker License Application
LICENSE FEE Resident Furtaker's License $54.50 Nonresident Furtaker's License $407.00 Resident Hunting License for Furtakers $26.00 Resident Juvenile Furtaker's License (age 12-17)
Juveniles younger than 12$17.00
see license requirements aboveBobcat Record Card
(Hunting License for Furtaker's or Furtaker's License Required.)$37.50 River Otter Record Card
(Hunting License for Furtaker's or Furtaker's License Required.)$37.50 The above license and record card fees each include a $2 license agent fee. For more information about licenses and tags, write: Department of Fish and Wildlife, Attn. Licensing, 4034 Fairview Industrial Dr. SE, Salem, OR 97302 or phone: (503) 947-6100.
Mandatory annual reporting
Any person possessing a valid furtaker's license or hunting license for furbearers is required to complete and return the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Furtaker Harvest Report form, postmarked by April 15, 2026 for the 2025-2026 season.
Failure to report harvest will deny the license holder the opportunity to purchase a hunting license for furbearers or furtakers license for the following furbearer season unless the late Harvest Report form and application is submitted with a $50.00 fee at the time of renewal.
Mail/Fax Submission: 2025-2026 Furtaker Harvest Report Form
Your furtaker harvest report provides valuable information to ensure sound management of Oregon's furbearers.
Important marten harvest information
If you harvest a marten, ODFW asks you to turn in all marten carcasses, along with the date, location of harvest and sex of marten taken, to the local ODFW office prior to March 1, following each season. Furtaker cooperation is critical to successful future management of this species.
Seasons
Furbearer pursuit seasons (statewide)
No animals shall be killed except during authorized open harvest seasons. A bobcat record card must be in possession to harvest bobcat. A Furtaker's License or Hunting License for Furbearers must be in possession to pursue.
STATEWIDE FURBEARER PURSUIT SEASONS Bobcat Sept. 1 - Feb. 28 Fox Sept. 1 - Feb. 28 Raccoon Sept. 1 - March 15 Furbearer harvest seasons
OPEN SEASON OPEN AREAS AND SPECIAL REGULATIONS Bobcat Dec.1 - Feb. 28 WESTERN OREGON - No bag limit. All counties west of the summit of the Cascades, except Klamath and Hood River counties. See the Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations of special bobcat regulations. Dec. 1 -
Feb. 28EASTERN OREGON - Bag limit is five bobcats. All counties east of the summit of the the Cascades, including Klamath and Hood River counties. See the Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations for special bobcat regulations. Fox, grey and red Oct. 15 - Feb. 28 Entire state Marten Nov. 1 -
Jan. 31Areas east of Interstate 5. The Department requests that furtakers provide marten carcasses and the date, location of harvest, and sex be turned in to the local ODFW office prior to March 1, following each season. Furtaker cooperation is critical for successful future management of this species. Muskrat/mink Nov. 15 - March 31 Entire state Raccoon Nov. 15 - March 15 Entire state River otter Nov. 15 - March 15 Entire state except for all areas closed to beaver trapping. See the Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations for special river otter regulations. Fisher, ringtail cat, wolverine, kit fox and sea otter Closed season entire year. Badger, coyote, nutria, opossum, porcupine, spotted skunk, striped skunk and weasel Open season entire year To hunt these a species, requires an appropriate furtaker's license to trap (also allows hunting) or appropriate hunting license for furbearer's, or a general hunting license. Beaver Nov. 15 - March 15 See the Oregon Furbearer Trapping and Hunting Regulations for areas open to beaver harvest. Further restrictions on areas open to beaver harvest are detailed below. HB3932 effective as of Jan 1, 2026.
- A person may not take a beaver for recreational or commercial purposes on DEQ-impaired streams, rivers, or watersheds that flow through, is on, or adjoins public land. Private lands are not affected by HB3932.
- ODFW is required to produce maps outlining where the harvest closure applies
- The 2026-2028 Furbearer Regulations will include statewide HB3932 related beaver harvest closure rules and maps, pending approval by the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission in June.
- Please use the DEQ interactive map to explore impaired waterways and watersheds (purple) and overlay with public landownership to understand where the harvest closure applies. Currently, this is the most accurate and comprehensive information on impaired waterways and watersheds potentially affected by this new law.
- To help hunters and trappers comply with the new law, a limited series of maps highlighting high-use areas can be found below.
- HB3932 harvest closures are specific to only beaver. River otter harvest seasons are open statewide except for all areas closed to beaver trapping. HB3932 does not make reference to river otter, nor does it exist in Div. 50 OARs and commission-approved 2024-2026 Furbearer regulations. Since there is no connection between the two, the HB3932 harvest closures that apply to the intersection of DEQ impaired waterways/watersheds and public lands do not apply to river otter.
- Please contact your local District Wildlife Biologist for more information or questions.
Definitions
What is a furbearer?
In general, a furbearer is an animal whose fur has commercial value. In Oregon, this includes beaver, bobcat, fisher, marten, mink, muskrat, river otter, raccoon, red and gray fox.
For any person owning, leasing, occupying, possessing or having charge or dominion over any land (or an agent of this person) who is taking or attempting to take beaver or muskrat on that property, these two species are considered to be predatory animals.
What is an unprotected mammal?
Unprotected mammals are badger, coyote, gophers, moles (Scapanus townsendii, S. orarius and S. latimanus), mountain beaver, yellowbellied marmots, nutria, opossum, porcupine, spotted skunk, striped skunk and weasel.
For any person owning, leasing, occupying, possessing or having charge of or dominion over any land (or an agent of this person) who is taking or attempting to take coyote, gopher, mountain beaver (boomer), marmot, nutria or porcupine on that property, these six species are considered to be predatory animals.
What is a predatory animal?
Predatory animals are coyotes, rabbits, rodents and feral swine, which are or may be destructive to agricultural crops. Therefore these animals have no closed season, bag limit or weapons restriction.
This however does not mean that all rabbits and rodents are available to hunt. A hunter must first find out if the small game they are seeking to hunt is either federally or state protected and if it carries any special regulations, such as closed seasons, bag limits or weapons restrictions.
Protected species
Protected species may not be taken without a valid license and tag during authorized seasons, or a Scientific Take Permit. However, you may take rabbits and rodents destructive to agricultural crops, products and activities.
PROTECTED MAMMALS AND BIRDS Game mammals Silver-haired bat Washington ground squirrel Game birds Western small-footed myotis Northern flying squirrel Furbearers Long-eared myotis Chickaree (pine squirrel) Threatened or endangered species Long-legged myotis Golden-mantled ground squirrel Fisher Yuma myotis Chipmunks Ringtail Pika (cony) While-footed vole Fringed myotis Pygmy Rabbit All marine mammals Townsend's big-eared bat White-tailed jackrabbit Pallid bat White-tailed antelope squirrel All nongame birds except Eurasian collared-dove, European starling, house sparrow and rock pigeon
Feral (wild) Swine
Additional resources (pdf)
- Furbearer Management in North American Wildlife Conservation
- Best Management Practices (BMPs) for Trapping in the United States
- Responsible Trapping
- Fur Handling Manuals
Reports (pdf)
- Oregon Furtaker License and Harvest Data, June 2018
- Forest Carnivore Research in the Northern Cascades of Oregon, July 2, 2014