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Pennsylvania Game Commission

​​​​​​​​Deer Management Assistance Program - DMAP

  • DMAP permits become available to hunters during the third round of antlerless license sales (second Monday of August). 

For Hunters

Hunters can get up to two to four DMAP harvest permits per unit. If the landowner provides coupons to hunters, a hunter can purchase up to four permits. Otherwise, a hunter can purchase up to two permits. DMAP harvest permits must be purchased from a license-issuing agent or through www.huntfish.pa.gov. A DMAP harvest permit costs $10.97 for a resident, $35.97 for a nonresident. Each DMAP harvest permit is good for taking one antlerless deer on the property for which the DMAP harvest permit was issued.

Hunters can get DMAP harvest permits two ways.

  1. First, if a hunter receives a coupon from a landowner, the hunter will take the coupon to any license-issuing agent (or visit www.huntfish.pa.gov) to purchase a DMAP harvest permit. In this situation, a hunter can purchase up to four DMAP permits.
  2. Second, to obtain a DMAP harvest permit for properties where landowners choose not to hand out coupons, hunters can go to any license-issuing agent (or www.huntfish.pa.gov) to purchase a DMAP harvest permit. Hunters utilizing this second option will need to contact the landowner (or the Game Commission's website) to get the DMAP unit number for the area they want to hunt. In this situation, a hunter can purchase up to two DMAP permits.

CWD DMAP Units: Permits in these units are being offered to increase CWD samples and reduce the spread of Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). To learn more, please visit the CWD page.

Hunters must report whether or not they harvest a deer.  All DMAP antlerless deer permit holders are required to file a harvest, regardless of whether they kill a deer. To report your DMAP harvest or no harvest, visit www.huntfish.pa.gov.

Hunters are responsible for acquiring the landowner information needed to participate in the Deer Management Assistance Program (DMAP). Neither the Game Commission, nor license-issuing agents, can provide additional landowner information other than the details available in the Participating Landowners Section.

 

Participating Landowner Properties

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DCNR DMAP Properties

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Find a License Issueing Agent

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​State Game Lands DMAP Units​​

DMAP UnitRegionWMUGame LandsAcreageCoupons
5838NW2FSGL 248,585215
5839NW2FSGL 299,831246​
5840NW2FSGL 5419,407388
5841NW2FSGL 746,568164
5842NW2FSGL 8614,321358
5843NW1BSGL 1438,477212
5844NW2FSGL 2833,06177
6714NW2FSGL 315,156103
6718NW1BSGL 964,954124
6719NW1BSGL 1222,79355
6720NW2ESGL 1953,45969
6721NW2DSGL 2444,87197

DMAP UnitRegionWMUGame LandsAcreageCoupons
5824NC2GSGL3011,654233
5825NC2GSGL3410,224204
5826NC3ASGL3713,139262
5827NC2GSGL7527,499549
5828NC2ESGL7872514
5829NC2GSGL904,15783
5830NC2GSGL942,29745
5831NC2GSGL10021,068421
6753NC3ASGL629,258185
6756NC2GSGL3315,272105
6773NC3BSGL1348,375167

DMAP UnitRegionWMUGame LandsAcreageCoupons
5890NE3BSGL1224,597480
6210NE3BSGL1350,742500
6833NE3CSGL357,772145
5891NE3BSGL3618,919370
6209NE3BSGL572,79960
5892NE3BSGL668,106160
6834NE3CSGL706,336120
5893NE3CSGL1231,60430
6829NE3BSGL14236915
6835NE3CSGL1599,448188
6830NE3BSGL17274025
5894NE4ESGL2061,51230
5895NE3CSGL2195,702110
6831NE3CSGL23982825
6832NE3BSGL2504408
5896NE3CSGL2891,66830

DMAP UnitRegionWMUGame LandsAcreageCoupons
7018SE3DSGL1687,800156
7109SE4CSGL2178,613172

For Landowners

DMAP provides an additional means for landowners to manage deer to meet their land-use goals. It also provides additional opportunities to the hunters who participate in the program.

Public landowners, political subdivisions, government agencies, defined hunting clubs, and private landowners or lessees, where no fee is charged for hunting, are eligible to enroll in DMAP. Qualified landowners are issued DMAP coupons at a standard rate of one coupon for every five acres of cultivated land, or one coupon for every 50 acres of non-cultivated land. Landowners requesting more than the standard rate of permits or with fewer than 5 acres of cultivated land or fewer than 50 acres of non-cultivated land can enroll by answering additional questions on the application. Landowners enrolled in DMAP are responsible for providing hunters with information about DMAP harvest permits for their property. 

Landowner Applications:

  • The 2024 application period is now closed. Applications for the 2025 season will open in March 2025, with a submission deadline of July 1, 2025. ​

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact information for public lands and some private lands enrolled in DMAP will be posted in the Participating Landowners Section of the Game Commission's website. For more information on Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR), bureaus of Forestry and State Parks, participation in the DMAP program visit the DMAP Section of DCNR's website.​

  • Contact information for private landowners enrolled in DMAP will be posted on the Game Commission website only with permission of the landowner.

It depends on whether the landowner is handing out coupons, or if coupons for the specific property are available to any hunter. If the landowner is handing out coupons to individual hunters, then the hunter must contact the landowner directly. If the landowner is not handing out coupons (ex. PGC State Game Lands, DCNR State Forests, other public lands or large landholdings), the hunter will need to know the DMAP unit number, but will not need a coupon to get a permit.

You must contact the landowner or visit the Participating Landowne​rs Section of the Game Commission's DMAP website to get the DMAP unit number. You must know the DMAP unit number when you purchase your DMAP permit. The license issuing agent will not know this information. The Game Commission website will contain DMAP unit numbers only for property owners who choose to make their information available to the public.

It is the hunter's responsibility to contact the landowner to obtain a property map. A hunter can check the Participating Landowners Section of the Game Commission's DMAP website Game Commission's website to see if the landowner has provided contact information. Otherwise, the hunter will need to contact the landowner by some other means.

Landowners do not need to issue physical coupons to hunters. Landowners can give hunters a paper copy, digital copy, or even just the required information on the coupon (the DMAP Unit Number, the hunter's Coupon Number, and the associated Control Number). Those three numbers can then be presented to a license vendor to purchase a DMAP permit. This is still considered a DMAP permit purchase with a coupon to the vendor, as opposed to DMAP permits sold directly through the licensing system without a coupon.

Hunters can purchase DMAP harvest permits at any license-issuing agent or www.huntfish.pa.gov. No DMAP harvest permits will be issued by mail. A hunter will need either a coupon (or the corresponding coupon information) from a landowner or know the DMAP unit number when he or she purchases a DMAP permit.

Your coupon will be returned to you. You will need to go to any license-issuing agent or www.huntfish.pa.gov, to purchase DMAP permits.

Reporting is mandatory for all DMAP harvest permits, regardless of harvest success. A hunter can report their DMAP activities using www.huntfish.pa.gov or by sending in a postage-paid report card that can be found in the Hunting and Trapping Digest.

You can go to any license-issuing agent or www.huntfish.pa.gov, for a replacement. When you indicate you are doing a replacement, you will need to select the lost DMAP permit from the list of items that you already have been issued. The cost is $6.97 per permit replaced.

The best way for a landowner to know if coupons have been redeemed is for the landowner to communicate with the hunters he or she has provided coupons. For landowners who have made their property public and do not distribute coupons, they can visit the Participating Landow​ners page and see the availability of permits in their unit in nearly real-time.

No. DMAP participants, like landowners participating in Game Commission hunter access programs, have the right to limit the public’s access to their properties regardless of their participation in Game Commission programs.

No, DMAP permits do not count toward the antlerless license personal limit. Hunters are allowed their full personal limit of antlerless licenses in addition to any DMAP permits they purchase. Log in to HuntFishPA to check your remaining quota for the current round and season.​