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Ohio’s 2026 Youth Turkey Hunting Results

Information provided
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Youth wild turkey hunters in Ohio’s south zone checked 1,941 birds during the state’s special youth-only weekend on April 18-19, according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Wildlife. The two-day season was open to hunters aged 17 and younger, and participants were required to be accompanied by a nonhunting adult.


   The south wild turkey hunting zone encompasses 83 of Ohio’s 88 counties. The three-year average for turkeys taken in this area during the youth season (2023-2025) is 1,681 birds. In 2025, youth hunters checked 1,625 turkeys.

   The top 11 counties for wild turkeys checked during the 2026 youth season in the south zone include: Highland (65), Tuscarawas (65), Guernsey (62), Monroe (57), Meigs (56), Adams (55), Gallia (55), Harrison (55), Carroll (52), Brown (50), and Noble (50).

   The youth-only hunting weekend for the northeast zone, which includes Ashtabula, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, and Trumbull counties, is scheduled for Saturday, April 25 and Sunday, April 26, 2026.

   As of Sunday, April 19, the Division of Wildlife has issued 6,472 youth turkey permits, which can be used throughout the 2026 turkey hunting season. The season limit is one bird, and only bearded turkeys may be taken.

   Spring turkey hunting season for all ages opens this weekend in the south zone with the northeast zone opening in May. 

Wild Turkey Hunting Season Dates
•    South Zone: Saturday, April 25 – Sunday, May 24
•    Northeast Zone: Saturday, May 2 – Sunday, May 31
Season dates in the northeast zone correspond with later turkey nest incubation in that region.


   The top five counties for wild turkeys taken during the 2025 hunting season were Ashtabula (516), Monroe (462), Belmont (459), Guernsey (419), and Muskingum (406). 


RESULTS
   A county list of all wild turkeys checked by youth hunters during the 2026 youth turkey season is shown below. The first number following the county’s name shows the harvest numbers for 2026, and the three-year average from 2023 to 2025 is in parentheses. A three-year average provides a better overall comparison to this year’s numbers, eliminating year-to-year variation because of weather, misaligned season dates, and other unavoidable factors. Numbers below are raw data and are subject to change.

Adams: 55 (35); Allen: 16 (10); Ashland: 20 (26); Ashtabula: 0 (0); Athens: 21 (27); Auglaize: 3 (4); Belmont: 49 (53); Brown: 50 (39); Butler: 21 (23); Carroll: 52 (38); Champaign: 8 (8); Clark: 4 (1); Clermont: 48 (22); Clinton: 21 (9); Columbiana: 41 (42); Coshocton: 41 (46); Crawford: 6 (6); Cuyahoga: 1 (0); Darke: 17 (17); Defiance: 28 (25); Delaware: 13 (7); Erie: 7 (5); Fairfield: 7 (9); Fayette: 3 (1); Franklin: 1 (0); Fulton: 15 (19); Gallia: 55 (47); Geauga: 1 (0); Greene: 3 (4); Guernsey: 62 (45); Hamilton: 6 (11); Hancock: 9 (6); Hardin: 19 (8); Harrison: 55 (42); Henry: 9 (8); Highland: 65 (36); Hocking: 14 (20); Holmes: 30 (30); Huron: 11 (11); Jackson: 33 (28); Jefferson: 41 (51); Knox: 38 (22); Lake: 0 (0); Lawrence: 46 (29); Licking: 28 (31); Logan: 12 (11); Lorain: 13 (10); Lucas: 10 (9); Madison: 1 (0); Mahoning: 29 (15); Marion: 4 (5); Medina: 14 (7); Meigs: 56 (42); Mercer: 8 (5); Miami: 3 (4); Monroe: 57 (61); Montgomery: 6 (2); Morgan: 29 (30); Morrow: 21 (19); Muskingum: 42 (56); Noble: 50 (62); Ottawa: 0 (0); Paulding: 13 (10); Perry: 28 (32); Pickaway: 0 (3); Pike: 26 (16); Portage: 40 (27); Preble: 7 (14); Putnam: 13 (7); Richland: 21 (27); Ross: 35 (23); Sandusky: 3 (3); Scioto: 36 (26); Seneca: 22 (18); Shelby: 5 (3); Stark: 33 (26); Summit: 5 (4); Trumbull: 0 (0); Tuscarawas: 65 (56); Union: 13 (8); Van Wert: 2 (3); Vinton: 26 (22); Warren: 12 (6); Washington: 49 (50); Wayne: 11 (10); Williams: 26 (31); Wood: 2 (1); Wyandot: 20 (16).

2026 total: 1,941 
3-year average total: 1,681

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