There are no restrictions on the total number of archery deer non-permit-tags available to Arizona residents. For resident hunters, a resident hunter may purchase an archery deer non-permit-tag at any third-party license dealer or any department office statewide, where they are available now.Their tags will not be available at licensed dealers or online, as the online sales option is only available to those nonresident hunters affected by the 10% cap. Nonresidents with a Pioneer, Lifetime or Benefactor license must purchase their archery deer non-permit-tag from any department office statewide or by mail with the mail order form. Nonresidents with one of these licenses will be required to pay the nonresident archery deer non-permit-tag fee, but they will not count toward the 10% cap. This nonresident restriction does not apply to nonresidents possessing an Arizona Pioneer, Lifetime Hunt, Lifetime Combination or Lifetime Benefactor license. Archery deer non-permit-tags for nonresidents will no longer be sold at third-party license dealers. Archery deer non-permit-tags for nonresidents will only be sold online - on a first-come, first-served basis - by visiting beginning at 12 a.m. After the allotment of 2,890 archery deer non-permit-tags for nonresidents has been sold, no additional archery deer non-permit-tags will be made available for nonresidents for the 2023 calendar year. AZGFD will make available 2,890 archery deer non-permittags for purchase by nonresidents for the 2023 calendar year. The number of archery deer nonpermit-tags available to nonresidents will be set annually at 10% of the average total sales of archery deer non-permit-tags for the most recent five years, rounding down to the nearest increment of 5. For nonresident hunters, the changes include limiting the sale of archery deer non-permit-tags to nonresident hunters beginning with the 2023 calendar year.Recent changes to Arizona statutes and the rules that govern the sale of over-the-counter, or OTC, non-permit-tags for the state’s archery deer hunting opportunity will affect both nonresident and resident hunters, according to the Arizona Game and Fish Department.
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