
US Hunts has been the middleman between landowners and hunters since 1999. They operate a straightforward marketplace: landowners list their property, hunters browse leases, US Hunts handles the legal docs, insurance, and hunter vetting so nobody has to guess. A hunting lease is a legal agreement be...
Own Arizona Hunting Leases - US Hunts?
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Full description and what we offer
US Hunts has been the middleman between landowners and hunters since 1999. They operate a straightforward marketplace: landowners list their property, hunters browse leases, US Hunts handles the legal docs, insurance, and hunter vetting so nobody has to guess.
A hunting lease is a legal agreement between you and the landowner that spells out who can hunt, what they can hunt, and for how long. You pay the fee, sign the waiver, and you're in. US Hunts manages everything—they keep copies of all documents, verify hunter names against property licenses, collect liability waivers from everyone who sets foot on the land, and provide general liability insurance backed by Lloyd's of London that covers hunting and fishing accidents plus fire.
Leases range from 90-acre properties up to 1,250 acres, with prices from $1,500 to $25,000+ per season. Most are in Oklahoma (Hughes County, Creek County, Dewey County, Osage County, and more), with:
Featured properties include: 320-acre trophy whitetail in Hughes County ($5,500), 440 acres with heavy timber and hills in Creek County ($6,947), 1,251-acre ranch in Kiowa County ($24,859), and river bottom leases near Oklahoma City and Shawnee.
Landowners set the rules—how many primary hunters, whether family can hunt, guest policies, harvest limits, buck size requirements, and what animals are off-limits. You can trim shooting lanes but not cut trees down. ATVs are allowed for retrieving game and reaching stands, not joyriding. Blinds and tree stands stay up only if you renew; remove them or you get billed. Feeders and food plots need written permission first.
If the property sells during your lease:
| Timeline | Refund |
|---|---|
| Before season opens | 100% |
| Days 1-30 of season | 90% |
| Days 31-60 | 85% |
| Days 61-90 | 80% |
| Days 91-120 | 70% |
| After 120 days | 40% |
Regular hunters get first dibs through the Early Bird Membership ($135/year). Members see new leases 7 days before they go public, which matters because properties move fast. Without it, you're competing with everyone else once the listing goes live.
Leasing beats trying to manage hunters yourself. US Hunts screens applicants before they step on your property—you meet prospective hunters and approve them. You get copies of all documents, hunter contact info, and insurance that actually covers what your farm policy probably doesn't (hunting accidents, fire). The company takes payment upfront, maintains all records, and gives you one phone number to call if something needs adjusting. They've only raised their cut twice in 23 years.
Hunters contributed an estimated $3 billion to wildlife conservation in the US last year. Leasing your land connects hunters with habitat while generating income for conservation and land management.
US Hunts charges hunters for the lease, landowners don't pay anything—they just collect the lease fee. Everything is transparent and documented. No surprise visitors because licensed hunters carry ID and vehicles display current property stickers. If a hunter breaks the rules, US Hunts handles the conversation. If you're unhappy with them, they don't renew.
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