Public Land Shooting in Idaho
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Public Land Shooting in Idaho
Disclaimer: This is educational information only and not legal advice. Always consult current regulations and local authorities before shooting on public lands.
Why it matters: Idaho's got millions of acres where you can actually shoot without paying range fees or dealing with range officers breathing down your neck. Most states shut down public land shooting—Idaho embraces it.
The legal reality: BLM and Forest Service lands welcome target shooters, but they'll nail you with citations if you screw up the safety rules or ignore fire restrictions. I've seen guys get hefty fines for shooting too close to roads or during fire bans.
The Basic Rules You Can't Ignore
The 150-yard rule: Stay 150 yards away from any building, campsite, or occupied area—period.
Even a .22 can travel way beyond that distance, and ricochets don't follow physics textbooks. Rangers patrol regularly and they know exactly what 150 yards looks like.
Road safety: No shooting from, over, or across any road—including those forgotten dirt tracks.
- Zero tolerance: Even "abandoned" roads count
- Safe distance: Get well away from any vehicle route
- Ricochet risk: Bullets bounce in unexpected directions
Backstop requirements: You need a natural hill or berm that'll stop your bullets cold. Flat desert with nothing behind your target is a no-go, no matter how empty it looks. Your rounds can travel for miles.
Fire Season Changes Everything
Between the lines: When fire danger spikes, shooting gets banned faster than you can say "Tannerite"—and for good reason.
What this means for you: Check fire restrictions before every trip, not just during summer.
- Steel-jacketed ammo: Can spark on rocks
- Ricochet sparks: Start fires instantly in dry conditions
- Complete bans: Often include all recreational shooting
- Hunter exceptions: Sometimes allowed during total fire bans
I've watched entire hillsides go up in flames from one careless shot. Fire restrictions aren't suggestions—they're life-and-death serious.
Gear and Target Restrictions
Exploding targets: Banned on BLM lands—leave the Tannerite at home.
Target materials: Stick with paper targets and clay pigeons. Shooting at metal objects or glass creates dangerous shrapnel and fire hazards. Bring a tarp to catch your brass—makes cleanup way easier.
The cleanup rule: Pack out everything you brought in, including spent cases. Leave No Trace isn't just for hikers.
Location Scouting That Works
The practical approach: Drive until you can't see roads, then drive some more.
Look for natural berms or steep hillsides for backstops. Avoid rocky areas where ricochets multiply your problems. Summer shooting means staying away from dry vegetation—one spark and you're explaining yourself to federal investigators.
Area restrictions: Some zones within public lands prohibit shooting entirely:
- Wilderness areas: Often closed to target shooting
- Wildlife habitats: Seasonal restrictions common
- Special management areas: Check local regulations
Common Screwups That Cost Money
Distance violations: "But it looked farther than 150 yards" doesn't work with rangers who carry range finders.
Fire restriction ignorance: "I didn't know" gets you the same citation as willful violation. Current conditions are your responsibility to check.
Backstop failures: Shooting into open country because "nobody's out there" ignores bullet physics. Rangers will cite you for inadequate backstops.
Before You Head Out
The bottom line: Call the local BLM or Forest Service office every single time. Fire restrictions change overnight, and what was legal yesterday might be banned today.
Information sources:
- BLM Idaho: Current shooting guidelines and restrictions
- Forest Service: Area-specific rules and fire conditions
- Local ranger stations: Most up-to-date restriction information
What's next: Idaho's public land shooting opportunities aren't going anywhere, but fire seasons are getting longer and restrictions tighter. Learn the rules now and follow them religiously—it keeps these opportunities available for everyone.
Last Updated: 2026-01-15
See Also
Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club Editorial Team
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If you've shot on BLM or Forest Service land around here, have you run into any surprises with fire restrictions or safety zones that caught you off guard?
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