
Mid-America Hunting Association operates private land hunting in Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa. Members get access to over 150,000 leased acres spread across 73 counties with 916 total hunting spots. You pick your season, your method, and your location. Online Reservation System All hunting and scoutin...
Own Mid-America Hunting Association?
01 // DETAILS
Full description and what we offer
Mid-America Hunting Association operates private land hunting in Kansas, Missouri, and Iowa. Members get access to over 150,000 leased acres spread across 73 counties with 916 total hunting spots. You pick your season, your method, and your location.
Online Reservation System All hunting and scouting is controlled through an online map and reservation system. Reserve a farm or spot up to 30 days in advance, or book the day of your hunt. Each reservation guarantees exclusive use of that spot on that day—no overlapping hunters.
Self-Guided Hunts You supply your own licenses, tags, stands, and gear. This is 100% fair-chase, do-it-yourself hunting. No guides, no hand-holding. Hunt firearms, archery, muzzleloader, or shotgun seasons depending on location and timing.
9,000+ acres across 7 counties in south-central Iowa, all in management Zones 4 and 5. Non-resident tags are by draw (application in May), and the draw is competitive. Nearest towns: Red Oak, Bedford, Mount Ayr, Lamoni, Humeston, Corydon, and Bussey.
Iowa leases are grain farming regions—mostly corn and soybeans. New members must be in the club for 2 consecutive seasons before becoming eligible to hunt Iowa in year three.
80,750+ acres in 34 counties with over 445 deer hunting spots. Kansas tags are by draw (application in April) with a high success ratio. Leased land covers management units 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 16, 17, and 18.
Kansas leases span grain farming regions: corn, soybean, wheat, milo, and sunflowers.
63,700+ acres in 33 counties with over 415 deer hunting spots. Missouri tags can be purchased over-the-counter or online. Many counties have a 4-point-one-side restriction. Leased land is grain farming (except Ozark region): corn, soybean, wheat.
| State | Counties | Acres | Spots | Gun | Muzzleloader | Archery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kansas | 35 | 91,095 | 460 | 68 | 24 | 121 |
| Missouri | 34 | 59,881 | 406 | 213 | 27 | 205 |
| Iowa | 7 | 9,000 | 50 | 12 | 4 | 18 |
With 392 total deer hunters across all seasons and states, the average deer spot is 160 acres. If all hunters were present simultaneously, that averages 408 acres per hunter.
No trophy restrictions. The association doesn't impose buck scoring requirements. Vast majority of hunters target 4+ year old animals, but you hunt the deer you want. Trophy is in the eye of the beholder. Youth hunters may harvest any legal buck or doe.
Doe harvest is optional. MAHA has no doe requirements, though landowners encourage taking one or two per season.
If you tag out early on deer, access to upland birds, waterfowl, spring turkey, and fishing is included. Turkey hunts (spring and fall archery), duck and goose hunting, pheasant and quail, and Missouri fishing are all available.
"It's a neat thing our buying power as a group allows us access to big leases none of us could achieve alone." — Brennan, Association Member
Members report seeing high-quality deer on MAHA land. One hunter harvested a 230-250 lb buck in Iowa. Another described seeing "bucks I normally only see in magazines or on television." The group hunting community also means meeting other hunters from across the Midwest.
Lodging is not included, but MAHA provides local lodging listings for each region.
Address: 11922 Grandview Road, Grandview, Missouri 64030 Phone: 816-761-3636 Email: [email protected] Hours: Monday-Friday 9:00 AM - 5:30 PM | Saturday-Sunday Closed
Loading comments...