Chris Schulz Published

Deer Hunt Numbers Hit Multi-Year Low

two men in the woods wearing blaze orange with hunting rifles.
The DNR explained the lower harvest numbers were caused by increased natural food source for deer, as well as outbreaks of hemorrhagic disease.
West Virginia Department of Natural Resources
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West Virginia deer hunters had a much less productive season this year. 

The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources (DNR) announced last week that hunters harvested close to 33,775 antlered deer during the state’s two-week buck firearm season, which ran from Nov. 24 to Dec. 7.

The 2025 total harvest is 18.5% below the 2024 harvest of 41,435 bucks. It is also below the five-year average of 42,210 and the lowest harvest in those five years. Harvests have been on a multi-year decline from a high of almost 48,810 deer harvested in 2022.

The DNR explained the lower harvest numbers were caused by an increase in hard mast production (nut and seeds), a key food source for deer. That often results in decreased harvests due to the difficulty of tracking and targeting game species spread out over a landscape. 

Several counties also experienced an outbreak of hemorrhagic disease, a natural, seasonal virus in white-tailed deer, which likely impacted hunter success.

According to preliminary data collected through the DNR’s electronic game check system, hunters in the following counties harvested the most deer:

  • Greenbrier (1,730)
  • Preston (1,349)
  • Randolph (1,198)
  • Hardy (1,165)
  • Pendleton (1,135)
  • Pocahontas (1,089)
  • Monroe (1,057)
  • Grant (1,039)
  • Fayette (991)
  • Hampshire (923)