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Wyoming Antelope Tag Cost 2026: Nonresident $326, Special $1,200 and Draw Fees

Use this page when the question is the Wyoming antelope or pronghorn price row before choosing a hunt area, draw pool, preference point or public-access route.

HuntingLicenseUSA Editorial 7 min read Updated 2026-06-19

TL;DR — Key Takeaways

  • The June 19 GSC Wyoming antelope group has 8 rows, 37 impressions, 0 clicks, and weighted average position 29.92.
  • The near-threshold lead row is "wgfd antelope non-resident license fee $326 wyoming game and fish" with 12 impressions, 0 clicks, and average position 16.00.
  • WGFD lists Nonresident Antelope at $326 and Nonresident Antelope Special at $1,200; the drawing application fee is $15.
  • Other WGFD antelope rows include Nonresident Antelope Youth at $110 and Nonresident Doe/Fawn Antelope at $34.
  • WGFD lists Antelope applications Jan 2-Jun 1, draw results Jun 18, and preference point applications Jul 1-Nov 2.
  • The fee row is not the final hunt budget. Confirm hunt area, draw pool, type, public/private access, Conservation Stamp status and final WGFD checkout before paying.
In This Guide 6 sections
  1. Wyoming Antelope Tag Cost: Fast Answer
  2. Why This Page Exists
  3. Regular vs Special Draw Price
  4. Application Dates And Preference Points
  5. What The $326 Row Does Not Include
  6. Before You Apply

Wyoming Antelope Tag Cost: Fast Answer

WGFD's current license fee list shows these antelope rows:

WGFD antelope rowNonresident feeWhat it means
Nonresident Antelope$326.00Standard nonresident antelope planning row
Nonresident Antelope Special$1,200.00Higher-priced special draw pool row
Nonresident Antelope Youth$110.00Youth row, still subject to application and eligibility checks
Nonresident Doe/Fawn Antelope$34.00Reduced-price doe/fawn row where the license type and hunt area fit
Nonresident Application Fee$15.00WGFD drawing application fee for nonresident antelope applications
Conservation Stamp$21.50Separate planning item; confirm exemptions and final checkout in WGFD

For a simple regular nonresident antelope draw estimate, start with $326 plus the $15 application fee, then check Conservation Stamp status and final WGFD checkout. For the special draw pool, start with $1,200 plus the $15 application fee.

Official source checked June 19, 2026: WGFD License Fee List, WGFD Application Dates & Deadlines, and WGFD Apply for Licenses. Use WGFD for the final license type, hunt area, draw pool, preference point, stamp status and payment total.

Why This Page Exists

The June 19 GSC export shows that Wyoming antelope price queries deserve a narrow support page instead of staying buried inside the broader Wyoming nonresident guide:

QueryImpressionsClicksAverage positionCorrect owner
wgfd antelope non-resident license fee $326 wyoming game and fish12016.00This page
wyoming antelope tag cost6023.50This page
wyoming antelope hunting license6040.83This page, then WGFD
wyoming antelope tag price4036.25This page
wyoming nonresident antelope tag price3041.67This page
wyoming antelope non resident cost2037.50This page
wyoming antelope tag prices2038.50This page
wyoming pronghorn hunting license2053.50This page

Together, the June 19 GSC Wyoming antelope group has 8 rows, 37 impressions, 0 clicks, and weighted average position 29.92. The lead row names the official WGFD $326 row, which means searchers are not asking for a generic Wyoming hunting license. They need the antelope fee row, draw fee, special draw distinction, and application timing.

Regular vs Special Draw Price

The $326 row and the $1,200 row are not interchangeable:

ChoicePlanning meaningBefore you choose it
Regular nonresident antelopeLower headline fee rowCompare hunt area, draw odds, access, type, and your point status
Special nonresident antelopeHigher-priced draw pool rowThe higher price does not guarantee a license; verify current draw odds and pool rules
Doe/fawn antelopeLower-cost reduced-price rowConfirm license type, hunt area, season and whether it fits your hunt goal
Youth antelopeYouth-specific rowConfirm age, residency, guardian, application and field-proof requirements

The user-helpful answer is not just "Wyoming antelope is $326." The real answer is: pick the license type, hunt area and draw pool first, then confirm whether the $326, $1,200, $110 or $34 row is the row you can actually use.

Application Dates And Preference Points

WGFD's application-date table checked for this batch lists:

Antelope application itemWGFD date
Open dateJan 2
Close dateJun 1
Modify / withdrawJun 1
Draw resultsJun 18
Preference point application periodJul 1-Nov 2

If you miss the application window, the $326 row does not create a license by itself. Check WGFD for leftover licenses, returned licenses, preference point options, and the current official application path.

What The $326 Row Does Not Include

Do not treat the fee row as the whole trip cost. Depending on your path, the final plan can also involve:

  • The $15 nonresident application fee.
  • Conservation Stamp status.
  • Preference point purchase or point-only decisions.
  • Special draw vs regular draw choice.
  • Hunt area access, private permission, public-road access, and checkerboard issues.
  • Archery permit or other method-specific items when applicable.
  • Payment, refund, leftover, or returned-license details inside the official WGFD system.

That is why this page routes back to the Wyoming nonresident guide for the full elk/deer/antelope draw stack and to the public-land guide when access is the real blocker.

Before You Apply

Use this sequence:

  1. Choose antelope or pronghorn as the species.
  2. Choose regular, special, youth, doe/fawn, or landowner path.
  3. Pick candidate hunt areas using current WGFD materials.
  4. Check draw odds, preference points, and access before paying.
  5. Add the $15 application fee when applying through the drawing.
  6. Confirm Conservation Stamp status and final cart in WGFD.
  7. Save the application confirmation, draw result and field proof.

The page-one opportunity here is narrow but valuable: answer the exact antelope price, then keep users from applying for the wrong pool, wrong area, wrong license type or wrong access plan.

Keep Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is a Wyoming nonresident antelope tag?

WGFD lists Nonresident Antelope at $326 and Nonresident Antelope Special at $1,200. If applying through the drawing, WGFD lists a nonresident application fee of $15. Confirm Conservation Stamp status and final checkout in WGFD.

What is the Wyoming antelope special tag cost?

WGFD lists Nonresident Antelope Special at $1,200. Treat it as a special draw pool price row, not a guarantee that you will draw. Check current WGFD draw odds, hunt area and preference point context before choosing it.

When is the Wyoming antelope application deadline?

WGFD lists Antelope applications Jan 2-Jun 1, draw results Jun 18, and preference point applications Jul 1-Nov 2 in the application-date table checked for this update.

Is Wyoming antelope the same as pronghorn?

In hunting-license searches, Wyoming antelope usually means pronghorn. Use WGFD antelope license rows and current hunt-area materials for the official license type, dates, draw odds and access rules.

View Page Update History (1)
  • 2026-06-19:Created as an independent second-round GSC support page for Wyoming antelope tag cost, regular vs special draw price, application fee, dates, preference points and WGFD checkout routing.