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Apply for a 2026 Alligator Gar Trophy Tag

BY Eric Brinkman

ON 12-04-2025

Gar Study

LITTLE ROCK — Anglers interested in hooking into an epic-sized trophy fish can apply for a 2026 Alligator Gar Trophy Tag from now until the end of 2025.

Many Arkansas anglers travel all the way to the Gulf of Mexico each year in search of trophy fish like tarpon and sailfish. Most don’t know they are passing up a similar opportunity right here in The Natural State.

While not truly a dinosaur, the alligator gar was alive during the Cretaceous Period (145 million to 66 million years ago), and can take decades to reach 6 feet long. They are the second-largest species of freshwater fish in North America, topped only by the white sturgeon. They frequently grow longer than 7 feet and weigh more than 200 pounds. The current alligator gar sportfishing record is 215 pounds caught from the Arkansas River in 1964, nearly 90 pounds heavier than the state’s next largest Arkansas catch, a 128-pound paddlefish from Beaver Lake in 2024.

Alligator gar can take years to reach the 36-inch mark, and females aren’t able to reproduce until they are 14 years old. Their slow maturity rate, habitat loss due to dams and channeling of large rivers, and an ill-fitting moniker as a trash fish or predator of other game species have hindered populations to the point where extra caution is required for harvest.

Anyone may fish for alligator gar on a catch-and-release basis, but an Alligator Gar Trophy Tag (AGT) is required to keep an alligator gar longer than 36 inches. Interested anglers can submit an Alligator Gar Trophy Tag Application (AGTA) for $5 by visiting the AGFC Licensing Catalog under “Fishing Stamps/Permits” to be entered for one of 200 Alligator Gar Trophy Tags available for the 2026 season. The application period is open Dec. 1-31, and the drawing will occur Jan. 2, 2026. Recipients will be notified of their selection by email with instructions on how to claim their tag.

Alligator gar may not be taken from noon, May 1-noon, July 1. All harvested alligator gar must be temporarily tagged using a provided Alligator Gar Possession Tag placed on the dorsal fin before leaving the waterbody. All harvested alligator gar must be reported within 12 hours of harvest via the internet through the AGFC mobile app, similar to the game check system used for deer.

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CUTLINE:

GAR IN NET
Alligator gar being tagged before release to help with conservation efforts of this prehistoric species in Arkansas. AGFC photo. 


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