Missouri Fishing License Guide: Online, Cost & Rules (2026)

Missouri MDC ยท MO Fishing app, trout permits, Free Fishing Days and 2026 permit guide

Missouri Fishing License Online, Cost and Rules: 2026 MDC Guide

If you plan to fish in Missouri, start with the official Missouri Department of Conservation permit page or the MDC permit-buying system. Missouri calls its license a fishing permit, and the correct choice depends on residency, age, trip length, trout plans, trout park tags, private water status, landowner rules, Lake Taneycomo, White River border lakes and whether you are taking fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish or live bait.

This 2026 refresh explains Missouri fishing permit cost, who needs a permit, how to buy online, resident and nonresident fees, daily permits, trout permit rules, youth and senior exemptions, resident landowner exemptions, Free Fishing Days, trout park daily tags, Lake Taneycomo rules, lifetime permits, White River Border Lakes Permit, digital proof, permit cards and the common mistakes to avoid before fishing Missouri rivers, lakes, Ozark streams, trout parks, reservoirs or border waters.

Resident fishing permit: $14 Nonresident fishing permit: $57 Daily permit: $9 Resident trout permit: $12 Free Fishing Days: June 6-7, 2026

Quick Answer: Do You Need a Missouri Fishing Permit?

In Missouri, anglers generally need a fishing permit unless they qualify for an official exemption. The common age rule is simple: anyone age 15 or younger, resident or nonresident, may fish without a regular fishing permit. Missouri residents age 65 or older may fish without a regular fishing permit, but trout permits or trout park daily tags can still be required in areas where those rules apply.

The standard 2026 Missouri Fishing Permit costs $14 for residents and $57 for nonresidents. A Daily Fishing Permit costs $9 for both residents and nonresidents and may be purchased for multiple days. If you possess trout outside trout parks, plan winter fishing in trout parks, or fish Lake Taneycomo upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge, check the trout permit rule carefully.

๐ŸŽฃ Most Missouri residents Use the $14 resident Fishing Permit unless you are youth, age 65+, landowner-exempt or otherwise exempt.
๐Ÿงณ Most visitors Compare the $9 Daily Fishing Permit with the $57 nonresident Fishing Permit based on trip length.
๐ŸŸ Trout anglers Check trout permit, trout park daily tag and Lake Taneycomo rules before fishing or possessing trout.

Source Verification Box

Publish-ready as of: May 17, 2026. Official sources checked for this refresh include Missouri Department of Conservation fishing permit fee pages, Daily Fishing Permit guidance, Trout Permit guidance, Permit Exemptions, 2026 Free Fishing Days information, 2026 Summary of Missouri Fishing Regulations, White River Border Lakes Permit notes and MDC permit-card guidance.

Permit fees, trout rules, trout park tag rules, Free Fishing Days, landowner exemptions, military/veteran exemptions, Lake Taneycomo requirements, White River border lake rules, lifetime permit pricing, daily permit coverage and fishing regulations can change. Verify current details through MDC before buying, renewing, relying on an exemption or fishing a new waterbody.

Official-source reminder This guide is independent and educational. It is not MDC, not legal advice and not a substitute for the Wildlife Code of Missouri, the current Summary of Missouri Fishing Regulations, permit checkout details or conservation agent interpretation.
๐Ÿ›๏ธ Official agency Missouri Department of Conservation, commonly called MDC.
๐Ÿ’ป Official online route Buy permits through MDCโ€™s official permit-buying system.
๐Ÿ“… 2026 permit year Many Missouri fishing permits are listed for January 1 through December 31, 2026.
๐Ÿ“ฑ Permit proof MDC permit cards and digital permit tools can help keep proof accessible.

Missouri Fishing License Cost in 2026: Resident, Nonresident, Daily, Trout and Lifetime Fees

Missouri fishing license cost depends on whether you buy a full Fishing Permit, a Daily Fishing Permit, a Trout Permit, a youth trout permit, a lifetime permit or the White River Border Lakes Permit. Missouriโ€™s regular Fishing Permit covers fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish and live bait, but limits, methods and seasons still vary by species and fishing area.

Use these cost cards as a practical planning guide, then confirm the final product in MDCโ€™s official permit system before paying.

Resident Fishing Permit $14 Standard Missouri resident permit for fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish and live bait.
Nonresident Fishing Permit $57 Annual-style nonresident permit for visitors fishing Missouri repeatedly during the permit year.
Daily Fishing Permit $9 Same price for residents and nonresidents. May be purchased for multiple days.
Resident Trout Permit $12 Required to possess trout outside trout parks unless exempt or using a required trout park daily tag.
Nonresident Trout Permit $24 Required for covered nonresident trout situations outside trout parks and specific trout waters.
Youth Trout Permit $6 For youth age 15 or younger when a trout permit is required for the activity or water.
White River Border Lakes Permit $10 For Missouri and Arkansas residents fishing eligible shared impounded waters under specific rules.
Lifetime Fishing Permit age 60-64 $40.50 Resident lifetime option useful as a lifetime trout permit for residents approaching age 65.
Lifetime Fishing Permit youth $320 Resident lifetime fishing option for youth ages 0-15; ordered through MDCโ€™s lifetime form.
Micro cost tip For a short Missouri trip, multiply the $9 Daily Fishing Permit by your number of fishing days and compare it with the $57 nonresident Fishing Permit. If trout is involved, add the correct trout permit or trout park daily tag logic before choosing.

Who Needs a Missouri Fishing Permit?

Most anglers need a valid Missouri fishing permit unless an exemption applies. A Missouri Fishing Permit covers fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish and live bait, but that does not mean every season, method, species or area is open at all times.

Youth age 15 or younger may fish without a regular fishing permit. Missouri residents age 65 or older may fish without a regular permit, except trout permits or daily trout tags are still required in areas where those rules apply.

๐Ÿ‘ง Age 15 or younger Resident and nonresident youth may fish without a regular fishing permit.
๐ŸŽฃ Age 16+ Most anglers need a valid fishing permit unless they qualify for an official exemption.
๐Ÿ‘ด Missouri residents 65+ May fish without a regular fishing permit, but trout rules can still apply.
๐ŸŸ Trout situations Trout permits or trout park daily tags can still be required even when regular permit exemptions apply.

Missouri Permit vs License: Same User Intent, Different Official Word

Many users search โ€œMissouri fishing license,โ€ but MDCโ€™s official language is โ€œfishing permit.โ€ In practical terms, when you are buying through the official system, look for Fishing Permit, Daily Fishing Permit, Trout Permit, and related permit products rather than expecting every page to say โ€œlicense.โ€

This matters because choosing the wrong product can leave you covered for ordinary fishing but not trout, daily fishing but not enough days, or your home-state side of a border lake but not the other stateโ€™s portion.

How to Buy a Missouri Fishing Permit Online

The official online route is MDCโ€™s permit-buying system. You can also use MDC permit pages to confirm which product you need before checkout. Online buying is easiest when you know your residency, age, trip length and trout plan.

  1. Start from an official MDC page Open MDCโ€™s fishing permit page or the official permit-buying system before entering personal information or payment details.
  2. Choose resident or nonresident status Select the correct residency category. Missouri resident and nonresident permit prices are very different.
  3. Check whether you are exempt Youth age 15 or younger, Missouri residents age 65+, qualifying resident landowners and certain military/veteran categories may have special rules.
  4. Select Fishing Permit or Daily Fishing Permit Choose the regular permit for longer use or the $9 daily permit for short trips. Daily permits may be bought for multiple days.
  5. Add Trout Permit if needed Add the correct resident, nonresident or youth trout permit when trout possession or specific trout waters require it.
  6. Review special-water needs Check trout parks, Lake Taneycomo, White River border lakes, private licensed trout areas and city/county/private area permit rules.
  7. Save proof before fishing Keep permit proof, picture ID, permit card or digital proof available so it can be inspected if requested.

Missouri Resident Fishing Permit Options

Missouri residents commonly use the $14 Fishing Permit unless exempt. Residents can also use the $9 Daily Fishing Permit for short trips, the $12 Trout Permit for covered trout situations, and lifetime fishing permits when they want long-term privileges.

Missouri residents age 65 or older do not need a regular fishing permit, but they should still check trout permit and trout park tag rules. Residents age 60-64 may compare the low-cost lifetime fishing permit because MDC notes that residents 65 and older are already exempt from the regular fishing permit, but may use lifetime fishing as a lifetime trout permit.

Fishing planResident ordinary fishing all year
Likely itemFishing Permit
Cost$14
Micro noteAdd trout permit or trout park tag if trout is part of the plan.
Fishing planResident short trip
Likely itemDaily Fishing Permit
Cost$9/day
Micro noteMay be purchased for multiple days; compare with annual permit if fishing more often.
Fishing planResident trout possession
Likely itemFishing Permit + Trout Permit
Cost$14 + $12
Micro noteTrout parks can require a daily trout fishing tag instead of ordinary trout permit logic.
Fishing planResident age 65+
Likely itemRegular permit exempt
Cost$0 regular
Micro noteTrout permit or daily trout tag may still be required where applicable.

Missouri Nonresident Fishing Permit Options

Nonresident anglers should compare the $9 Daily Fishing Permit with the $57 nonresident Fishing Permit. The Daily Fishing Permit can work well for a short weekend or vacation day. The $57 nonresident Fishing Permit is more practical when you fish Missouri repeatedly or stay long enough for daily permits to add up.

Nonresident trout anglers should also budget for the $24 nonresident Trout Permit when required. If fishing in a trout park during the regular trout park season, a daily trout fishing tag can be required. If fishing Lake Taneycomo upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge, check the year-round trout permit rule before fishing.

๐Ÿงณ One-day visitor Use the $9 Daily Fishing Permit if fishing one day and not needing a longer permit.
๐Ÿ“… Multi-day visitor Daily permits may be purchased for multiple days. Compare daily total with the $57 nonresident permit.
๐ŸŸ Trout visitor Add the $24 nonresident Trout Permit or trout park tag logic where required.
Visitor planning tip Before buying, write one sentence: โ€œI will fish Missouri for ___ days, and I will or will not possess trout.โ€ That usually decides whether you need daily permits, a nonresident Fishing Permit, and a nonresident Trout Permit.

Missouri Trout Permit Rules: Trout Parks, Lake Taneycomo and Winter Fishing

Missouri trout rules are where many anglers make mistakes. The Trout Permit is required to possess trout, except in trout parks where a daily trout fishing tag is required during the regular trout park season. A Trout Permit is also required for all winter fishing in trout parks and for all fishing year-round in Lake Taneycomo upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge.

You must also have a fishing permit or qualify for an exemption. In other words, trout coverage is not always a stand-alone replacement for the regular fishing permit. Check both the regular permit and the trout-specific rule.

Resident Trout Permit $12 Required for covered resident trout situations outside trout park daily tag rules.
Nonresident Trout Permit $24 Required for covered nonresident trout situations, with trout park tag exceptions where applicable.
Youth Trout Permit $6 For youth age 15 and younger when trout permit requirements apply.
๐Ÿž๏ธ Trout parks regular season Daily trout fishing tag is required during the regular trout park season.
โ„๏ธ Winter trout park fishing Trout Permit is required for all winter fishing in trout parks.
๐ŸŒŠ Lake Taneycomo Trout Permit is required year-round upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge.
Trout mistake to avoid Do not assume youth, senior or regular fishing permit rules automatically solve trout requirements. Trout parks, winter fishing and Lake Taneycomo can trigger separate permit or tag rules.

Missouri Fishing Permit Exemptions: Youth, Seniors, Landowners and Military/Veteran Rules

Missouri lists several fishing permit exemptions. The most common are youth age 15 or younger and Missouri residents age 65 or older. Resident landowners who own five acres or more and their immediate households may fish on land they own, but MDC notes that you must own all the land around the body of water to qualify for the fishing permit exemption.

Special military and veteran-related exemptions can apply in narrow situations, often with required proof. If your exemption depends on disability status, prisoner-of-war status, Warrior Transition assignment or a military medical center assignment, carry the required documentation.

๐Ÿ‘ง Youth age 15 or younger Resident and nonresident youth may fish without a regular fishing permit.
๐Ÿ‘ด Residents age 65+ May fish without a regular permit, except trout permit or daily tags where required.
๐Ÿก Resident landowners Must meet land ownership rules, including owning all land around the water for the fishing exemption.
๐ŸŽ–๏ธ Military/veteran cases Special exemptions can require certified proof, orders or eligibility documentation.

Private Water and Privately Stocked Water Caution

MDC says a fishing permit is not required to fish privately stocked waters. On private licensed trout-fishing areas, customers and guests may fish for trout without a permit. This does not mean all private ponds, private lakes or paid fishing areas have the same rule.

Before relying on private-water language, confirm whether the water is privately stocked, whether it is a private licensed trout fishing area, whether fish migrate to or from public waters, and whether any city, county, owner or local rules require a separate permission or fee.

Missouri Free Fishing Days 2026

Missouri Free Fishing Days are June 6 and 7, 2026. During Free Fishing Days, anyone may fish in Missouri without buying a fishing permit, trout permit or prescribed-area daily fishing tag.

Free Fishing Days do not remove all rules. Normal fishing regulations still apply, including seasons, size limits, daily limits, method rules and possession limits. Special permits may still be required at some county, city or private fishing areas, and trespass laws still apply on private property.

โœ… Good Free Fishing Days use Try a beginner-friendly lake, pond, river access or family fishing area with current regulations checked.
โš ๏ธ Not rule-free Permit requirements may be waived, but limits, methods, access rules and trespass laws still apply.

Missouri White River Border Lakes Permit: Arkansas Border-Water Planning

The White River Border Lakes Permit is valid from the date of purchase through the last day of February. It allows Missouri and Arkansas residents to pursue, take, possess and transport fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish and live bait from the other stateโ€™s portion of the impounded waters of Bull Shoals, Norfork and Table Rock lakes without buying a nonresident fishing permit.

This permit does not include trout. You must possess a fishing permit, or qualify for an exemption, issued by your state of residence. The permit is only for Missouri and Arkansas residents.

White River Border Lakes Permit $10 For Missouri and Arkansas residents only.
๐ŸŒŠ Covered waters Bull Shoals, Norfork and Table Rock lakes under specific impounded-water rules.
๐ŸŸ Trout excluded This border-lakes permit does not cover trout. Check trout permit rules separately.

Missouri Lifetime Fishing Permits

Missouri residents can purchase lifetime fishing permits through MDCโ€™s Lifetime Hunting and Fishing Permit Order Form. These permits are not available online or from permit vendors. A Lifetime Fishing Permit carries the same privileges as the Resident Fishing Permit and the Trout Permit.

MDC notes that Missouri residents age 65 and older are exempt from needing a regular fishing permit but can purchase the lifetime fishing permit as a lifetime trout permit. This makes the age 60-64 lifetime price especially relevant for residents who regularly fish trout.

Lifetime Fishing youth 0-15 $320 Resident lifetime fishing option for youth.
Lifetime Fishing age 16-29 $465.50 Resident lifetime fishing option for young adults.
Lifetime Fishing age 60-64 $40.50 Low-cost resident lifetime option useful for trout permit planning.
Lifetime permit reminder Lifetime permits use an order form and are not sold like normal online permits. Check the official MDC form before mailing, gifting or planning around lifetime privileges.

Missouri Permit Proof, Permit Card and Inspection Rules

MDCโ€™s Conservation Permit Card allows multiple permits to be carried on a single plastic card, and new permits are automatically loaded onto the card. Digital tools can also help with proof, but anglers should still make sure permit details are available before fishing remote Ozark streams, trout parks, large reservoirs or low-signal areas.

Accepting a permit means you agree to observe the Wildlife Code of Missouri, not loan your permit to another person, and allow inspection of your permit, picture identification, catch and equipment by an MDC agent.

๐Ÿ’ณ Permit card Multiple permits can be carried on one MDC Conservation Permit Card.
๐Ÿ“ฑ Digital backup Save permit proof before fishing where phone signal may be weak.
๐Ÿชช Picture ID Be ready for permit and picture identification inspection if requested.
๐ŸŽฃ Catch inspection MDC agents may inspect catch and equipment under permit obligations.

Missouri Fishing Regulations: Permit Is Only Step One

A Missouri fishing permit gives fishing privileges, but it does not decide what you can keep. The 2026 Summary of Missouri Fishing Regulations controls seasons, daily limits, possession limits, size limits, methods, special waters, trout parks, Lake Taneycomo, Ozark streams, paddlefish, frogs, turtles, nongame fish, bowfishing, snagging, gigging and special management areas.

Before keeping fish, check the current MDC regulations for your exact water and species. This matters for trout, black bass, catfish, crappie, paddlefish, walleye, sauger, mussels, clams, frogs, turtles, nongame fish, Lake Taneycomo, trout parks, Table Rock, Bull Shoals, Norfork and Mississippi/Missouri River waters.

๐Ÿ“ Size limits Measure fish before keeping them. Ozark streams and special waters can differ.
๐Ÿงบ Daily and possession Know both daily and possession limits before storing fish.
๐ŸŽฃ Methods matter Bowfishing, snagging, grabbing, gigging, atlatl, spearing and line methods have specific seasons.
๐ŸŸ Trout waters Trout parks, winter catch-and-release, Lake Taneycomo and trout areas have special rules.

Common Missouri Fishing Permit Mistakes to Avoid

Most Missouri fishing permit mistakes happen because anglers buy a regular permit but forget trout, assume Free Fishing Days remove every rule, misunderstand landowner exemptions, or use a daily permit for too many days when an annual permit would be cheaper.

โŒ Forgetting trout rules Trout permit, youth trout permit or trout park daily tag rules can apply separately.
โŒ Using daily permits too long Visitors should compare $9 per day against the $57 nonresident Fishing Permit.
โŒ Misusing senior exemption Missouri residents 65+ are regular-permit exempt, but trout permit or daily tags may still apply.
โŒ Assuming landowner exemption too fast MDC says you must own all land around the body of water to qualify for fishing permit exemption.
โŒ Ignoring Lake Taneycomo Upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge, a Trout Permit is required year-round.
โŒ Misreading border-lake permit White River Border Lakes Permit is only for Missouri and Arkansas residents and excludes trout.
โŒ Thinking Free Fishing Days remove limits Free Fishing Days waive permits and tags, but normal limits and access rules still apply.
โŒ No proof ready Keep permit proof and picture ID available for inspection.

These related guides help with Missouri visitor rules, online buying and general license planning. Use them for planning, then verify final requirements through MDC before fishing in Missouri.

๐Ÿงณ Missouri Non-Resident Fishing License

Useful for visitors comparing daily permits, annual nonresident permits, trout permits and short-trip costs.

Read Nonresident Guide
๐Ÿ’ป Buy Fishing License Online

General official-portal safety guide for buying, saving proof and avoiding wrong-license mistakes.

Online Buying Guide
๐ŸŽฃ Fishing License Guide

Broader U.S. fishing license guide for costs, age rules, permits, official portals and proof.

Read Main Guide

Use official Missouri sources for final decisions. Third-party guides can explain the process, but MDC controls permit products, fees, exemptions, trout permits, Free Fishing Days, lifetime forms, permit cards and current fishing regulations.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ MDC Fishing Permits

Official MDC hub for Missouri Fishing Permit, Daily Fishing Permit, Trout Permit and related products.

Open MDC Fishing Permits
๐Ÿ’ป MDC Buy Permits

Official online permit purchase route for Missouri fishing, hunting and conservation permits.

Buy Permits Online
๐Ÿ“˜ 2026 Missouri Fishing Regulations

Official summary PDF for seasons, limits, methods, trout parks, special waters and permit obligations.

Open Regulations PDF
๐ŸŽŸ๏ธ MDC Permit Exemptions

Official page for youth, senior, resident landowner, military, veteran and group permit exemptions.

Check Exemptions
๐Ÿ“… Missouri Free Fishing Days

Official MDC page and events related to statewide Free Fishing Days.

Open Free Fishing Days
๐ŸŸ MDC Fishing Hub

Official fishing hub for regulations, species, seasons, events and Missouri fishing resources.

Open MDC Fishing

Find Missouri Fishing Permit Help Near You

Missouri permits can be bought online, and MDC also supports permit-card and permit service routes. Use this map as a general helper for finding Missouri Department of Conservation offices or permit help near you. Call before visiting if you need lifetime, exemption, landowner, military, trout park, Lake Taneycomo or permit-card questions handled in person.

Missouri Fishing License FAQs

How much is a Missouri fishing license in 2026?

Missouri calls it a fishing permit. Common 2026 MDC fees include $14 for a resident Fishing Permit, $57 for a nonresident Fishing Permit, $9 for a Daily Fishing Permit, $12 for a resident Trout Permit, $24 for a nonresident Trout Permit and $6 for a youth Trout Permit.

Can I buy a Missouri fishing permit online?

Yes. Use MDCโ€™s official permit-buying system. Start from the MDC fishing permit page or the official buy-permits route before entering personal or payment information.

Who needs a Missouri fishing permit?

Most anglers need a Missouri fishing permit unless an official exemption applies. Youth age 15 or younger may fish without a regular permit, and Missouri residents age 65 or older may fish without a regular permit except trout permits or daily tags where required.

Do kids need a Missouri fishing permit?

Anyone age 15 or younger, resident or nonresident, may fish without a regular Missouri fishing permit. Trout permits or trout tags can still matter depending on the trout water and activity.

Do Missouri seniors need a fishing permit?

Missouri residents age 65 or older may fish without a regular fishing permit. However, trout permits or daily trout fishing tags may still be required in areas where those rules apply.

How much is a Missouri daily fishing permit?

The Missouri Daily Fishing Permit costs $9 for both residents and nonresidents. It may be purchased for multiple days and covers fish, frogs, mussels, clams, turtles, crayfish and live bait, subject to seasons and limits.

Do I need a Missouri trout permit?

You need a Trout Permit to possess trout except in trout parks where a daily trout fishing tag is required. A Trout Permit is also required for winter fishing in trout parks and year-round fishing in Lake Taneycomo upstream from the U.S. Highway 65 bridge.

When are Missouri Free Fishing Days in 2026?

Missouri Free Fishing Days are June 6 and 7, 2026. Anyone may fish without a fishing permit, trout permit or prescribed-area daily fishing tag, but normal regulations and access rules still apply.

Does a Missouri fishing permit cover trout parks?

Not by itself. In trout parks during the regular trout park season, a daily trout fishing tag is required. For winter fishing in trout parks, a Trout Permit is required.

What is the Missouri White River Border Lakes Permit?

It is a $10 permit for Missouri and Arkansas residents that allows fishing on the other stateโ€™s portion of Bull Shoals, Norfork and Table Rock lakes under specific rules. It does not include trout.

Do resident landowners need a Missouri fishing permit?

Resident landowners who own five acres or more and their immediate households may fish on land they own, but MDC notes that you must own all land around the body of water to qualify for fishing permit exemption.

Where should I verify Missouri fishing permit rules?

Verify through MDCโ€™s official fishing permit page, permit exemptions page, buy-permits system and the current Summary of Missouri Fishing Regulations before buying or fishing.

Editorial Disclaimer

This Missouri fishing license guide is for general educational use. Missouriโ€™s official term is fishing permit. This guide does not replace Missouri Department of Conservation rules, the Wildlife Code of Missouri, MDC permit checkout details, trout park daily tag rules, Lake Taneycomo rules, permit exemption determinations, law-enforcement interpretation or waterbody-specific requirements.

Before fishing, verify your permit type, proof of purchase, exemption status, age category, residency, trout permit, trout park tag, Free Fishing Days rule, White River Border Lakes Permit rule, season, daily limit, possession limit, size limit, method rule, access permission and any special regulation through official MDC sources.

Final Summary: Missouri Permit Choice Starts With Age, Residency, Trip Length and Trout

The safest Missouri fishing permit path starts with four questions: How old is the angler, are they a Missouri resident, how many days will they fish, and will they possess trout or fish a trout-specific water? Youth age 15 or younger and Missouri residents age 65+ may not need a regular fishing permit, but trout rules can still apply.

Residents commonly use the $14 Fishing Permit, visitors compare the $9 Daily Fishing Permit with the $57 nonresident Fishing Permit, and trout anglers check the $12 resident, $24 nonresident or $6 youth Trout Permit plus trout park daily tag rules. Buy through MDC, save proof, then check the current Missouri fishing regulations for your exact water, species and method.

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