
Arizona's whitetail are Coues deer — a small, gray desert subspecies of the southeastern sky islands. They rut about two months later than the eastern whitetail: chasing builds through January and peak breeding lands roughly late January into mid-February. The windows below reflect Coues timing in the mountain ranges that hold them.
Note: "whitetail" in Arizona means the Coues deer of the southeastern mountains — a true whitetail subspecies that ruts in mid-winter. The state's mule deer rut earlier, around late December into January.
Jan 20 – Feb 14
Peak: late January – mid-February (~early Feb)
The heart of Coues country.
Jan 18 – Feb 10
Peak: late January – early February
Northern edge of the Coues range.
Jan 22 – Feb 14
Peak: early-to-mid February
Desert mountain Coues.
Regional estimates from state breeding-date studies, your area can vary. Confirm legal season dates with your wildlife agency: Arizona season dates (Arizona Game & Fish).
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Roughly late January into mid-February — about two months later than the eastern whitetail rut.
The Coues whitetail live in the southeastern sky islands — the Chiricahuas, Huachucas, Santa Ritas and surrounding ranges.
Yes — Coues are a desert subspecies of whitetail, just smaller and grayer, with a later, mid-winter rut.