
Washington's true whitetail are concentrated in the northeast — the Selkirks, Pend Oreille and the Palouse — and they run a mid-to-late November rut. Their breeding peaks around November 15–25, a touch later than the classic Midwest. West of the Cascades you're hunting Columbian blacktail, a different deer with its own mid-November rut.
Heads-up: "whitetail" in Washington means the northeast corner. West of the Cascades you're hunting Columbian blacktail, and the dry interior holds mule deer — the windows below note which deer is which by region.
Nov 10 – Nov 26
Peak: mid-to-late November
Whitetail — the state's prime whitetail country.
Nov 10 – Nov 24
Peak: mid-to-late November
Whitetail in the farm draws and breaks.
Nov 8 – Nov 22
Peak: mid-November
Columbian blacktail rut.
Regional estimates from state breeding-date studies, your area can vary. Confirm legal season dates with your wildlife agency: Washington season dates (WDFW).
RackIQ turns the weather, the rut, and your own property's history into a daily, scored read of when and where deer will move, and it gets sharper every hunt you log.
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In the northeast — the Selkirks, Pend Oreille and the Palouse hold the state's whitetail.
Peak breeding is roughly November 15–25, a little later than the Midwest.
Columbian blacktail, which run their own mid-November rut — not whitetail.