Free Montana Hunter Safety Practice Test (43 Questions with Answers)
Study for the Montana hunter education exam with this free practice test. It combines the core national hunter safety curriculum — firearm safety, shot placement, tree-stand safety, survival, and conservation — with Montana-specific questions on who needs hunter education, online and field-day rules, and reciprocity. Every answer includes an explanation. This is a study aid, not the official exam; see the Montana requirements page to get certified.
Montana-Specific Questions
1. Under Montana law, who is generally required to complete hunter education before buying a hunting license?
- A. Anyone born on or after January 2, 1985 (correct answer)
- B. All license buyers, regardless of when they were born
- C. Only hunters under age 16
- D. Only nonresident hunters
Anyone born after January 1, 1985 (MCA 87-2-105) must show completion of a hunter education course from Montana, another state, or a Canadian province to buy a Montana hunting license, unless holding an apprentice hunting certificate.
2. Can you complete Montana's hunter education certification entirely online?
- A. Yes — the entire course can be completed online, with no field day (correct answer)
- B. Only if you're 18 or older — younger students must also attend an in-person field day
- C. No — an in-person field day is required for all students
- D. No — the entire course must be taken in a classroom
Montana allows the entire hunter education course to be completed online — no in-person field day is required.
3. You completed hunter education in Montana. Is your certificate recognized when you hunt in other states?
- A. Yes — IHEA-approved certificates are honored across most US states and Canadian provinces (correct answer)
- B. No — every state requires its own separate course
- C. Only in states that directly border Montana
- D. Only for the first year after certification
Hunter education certificates from IHEA-approved courses are reciprocal: once certified in any state, your certificate is recognized across most of the US and Canada, for life.
Sample National Curriculum Questions
A sample from the national question bank — take the full 40-question practice test interactively with instant scoring.
4. The three main parts of a firearm are the:
- A. Scope, sling, and trigger
- B. Action, stock, and barrel (correct answer)
- C. Muzzle, safety, and magazine
- D. Bolt, hammer, and grip
Every modern firearm has three basic parts: the action (which loads, fires, and ejects), the stock (the handle), and the barrel (through which the projectile travels).
5. Where should your trigger finger be until you are ready to shoot?
- A. Resting lightly on the trigger
- B. Outside the trigger guard, along the side of the firearm (correct answer)
- C. On the safety
- D. Wherever is most comfortable
Keep your finger outside the trigger guard and off the trigger until your sights are on the target and you have decided to fire. This prevents a startle or stumble from causing a discharge.
6. What is a 'zone of fire'?
- A. The area where game is most likely to appear
- B. The area in which a hunter can safely shoot without endangering others (correct answer)
- C. The distance a bullet will travel
- D. The range of a shotgun's pattern
Your zone of fire is the area in which you can safely take a shot. When hunting in a group, each hunter is responsible for a designated zone and must never swing outside it.
7. Which shot angle offers the best opportunity for a clean, ethical harvest of big game?
- A. Head-on (facing you)
- B. Straight away (rear)
- C. Broadside or quartering-away (correct answer)
- D. Any angle if you're a good shot
Broadside and quartering-away angles give the clearest, largest path to the vitals. Head-on and straight-away angles present small targets and risk wounding the animal.
8. If you become lost while hunting, you should generally:
- A. Keep walking quickly to find your way out
- B. Stop, stay calm, and use S.T.O.P. — Stop, Think, Observe, Plan (correct answer)
- C. Fire all your ammunition at once
- D. Wait until dark and follow the stars
Use S.T.O.P.: Stop, Think, Observe, Plan. Staying put, staying calm, and signaling for help usually leads to a faster, safer rescue than wandering.
9. What does 'tagging' a harvested animal mean?
- A. Taking a photo of it
- B. Attaching and validating your license or tag to the animal as required by law, usually immediately after harvest (correct answer)
- C. Reporting it online next week
- D. Marking the trail where you found it
Most states require you to validate and attach your tag to the animal immediately after harvest, before moving it, as proof of a legal, licensed take.
10. For safe, accurate shooting, an arrow's spine (stiffness) must:
- A. Be as light as possible
- B. Match the bow's draw weight and the archer's draw length (correct answer)
- C. Be longer than the bow
- D. Have no effect on accuracy
Arrow spine must be matched to your bow's draw weight and your draw length. An improperly spined arrow flies poorly and can be dangerous.
11. A firearm's mechanical safety should be considered:
- A. a guarantee the gun will not fire
- B. a mechanical device that can fail — never a substitute for safe handling (correct answer)
- C. unnecessary if you are careful
- D. on only while cleaning the firearm
A safety is a mechanical device that can fail. Keep it on until you are ready to shoot, but never rely on it in place of safe muzzle and trigger discipline.
12. A bird flushes and flies low between you and another hunter. You should:
- A. Take the shot quickly before it's out of range
- B. Not shoot — never swing your firearm through another hunter's position (correct answer)
- C. Shoot only if your safety is on
- D. Shoot after shouting a warning
Never take a shot that swings your muzzle across another person. Pass up the shot; no game is worth risking a life.
13. 'Effective range' refers to:
- A. The farthest distance a bullet or arrow can travel
- B. The maximum distance at which you can consistently and accurately hit the vital zone (correct answer)
- C. The distance the manufacturer prints on the box
- D. The range of your rifle scope
Effective range is a combination of your equipment's capability and your own skill — the distance at which you can reliably place a shot in the vitals. Take shots only within your effective range.
14. Regulated hunting helps wildlife management by:
- A. Eliminating predator species
- B. Keeping animal populations in balance with their habitat (correct answer)
- C. Guaranteeing more animals every year
- D. Replacing the need for habitat conservation
Managed hunting seasons and limits keep populations in balance with the carrying capacity of their habitat, helping prevent overpopulation, disease, and starvation.
15. The ammunition you use must match:
- A. The color of the firearm
- B. The gauge or caliber stamped on the firearm (correct answer)
- C. The brand of the firearm only
- D. Whatever fits in the chamber
Always match ammunition to the gauge (shotgun) or caliber (rifle) marked on the barrel or receiver. Using the wrong ammunition can cause the firearm to burst.
16. You may point a firearm's muzzle at something only when you:
- A. Are certain the safety is on
- B. Intend to shoot it and have positively identified it as a safe, legal target (correct answer)
- C. Are showing the firearm to a friend
- D. Are walking through thick brush
Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy. Point it at a target only once you've positively identified it and decided the shot is safe and legal.
17. When you must cross a fence alone, you should first:
- A. Hand the loaded firearm over the fence
- B. Unload the firearm, place it under or through the fence with the muzzle pointed away, then cross (correct answer)
- C. Carry the loaded firearm across in one hand
- D. Lay the loaded firearm on the ground and climb over
Unload before crossing any obstacle. Set the unloaded firearm through or under the fence with the muzzle pointed away from you, cross, then pick it up.
18. When using an elevated tree stand, you should wear a full-body harness (fall-arrest system):
- A. Only once you're seated in the stand
- B. From the moment you leave the ground until you return to the ground (correct answer)
- C. Only in high winds
- D. Only if the stand is over 20 feet high
Most tree-stand falls happen while climbing up or down. Wear the harness and stay connected to the tree from the time you leave the ground until you're back on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the official Montana hunter safety test?
No. This is a free practice test covering the national hunter education curriculum plus Montana-specific requirements. The official Montana exam is taken as part of your state-approved course.
Can I take the Montana hunter education course online?
Montana allows the entire course to be completed online — no field day required.
How do I get certified in Montana?
Complete an IHEA-approved Montana course, pass the exam. Your certificate is then valid for life and recognized across most US states.
Ready for the real thing? Get certified in Montana or take the full national practice test.