Free New York Hunter Safety Practice Test (43 Questions with Answers)
Study for the New York 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 New York-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 New York requirements page to get certified.
New York-Specific Questions
1. Does New York use a birth-date cutoff to decide who needs hunter education?
- A. No — the requirement is not based on a birth-date cutoff (correct answer)
- B. Yes — anyone born on or after January 1, 1972
- C. Yes — anyone born on or after January 1, 1960
- D. Yes — anyone born after 1980
No birth-date rule: all first-time hunters, regardless of age, must complete a hunter education course before buying a New York hunting license unless they can show proof of a previously held hunting license.
2. Can you complete New York'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 21 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
New York allows the entire hunter education course to be completed online — no in-person field day is required.
3. You completed hunter education in New York. 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 New York
- 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. 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.
5. Before heading out to hunt, the most important thing to do is:
- A. Post your plans on social media
- B. Tell a responsible person where you are going and when you'll return (correct answer)
- C. Bring extra ammunition
- D. Check the stock market
Always leave a plan: tell someone where you'll be hunting and when you expect to return, so help can find you if something goes wrong.
6. Why do hunters wear blaze (hunter) orange?
- A. It scares game away from other hunters
- B. So other hunters can see them clearly; most big game animals cannot distinguish the color (correct answer)
- C. It is required to keep warm
- D. It attracts more game
Blaze orange makes hunters highly visible to each other, reducing shooting incidents. Big game such as deer are effectively colorblind to orange, so it does not spook them.
7. When storing firearms at home, you should:
- A. Keep them loaded for quick access
- B. Store them unloaded, in a locked location, separate from ammunition (correct answer)
- C. Leave them leaning in a corner
- D. Store them loaded but with the safety on
Store firearms unloaded and locked, with ammunition secured separately, out of reach of children and unauthorized users.
8. How should you treat every firearm?
- A. As if it is unloaded until you check
- B. As a tool that is safe once the safety is on
- C. As if it is loaded (correct answer)
- D. As loaded only during hunting season
Treat every firearm as if it is loaded, every time you pick it up. Assuming a gun is unloaded is a leading cause of hunting incidents.
9. When should you load your firearm?
- A. As soon as you leave the house
- B. Only when you have reached the field or stand and are ready to hunt (correct answer)
- C. While driving to the hunting area
- D. The night before, so you're ready
Load only when you are in the field and ready to hunt, and unload before returning to a vehicle, camp, or building. Never transport a loaded firearm in a vehicle.
10. On a broadside deer, where is the best aiming point for a clean, ethical shot?
- A. The head
- B. The heart-lung (vital) area, just behind the front shoulder (correct answer)
- C. The hindquarters
- D. The neck, high on the spine
The heart-lung area behind the front shoulder is the largest vital target and produces the quickest, most humane harvest. Aim about one-third of the way up from the bottom of the chest.
11. The most important treatment for a person suffering from hypothermia is to:
- A. Give them coffee or alcohol to warm up
- B. Get them warm and dry (correct answer)
- C. Have them exercise vigorously
- D. Rub their skin briskly with snow
Hypothermia is a dangerous drop in body temperature. Get the person warm and dry, out of wind and wet clothing. Avoid alcohol, which actually increases heat loss.
12. Transporting a firearm in a vehicle should be done:
- A. Loaded, so you're ready to hunt
- B. Unloaded and cased, in accordance with state law (correct answer)
- C. Loaded but with the safety on
- D. Any way that is convenient
Firearms should be unloaded and cased for transport. Carrying a loaded firearm in a vehicle is unsafe and illegal in most states.
13. The three most common types of bows used in bowhunting are the:
- A. Crossbow, slingbow, and blowgun
- B. Longbow, recurve, and compound (correct answer)
- C. Flatbow, takedown, and pistol bow
- D. Reflex, deflex, and cable bow
Longbows, recurve bows, and compound bows are the three main types used in bowhunting. (Crossbows are also legal in many areas but are a separate category.)
14. Before you pull the trigger, you must be certain of your target and:
- A. the wind direction
- B. what is in front of and beyond it (correct answer)
- C. the time of day
- D. your firearm's serial number
Positively identify your target and know what is in front of and beyond it. A bullet can travel far past the target, so you must have a safe backstop and a clear line of fire.
15. When three hunters walk abreast through a field, each hunter's safe zone of fire is roughly:
- A. A full 180 degrees in front
- B. About 45 degrees directly in front of that hunter (correct answer)
- C. Anywhere game appears
- D. Only straight ahead within 10 degrees
Each hunter takes a zone of about 45 degrees directly in front of them. Shots must stay within your own zone so you never swing your muzzle toward the hunters beside you.
16. You are not completely sure of your target. You should:
- A. Shoot if it's probably legal game
- B. Not shoot (correct answer)
- C. Fire a warning shot first
- D. Shoot toward the ground to check
If you cannot positively identify the target and what lies beyond it, do not shoot. Certainty is required before every shot — no exceptions.
17. In North America, a primary source of funding for wildlife conservation is:
- A. General sales taxes
- B. Hunting license fees and excise taxes on firearms, ammunition, and archery equipment (correct answer)
- C. Private donations only
- D. Property taxes
Through license fees and the Pittman-Robertson excise taxes on hunting equipment, hunters are among the largest funders of wildlife conservation and habitat management in North America.
18. A responsible, ethical hunter always:
- A. Takes the longest shot possible to test their skill
- B. Obeys laws, respects landowners and other hunters, and makes clean, humane shots (correct answer)
- C. Hunts alone to avoid sharing game
- D. Keeps hunting spots secret from game wardens
Ethical hunting means following the law, respecting property and other people, practicing fair chase, and striving for a quick, humane harvest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the official New York hunter safety test?
No. This is a free practice test covering the national hunter education curriculum plus New York-specific requirements. The official New York exam is taken as part of your state-approved course.
Can I take the New York hunter education course online?
New York allows the entire course to be completed online — no field day required.
How do I get certified in New York?
Complete an IHEA-approved New York 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 New York or take the full national practice test.