Free Wisconsin Hunter Safety Practice Test (43 Questions with Answers)
Study for the Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin-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 Wisconsin requirements page to get certified.
Wisconsin-Specific Questions
1. Under Wisconsin law, who is generally required to complete hunter education before buying a hunting license?
- A. Anyone born on or after January 1, 1973 (correct answer)
- B. All license buyers, regardless of when they were born
- C. Only hunters under age 16
- D. Only nonresident hunters
Anyone born on or after January 1, 1973 must complete a hunter education course to purchase any Wisconsin hunting license, except those hunting under the mentored hunting program or those with proof of completing U.S. Armed Forces, Reserves, or National Guard basic training.
2. Can you complete Wisconsin'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
Wisconsin allows the entire hunter education course to be completed online — no in-person field day is required.
3. You completed hunter education in Wisconsin. 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 Wisconsin
- 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. 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.
5. 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.
6. Before every hunt, a bowhunter should inspect arrows and:
- A. Only check the fletching
- B. Discard any arrow that is cracked, splintered, or damaged (correct answer)
- C. Reuse broken arrows to save money
- D. Bend each arrow to test flexibility
A cracked or splintered arrow can shatter on release and injure the archer. Inspect arrows before use and discard any that are damaged.
7. Which carry generally provides the best control of the muzzle?
- A. The trail carry
- B. The cradle carry
- C. The two-handed (ready) carry (correct answer)
- D. The shoulder carry
The two-handed or 'ready' carry gives you the most control over the muzzle's direction and lets you react quickly, which is why it's recommended in most situations.
8. What is a leading cause of serious hunting injuries?
- A. Firearm cleaning accidents
- B. Falls from tree stands (correct answer)
- C. Snake bites
- D. Getting lost
Falls from elevated tree stands are one of the most common causes of serious hunting injuries. A full-body harness and a fall-arrest system dramatically reduce the risk.
9. 'Fair chase' means:
- A. Using any legal means to take game quickly
- B. The ethical, lawful, sportsmanlike pursuit of game that does not give the hunter an improper advantage (correct answer)
- C. Chasing game until it tires
- D. Hunting only on public land
Fair chase is a core hunting ethic: pursuing free-ranging wild game lawfully and sportsmanlike, without taking an improper or unfair advantage over the animal.
10. 'Positive target identification' means:
- A. Being fairly sure the animal is legal
- B. Being 100% certain of the species and, where required, the sex before shooting (correct answer)
- C. Seeing movement in the brush
- D. Hearing an animal call
You must be absolutely certain of what you're aiming at — species, and often sex — before you shoot. Movement, sound, or color are never enough.
11. The main difference between a rifle bore and a shotgun bore is that a rifle:
- A. Is always longer
- B. Has spiral grooves (rifling) that spin the bullet for accuracy; a shotgun has a smooth bore (correct answer)
- C. Cannot be used for hunting
- D. Fires only shot pellets
Rifling — spiral grooves inside the barrel — spins a single bullet to stabilize it for accuracy at distance. Shotguns have smooth bores and typically fire a load of shot.
12. What is the single most important rule of firearm safety?
- A. Always keep the safety on
- B. Always point the muzzle in a safe direction (correct answer)
- C. Always carry the firearm unloaded
- D. Always shoot only in daylight
Controlling the muzzle so it never points at anything you don't intend to shoot is the foundation of all firearm safety — a negligent discharge can only cause harm if the muzzle is pointed at something you care about.
13. When two hunters need to cross a fence, the safest method is to:
- A. Both climb over with firearms slung on their backs
- B. Unload both firearms; one hunter holds both while the other crosses, then pass them across with muzzles pointed away (correct answer)
- C. Hand loaded firearms across to save time
- D. Cross at the same time on opposite sides
Unload both firearms. One hunter holds both while the other crosses, then the firearms are passed across with muzzles pointed away from both people before the second hunter crosses.
14. How should you get your firearm or bow into a tree stand?
- A. Carry it up in one hand as you climb
- B. Sling it over your shoulder while climbing
- C. Raise it unloaded with a haul line after you're secured, muzzle pointed down and away (correct answer)
- D. Toss it up to a hunting partner in the stand
Climb with both hands free. Once you're secured in the stand, use a haul line to raise your unloaded firearm (muzzle down) or bow. Lower it the same way before climbing down.
15. The best first-aid response to serious external bleeding is to:
- A. Apply a tourniquet immediately in all cases
- B. Apply firm, direct pressure to the wound (correct answer)
- C. Rinse the wound with cold water and wait
- D. Elevate the wound and do nothing else
Direct pressure on the wound is the primary treatment for serious bleeding. Maintain steady pressure and seek medical help.
16. Using alcohol or drugs while hunting is dangerous because they:
- A. Make you a better shot
- B. Impair judgment, coordination, balance, and reaction time (correct answer)
- C. Only affect you after hunting hours
- D. Improve your night vision
Alcohol and drugs impair the judgment, balance, coordination, and reaction time that safe hunting depends on. Never handle a firearm or bow while impaired.
17. 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).
18. 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.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the official Wisconsin hunter safety test?
No. This is a free practice test covering the national hunter education curriculum plus Wisconsin-specific requirements. The official Wisconsin exam is taken as part of your state-approved course.
Can I take the Wisconsin hunter education course online?
Wisconsin allows the entire course to be completed online — no field day required.
How do I get certified in Wisconsin?
Complete an IHEA-approved Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin or take the full national practice test.