Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age (2024)

Todd Amenrud

Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age (1)

Whether it’s while in your treestand or when viewing trail camera photos, it is important to learn to judge age by looking at an animal. Most gamekeepers feel that harvest decisions should be made based on the animal’s age not antler size. Antler size is one of the details we use to help determine age, but only one in a long list of aspects like body size and shape, muscle tone, the appearance of certain features, etc. You will develop a more effective management plan if you can distinguish a buck’s age by assessing it in a photo or by sight. The following characteristics are fairly consistent for whitetails throughout their range. (Much of the information is courtesy of the QDMA.)

Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age (2)

To begin, let’s stop saying “and-a-half” after the age of a whitetail. It’s a given! If animals are born during the spring, and it’s during the fall hunting season, they obviously will be nearest the “half year” of whatever year they are in.

One Year Old

These animals are easiest to identify, especially the bucks. They are delicate-looking compared to older animals with a thin neck. They resemble a doe with antlers and legs that appear long compared to the body giving them a slim, lanky appearance. They have a distinct line of separation between their neck and shoulders and little muscle definition. They have a thin waist, and they may have slight staining in their tarsal glands during the rut. Their antlers can be extremely inconsistent, but overall they tend to have beams that are thin and relatively short and a spread usually inside the ears. These deer in well-managed areas with good genetics can sometimes have multiple points (10 or more) and even have spreads outside their ears. This is why learning to judge age by body characteristics is so important, because a one-year-old with great characteristics is the exact buck you want to let develop until five or six. Those will be your Boone & Crocket candidates.

Two Years Old

Their legs still appear long for their body and may seem gangly and awkward. The waist is still thin and the muscles in the shoulders aren’t very defined yet. They may show some neck muscle build-up during the rut, but their tarsal glands will only be moderately stained and still very small and round. Their antlers will have a spread around the same width as the ears; beams show the beginning of some mass and multiple points.

Three Years Old

Now the neck and shoulders should be thickly muscled, but the neck should still be discernible from the shoulders. Their back and stomach lines are relatively straight and taut. At three, the chest begins to become deeper than the hindquarters but still with a thin waist, giving them what some call a “linebacker” or “racehorse” appearance. Their legs appear about the right length for their body. Now the antlers can have a spread even with or outside the ears with decent mass. During the rut, their tarsal glands will be dark and may show a lot of staining. Research shows that at this age, most bucks have achieved 50 to 75 percent of their antler-growth potential.

Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age (3)Four Years Old

Now we should be looking at a fully muscled neck that blends into his deep chest and well-defined muscled shoulders. Their waist drops down to become more even with their gut, helping to give the appearance that their legs are slightly short for the body, but their stomach and back are not sagging yet. Their hind-end appears filled-out and rounded. Their faces appear to have taut skin around the jaw. The antlers are now beginning to show you their potential and should be heavy with good bases and multiple points. During the rut they should have noticeably larger tarsal glands that are dark-stained with some staining possibly extending down their legs. Given adequate nutrition, they’ll become structurally mature and can reach 75 to 90 percent of their antler growth potential. Four-year-olds have an entirely different appearance than one- to three-year-old bucks.

Five to Seven Years Old

Other than in select places, few free-ranging bucks exceed five years of age, so I’ll combine five- to seven-year-olds. Bucks in this category have legs that appear too short for their body. They also have several other characteristics of four year olds including fully muscled shoulders, heavy swelling in their neck during the rut, and a waist that’s even with their chest. However, they also may have a pot belly and a sagging back. Their increased body mass gives them a more rounded appearance, and they may look like a small cow. They will have achieved 90 to 100 percent of their antler growth potential, and they can have highly stained tarsal glands during the rut with the stain extending well below the tarsal gland.

8 Years Old and Older

A few free-ranging bucks make it to the post-mature age category. These bucks have passed their prime and regress in both body and antler size. They generally have loose skin on their face, neck and shoulders – usually visible as a “chin flap” – and they may have pointed shoulder and hip bones. Their antlers can show age-related abnormalities such as abnormal points or wavy or curvy tines, and they have an overall “weathered” appearance.

As you study age-specific body characteristics, you’ll notice there aren’t age-specific antler characteristics (other than the range of antler potential that may be reached at each age class, and this percentage can’t be accurately estimated by viewing the antlers). Therefore, I suggest you don’t rely solely on antler size when aging bucks.Large antlers on a younger deer and small antlers on an older deer can negatively influence your estimated age. I prefer to estimate age based solely on body characteristics with respect to location and time of year and then use antler size to “check” my estimate or to break a tie if I can’t decide between two ages.

Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age (2024)

FAQs

Antler Size and Determining a Deer’s Age? ›

Antler Spread

Does antler size tell the age of a deer? ›

No, typically antlers are not a reliable way to determine an animal's age. What antlers do indicate is the health and fitness of an animal. The one case where you can be fairly certain that antlers are a good indication of age is for yearling deer and elk, which have spikes rather than branched antlers.

How can you tell the age of a deer? ›

Typically, the deer has 4 cheek teeth if it is 5 to 6 months old, and 5 cheek teeth if the deer is 7 months to one year old. Yearlings and older deer will have 6 cheek teeth. Yearlings can be identified by looking at the replacement of the temporary tricuspid third tooth with a permanent bicuspid tooth.

How many years old is a 10 point buck? ›

Age Estimate: 2 ½-Year-Old Buck

Often, it grows between six and 10 points, with a typical average number of eight points.

What is the most accurate way to age a deer? ›

Cementum Age Analysis

Can accurately age deer and other mammalian species of any age from 0 and above. Age Determination: Based on tooth eruption schedules and cementum annuli growth. Both eruption schedules and cementum growth on deer teeth are predictable.

What is a 4.5 year old buck? ›

At 4.5 years and beyond, bucks are considered mature. At this age bucks have heavy swelling in their neck during the rut and the defining line between the neck and shoulder disappears and looks to be one mass. Their legs now look in proportion with their body and their waist drops to become even with their chest.

What does a 2.5 year old buck look like? ›

2.5-Year-old Bucks

Relatively thin waist and shoulders. Limited neck swelling during the rut.

What is a 3 1 2 year old buck? ›

3-1/2-year-old

A buck in this class has a muscular body, a chest that is slightly deeper than its rump, and a taut stomach. During the breeding season, a 3-1/2-year-old exhibits a moderately swollen neck. On average, 3-1/2-year-old bucks have reached about 75 percent of their maximum antler size.

Is a 12 point buck big? ›

A large buck would be a 12-point, massive would be like 18-20. Think about a deer with 15 points on each side! Now that's something to tell your grand-kids about! :) Only a “non-typical” buck is likely to have that many points, but, yes, a 30 point buck would be very large.

How can you tell the age of a deer by its jaw bone? ›

After removing and cleaning the jaw bone, count the number of jaw teeth. If the jaw bone has fewer than 6 jaw teeth it is a fawn. (See figure 2.) If the jaw bone has 6 jaw teeth, the deer is 1½ years or older.

What is considered a trophy whitetail buck? ›

So, What is a REAL Trophy Whitetail? Depends, but for me it is that whitetail doe or buck who has successfully eluded predators and hunters for many years, taken with the most challenging weapon I have proficiency with. That is the buck or doe that goes up on my wall, with a Certificate of Aging™ right next to it.

Does a buck get more points every year? ›

However, we know that taken as a group and averaged out to determine the norm, bucks grow a larger set of antlers each year of their life up to a point.

Is there a 40 point buck? ›

A potentially record-breaking doozy. Fourteen-year-old Paslie Werth, of Cimarron, shot a once-in-a-lifetime deer last Sunday — a 40-point, free-range whitetail buck tallying a gross green score of 282 6/8 inches — while rifle hunting on family property with her father, Kurt, in Kiowa County.

How to tell a deer's age by antlers? ›

The spread of the antlers can offer a clue to a buck's age. Yearling bucks rarely have antlers that grow wider than their ears. A buck with an antler spread well outside the end of the ears is normally a mature or older buck.

How do you visually age a deer? ›

Deer are aged by examining the wear and replacement of the premolars and molars of the lower jaw. As a deer grows older, its teeth continue to wear. As the enamel begins to wear away, and exposes the dark dentine material, noticeable distinctions in tooth wear occur between each age class.

What is the lifespan of a deer? ›

Most male white-tailed deer live to about 6 years of age. Some live longer, some less. Females tend to live about two years longer than males. The record white-tailed deer was a doe in Georgia that lived 22 years.

What does the size of deer antlers mean? ›

The size and formation of antlers vary widely among deer in general. Antler growth depends on an individual deer's access to quality nutrition, age and genetics. However, factors such as date of birth and condition of the mother can affect antler development.

Do older bucks have bigger antlers? ›

If you look at a graph of average antler size of white-‐tailed deer at different ages, it is clear antler size increases until 5 years of age. Average antler size then remains relatively constant, suggesting antler size does not change much after a buck reaches 5 years old.

What is a 1 1 2 year old buck? ›

1-1/2-year-old (Yearling)

Bucks in the 1-1/2-year-old age class are often characterized as “does with antlers” due to their body characteristics. A yearling typically has a thin neck, taut stomach, long legs and a thin body (Figure 2).

What does an 8 point buck mean? ›

For example, a 1½-year-old buck might have eight points that have tines just a couple inches long with a 10-inch wide spread. Another hunter's eight-point might be been an older buck with eight points with some tines standing 10 or more inches high and have a spread about 20 inches wide.

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