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Bears & Wildlife

Missoula Public Health is committed to keeping the community safe by helping residents reduce interactions with bears. This page offers essential information on bear-proofing trash, reducing attractants, and properly disposing of deceased deer to prevent bear encounters, protecting both themselves and local wildlife.


Bears and Garbage

To reduce human-bear conflicts and to keep bears from getting conditioned to looking for food in garbage, bear-resistant garbage containers or enclosures are required within the Missoula Bear Buffer Zone and the Potomac Bear Mitigation Zone.  To give haulers time to get and distribute enough bear-resistant containers, the rules go in effect in phases.  Phase 1 includes the Rattlesnake and Grant Creek valleys.  Phase 2 extends to the University of Montana, Pattee Canyon and part of Farviews, and then Phase 3 is the rest of the zone. 

Bear-resistant cans or enclosures are required by the following dates:

              Missoula Bear Buffer Zone
                             Phase 1 – April 30, 2024
                             Phase 2 – April 30, 2025
                             Phase 3 – April 30, 2026
              Potomac Bear Buffer Zone – September 1, 2024

Before those dates, garbage cannot be stored in a manner that allows bears or other animals to access it, which could mean having to store garbage inside a garage until collection day or getting a bear-resistant container earlier.

If you want a more detailed look at the bear zones, you can see it on Missoula County’s property information system


Bird Feeders

Because bird feeders attract bears, and bears are so good at accessing the feeders, the recommendation is to feed birds only in the late fall and winter (December 1 through April 1). In the other months, birds have access to plenty of food.  To keep bears away from hummingbird feeders, they need to be hung over 10 feet high and more than 4 feet from buildings or trees.   Within the city limits, the municipal code states that bird feeders cannot be accessible to any animals other than birds and squirrels.  


Other Bear Attractants

Bears are also attracted to pet food left outside, livestock and chicken feed, horse blocks and pelleted horse feed, unharvested fall fruit and outdoor freezers containing human food.  For suggestions on how to manage these bear attractants, visit missoulabears.org


Deceased Deer


Feeding Wildlife

Feeding, or providing food or other attractants to wildlife is prohibited within the city limits.  Attractants means any substance such as food, garbage, or salt licks that attracts wildlife to a particular location.