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Law & ethics · United States

Where collecting is legal — and how to do it right

Rockhounding is a privilege that depends on light footprints and knowing the rules. Here’s where you can collect in the U.S., and the ethics that keep it open.

The single most important rockhounding skill isn’t ID or digging — it’s knowing whose land you’re on and what’s allowed there. Rules differ sharply between federal, state and private land.

Where you can usually collect

Generally allowed

  • BLM land — reasonable personal-use collecting of rocks, minerals and petrified wood, within published limits.
  • National Forests — hobby collecting of common rocks/minerals usually allowed; check the local forest.

Generally prohibited

  • National Parks & Monuments — collecting is prohibited. Leave everything.
  • Wilderness, tribal & archaeological sites — off-limits; vertebrate fossils and artifacts are protected by federal law.

Private and state land

On private land, always get the owner’s explicit permission first — no exceptions. State lands vary widely: some state parks and trust lands permit hobby collecting, others don’t. When in doubt, ask the managing agency before you dig.

The rockhound’s code

  • Collect only what you’ll use; leave some for the next person.
  • Fill your holes; pack out all trash; leave no trace.
  • Respect claims, fences, gates and livestock.
  • Never collect vertebrate fossils or artifacts on public land.
  • Follow the American Federation / regional society codes of ethics.
Rule of thumb. If you can’t confirm collecting is allowed, treat the site as off-limits. One bad actor can close a locality for everyone.
Authoritative sourcesU.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) rockhounding guidance · USDA Forest Service · National Park Service regulations · American Federation of Mineralogical Societies code of ethics.

Informational only — not legal advice. Regulations change; verify with the managing agency before collecting. Published by KEVALEX Group.

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