We ask all cache hiders to provide basic information in a Reviewer Note about their cache. In your Reviewer Note, please clearly and completely describe your cache in detail.
WHERE - Always describe the property your cache is placed on - both the ownership and the property use. Any cache should have permission as described in the Guidelines. (http://www.geocaching.com/about/guidelines.aspx#permission) Just because property does not have obvious No Trespassing signs does not mean that it's open to geocache placement without obtaining permission. For example, some subdivisions have green space trails or parks. However these may be restricted to residents only. We expect you to comply with the Guidelines, include documented permission of owners or management in your Reviewer Note. If a permit is required, attach an image of the permit to your reviewer note. If your cache is adjacent to a residence, please get consent from that home owner, even if your cache is located on property that is otherwise acceptable, since you're essentially inviting people to visit this location at all hours of the day and night.
WHAT - Clearly and completely describe the cache container. Just saying a "plastic container" or a 'Metal box" is incomplete. Some containers are self explanatory like a 30 cal ammo can, a bison tube, a preform, a keytainer, or a magnetic nano but others need a complete description in your Reviewer Note. We want to know exactly what you've placed in case there is some question in the future by Law Enforcement or a property owner.
HOW - Explain how and where your cache is hidden. Please be specific any about camouflage and any attachment method to any object or the ground. For example, it might be a bison tube hung with a wire hook over a cedar limb about 5 feet off the ground. If your cache is on a sign post, or near a sign, please tell us what the sign says.
If you need to include a picture, please upload the image to a Reviewer Note as additional information. Photos are not a substitute for a written Reviewer Note.
When the cache is published, any images and all information in the reviewer notes will be hidden and not visible to the public.
Generally geocachers must obtain permission to place a geocache from the landowner. All land belongs to someone. It may be a government agency, corporation, tribal land, or private landowner. Some sources to determine the landowner include:
Just because the public is generally allowed to use a parcel of land does not mean that geocaching is allowed on it. Landowners may have granted an easement for a certain use and geocaching is not included in that use.
All roads are not publicly owned and those that are may have restrictions by the government entity that controls it.
Public bodies of water may be bordered by private lands and private structures may extend into the water.
Subdivisions may have public use areas that are either open to use by anyone or restricted to homeowner use.
If you are contacting a reviewer about a geocache that is in the process of being reviewed, please post a reviewer note to the cache page. This keeps all information together in case you need to forward the cache to Geocaching HQ for an appeal.
If you are contacting a reviewer about a geocache that has already been published or other matters, please use email at the link in their profile above. Be sure to include the GC number of the geocache. Cache names are not unique.
Please DO NOT use the message center. Most reviewers do not check the message center regularly, if at all, and the messages tend to run together which makes it difficult when discussing several issues.
Creating your own cache container using a 3D printer is becoming more popular. While these containers are allowed, be aware that usually they are not weatherproof and the log book needs to be enclosed in a waterproof bag or other container within the 3D container to keep the log dry.
Geocaches are not generally allowed on property managed, owned or operated by the United States National Park Service. Exceptions can be granted with the express consent of the Park Superintendent and the NPS. In Alabama, this includes:
Geocaches are not generally allowed on property managed, owned or operated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (National Wildlife Refuges). Exceptions can be granted with the express consent of the Park Manager. In Alabama, this includes:
All caches placed in the below listed parks must have written approval of the Park Manager
The guidelines here apply to the following state parks:
You may download the Alabama State Parks Geocaching policy at LINK.
You may download the Alabama State Parks Geocaching permit at LINK.
You should have the form completed and attach an image of the form to your Reviewer Note when you submit your geocache for publication.
If the Alapark website is down, you may use the following link for a permit. Be aware this permit may not be up to date. LINK
The following parks require verbal permission from the park staff to place a geocache. Please include the staff members name that granted the permission in your reviewer note when you submit the geocache for publication.
Most cemeteries are private property. There are a few cemeteries in the state that are owned by municipalities. Several states have banned geocaches in cemeteries due to disrespectful actions by geocachers. Geocaches may NOT be placed near graves. You must have permission from the entity that owns or controls the cemetery to place a geocache there and there must be public access. Just owning a plot in the cemetery is not sufficient permission. When submitting the geocache, attach photographs of the geocache placement to the reviewer note looking at the geocache from different directions.
Section 13A-7-23.1 Desecration, defacement, etc., of memorial of dead; invasion or mutilation of corpse.
(a) Any person who willfully or maliciously injures, defaces, removes or destroys any tomb, monument, gravestone or other memorial of the dead, or any fence or any inclosure about any tomb, monument, gravestone or memorial, or who willfully and wrongfully destroys, removes, cuts, breaks or injures any tree, shrub, plant, flower, decoration, or other real or personal property within any cemetery or graveyard shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
(b) Any person who willfully or maliciously desecrates, injures, defaces, removes, or destroys any tomb, monument, structure, or container of human remains, and invades or mutilates the human corpse or remains shall be guilty of a Class C felony and upon conviction the person shall be punished as provided by law. Any person who maliciously desecrates an American Indian place of burial or funerary objects on property not owned by the person shall be guilty of a Class C felony and upon conviction the person shall be punished as provided by law.
(c) The provisions of subsections (a) and (b) of this section shall not apply to any person holding a permit issued by the Alabama Historical Commission pursuant to subsection (d) of this section.
(d) The Alabama Historical Commission, to provide for the lawful preservation, investigation, restoration, or relocation of human burial remains, human skeletal remains, or funerary objects, shall promulgate rules and regulations for the issuance of a permit and may issue a permit to persons or companies who seek to restore, preserve or relocate human burial remains, human skeletal remains, funerary objects, or otherwise disturb, a place of burial.
Acts 1980, No. 80-706, p. 1424; Acts 1993, No. 93-770, §1; Acts 1993, 1st Ex. Sess., No. 93-905, p. 201, §1.
TVA has no objection to the geocaching activity based on your understanding of the following conditions:
The Corps of Engineers has no objection to the legal pursuance of geocaching activity based on your understanding of the following conditions:
Generally, geocaching is permitted within the National Forests in Alabama without a permit. You must contact the ranger district before you place a cache to make sure your cache is not in a potentially problematic area.
"Geocaching: Geocaching is becoming a popular past time in the forest. We want you to have a positive experience and enjoy yourself, but we also want to protect sensitive areas and species. Therefore, we asking that you contact any one of the six Ranger Districts or the Supervisor's Office at: 334/241-8136 BEFORE you plan the activity."
Geocaches are not allowed in designated Wilderness Areas.
Oakmulgee Ranger District
9901 Highway 5, Brent, AL 35034
205-926-9765
Shoal Creek Ranger District - (Encourages geocaching, ask permission first)
45 Highway 281, Heflin, AL 36264
256-463-2272
Talladega Ranger District - (Encourages geocaching, ask permission first)
1001 North Street (Highway 21 North), Talladega, AL 35160
256-362-2909
Tuskegee Ranger District - (Encourages geocaching, ask permission)
125 National Forest, Road 949, Tuskegee, AL 36083
334-727-2652
Bankhead Ranger District - (Must contact them first before placement)
1070 Highway 33, Double Springs, AL 35553
205-489-5111
Conecuh Ranger District
24481 Alabama Hwy 55, Andalusia, AL 36420
334-222-2555
There are several Land Trusts in Alabama. Generally they allow geocaching on the properties they own or manage. Be aware there may be private landholdings inside the boundaries of the land trusts that will require permission of the actual landowner and that some land trust trail properties are only 25 feet wide.
Geocaches may be placed with written permission from the Preserve. Geocaches must meet the geocaching guidelines and any additional restrictions placed by the Preserve.
2021 update. The former Ft, McClelland property is now a mixture of land use areas.
Ft. Rucker consists of a mix of access areas, in which geocaching is allowed in some parts. Geocachers must obtain a pass to enter the base. Non-military personnel should make advance arrangements by visiting the Ft. Rucker website (www.rucker.army.mil/visit) and download form 2746-R-E as well as following the posted instructions prior to approaching a Visitor Control Center.
Geocaches are not allowed in the Restricted Access Areas, Cantonment Area, Ranges, Impact Areas, and Airfields. Some of these restricted areas are outside the main boundaries of Ft. Rucker.
Geocaches are allowed in most of the other areas including training areas. Permission must be obtained from the base authority that controls the area (usually Outdoor Recreation or Family, Morale and Welfare) and the name of the personnel granting the authority and their phone number must be included in the reviewer note when the cache is submitted for review.
Areas in which geocaches are allowed may be temporarily restricted to access. If a sign or barricade indicates an area is currently restricted, do not enter the area under any circumstances.
Geocaching is allowed on lands owned by Alabama Power that is not leased to or owned by a private landowner. Islands may be owned by Alabama Power, private owners, or a combination of both. Docks and piers are generally privately owned.
Geocaches are not allowed to be attached to navigation markers or buoys.
No geocaches may be placed near dams and electrical generating facilities.
Generally geocaching is allowed in areas where the general public is allowed to visit unrestricted. Geocaches are not allowed to be placed near student housing, including Greek fraternity areas.
Permission to place geocaches on the property must be obtained from campus security. No geocaches may be placed in the student housing area.
No geocaching allowed.
All geocaches must be approved by Campus Security.
Geocaching is not allowed in the vicinity of the Presidents home. Geocaching is allowed at the Kreher Nature Preserve.
Generally geocaching is allowed in areas where the general public is allowed to visit unrestricted. Geocaches are not allowed to be placed near student housing, including Greek fraternity areas.
No geocaching allowed.
All geocaches must be approved by Campus Security.
All geocaches must be approved by Campus Security.
No geocaching allowed.
No geocaching allowed.
All geocaches must be approved by Campus Security.
All geocaches must be approved by Campus Security. This includes some commercial properties leased by the school to private businesses.
No geocaching allowed.
Geocaching allowed except in student and Greek housing areas.
Permission to place geocaches must be obtained from campus security.
Generally geocaching is allowed in areas where the general public is allowed to visit unrestricted. Geocaches are not allowed to be placed near student housing, including Greek fraternity areas.
Geocaching is allowed outside of the student housing areas. There are parcels of private land ownership inside the boundaries of the campus. Permission must be obtained from the landowner for any caches placed on private property.
Geocaching is allowed outside the student housing areas.
No geocaching allowed.
Generally geocaching is allowed in areas where the general public is allowed to visit unrestricted. Geocaches are not allowed to be placed near student housing, including Greek fraternity areas.
Geocaching is allowed outside of student and Greek housing areas.
Geocaching is not allowed at Campus Crest. There is also a subdivision that is a mix of University owned land and private ownership. Privately owned parcels require permission of the land owner.
Geocaching is allowed outside of student housing areas,
Youth camps are properties dedicated for the use of the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, special needs children, church camps or similar sites. Geocaches may not be placed on portions of these properties that are not open to the general public. A geocache placed on public portions of the camp must be placed with permission of the governing authority for the property and the contact information of the director granting that authority must be included in the reviewer note when the geocache is submitted to be published.
Geocaching is specifically prohibited by the owners of these properties. Lease holders cannot override the corporate decision. There may be a few grandfathered geocaches that were placed before the prohibition took effect.
Baldwin County - Barber Marina area. The following restrictions are in place for geocaches placed on land owned by Barber Marina and the adjoining properties owned by the Barber family.
Many of the counties and cities in Alabama have on-line resources that can be used to help you determine the ownership of land and obtain permission to place a geocache. For the other counties, you may have to either visit the local courthouse or subscribe to a paid service to determine the land ownership.
Geocaches that involve stages underground must have at least one stage above ground that requires navigation with a GPS enabled device. Underground geocaches should be submitted as either multi-caches, puzzle/mystery caches, wherigo caches or letterbox caches.
Underground geocaches may pass under areas that would be restricted if at ground level (such as schools or controlled access highways) as long as the ground level restricted area is not subject to any Homeland Security restrictions (such as courthouses or military installations).
Geocache owners submitting geocaches that involve underground stages must submit hidden waypoints for the stages as if they were at ground level, to the extent this is possible. This is to avoid another underground stage geocache being placed in the same area that would conflict with the existing one. Underground stages would not conflict with ground level geocaches.
Geocaches may not be placed on, over or under bridges located on federal roadways, Interstate Highways, U. S. Highways, State Numbers Highways and controlled access highways.
Geocaches generally may be placed on municipal and county road bridges with the following exceptions:
Geocaches may be placed on bridges designed for pedestrian use only or former railroad bridges converted to pedestrian trails that pass over interstate or U.S. highways with the following restrictions:
For bridge geocaches to be published, there must be a location available for a geocacher to park his vehicle completely clear of the roadway and the parking location shall not be in a curve or other visually obstructed area.
Geocachers should understand that all roadway bridges are inspected on a regular basis by government inspectors and any geocache found attached to the bridge structure will probably be removed by the inspectors.
In urban areas geocaches may be placed in parks and green spaces located under controlled access highway overpasses with permission of the government agency that manages the park or green space. The geocache may not be attached to or placed immediately next to structures supporting the overpass.
Geocaches must not be placed in or attached to highway tunnels or any part of their infrastructure.
Guardrail caches are not allowed on federal highways, controlled access highways or as part of railroad signaling locations. The cache must be on the portion of the guardrail away from any bridge restricted as listed above.
For guardrail geocaches to be published, there must be a location available for a geocacher to park his vehicle completely clear of the roadway and the parking location shall not be in a curve or other visually obstructed area.
Little Free Libraries are growing in popularity and geocachers are increasingly wanting to use them for geocache placement.
They are publishable with the following considerations:
Geocaches may not be placed near:
Utility companies. Several utility companies in Mississippi have enacted policies that now require written permission to attach to or utilize their equipment for non-utility purposes. This includes poles, guy wires, underground boxes, signage, transformers and similar equipment. A copy of the permission must be attached to the reviewer note when submitting a geocache to be published.
While there's no specific guideline against hiding a cache on playground equipment, many geocachers consider it a bad idea. It's perfectly normal for a 10 year old to be on a playground with their mom. But how normal would it be for him to go there without a parent and for someone who may be fifty something and doesn't have a kid with them to be prowling around the equipment? This might make most mom's kind of nervous. If the playground is not part of a school or daycare the geocache can be published, but the cache owner will be asked to reconsider before it is published.
Generally if the posted coordinates for a multi-cache, puzzle cache or wherigo cache are virtual coordinates, they must not be placed in any restricted area listed above without permission of the landowner or authority controlling the property. This helps avoid confrontations for new geocachers who may not understand what a virtual waypoint is.
When event caches are located at a commercial location, they may contain the name of the venue in the description one time. The name cannot be in the title. Street addresses and other directions shall be included in the description section, not in the hint section. Attributes and terrain should be pertinent to the actual location the event attendees are gathering at.
Be aware that geocaching guidelines are subject to change. There is no precedent for placing geocaches. This means that the past publication of a similar geocache in and of itself is not a valid justification for the publication of a new geocache. If a geocache has been published and violates any guidelines listed, you are encouraged to report it. However, if the geocache was placed prior to the date when a guideline was issued or updated, the geocache is likely to be grandfathered and allowed to stand as is.