Homeinwestil, I have lots of experience in leasing land to hunters and BB_tx gave you pretty much the story. In the North east it seems like most people just wander onto someones property and hunt or ask permission and hunt but typically either way for free. In Texas if you want to hunt and not have a 100 or so other hunters to contend with on the few available public hunting reservations you pay for a lease. Day hunting is a lot of work and you'd have to be there full time and run it like a state park entrance fee booth, it requires a lot of work and you never know who your dealing with. We choose to lease by the season and deal directly with the hunters who must form their own group of 5 or be prepared to pay the total lease fee regardless, the season starts 2 weeks before archery season and ends 2 weeks after the special late spike and antlerless season. We allow access throughout the year to maintain feeders, blinds, food plots etc. etc. We split the money into a deposit and balance arrangement deposits are due by March 1st and balance is due Sept 1st. We have 347 acres that we live on, we lease to 5 named hunters for $10,000 per season. All hunters and their guest must sign a release of liability that is written especially for hunting in Texas. We allow the hunters to have hunting guest at $10 per guest per night and then the guest have kill fees $50 for feral hogs, $100 for white tailed deer (shot off their sponsoring hunters allotment) and $250 for exotics (sikas, axis, black buck antelope, red stags and fallow) The hunters included with the lease fee allotments are 1 trophy white tailed buck, 1 cull white tailed buck, up to 3 white tailed does, unlimited feral hogs over 30lbs and 1 exotic of their choice of species and gender. Our ranch is low fenced so even on 347 acres most game is transcient. We supply a very small rock cabin with two 15 amp electric circuits, there is no plumbing in the cabin so for water they run a hose from our house which is 150 feet away and I also plant numerous acres of food plots for the wildlife and provide secondary watering sources which also is part of our wildlife management AG exempt tax status so our taxes are less than $500 per year instead of over $25,000. In your bio it says you have 80 acres and unless your place is very hilly like ours you might be looking at only 1 hunter so if your game is really top notch you could probably charge a premium you'd have to check with your local hunters to find out what that is and if its worth it to have strangers walking around on your ranch with loaded weapons. For us it pays a bunch of bills including my new tractor payment so its worth it but it is a lot of work.
Steve