Wisconsin
From the 50 state
visitor guide :
Wis. Stat. 2019 §§301.45
through 301.50
Registration Triggers and Deadlines:
10 days for initial
registration, after entering state, and for updates. Employment defined as a period exceeding 14
days or 30 days in a calendar year. §301.45(3).
Per Wisconsin SOR response
letter (2019), the 10 day period also applies to visitors. No mention of any limit per month or year.
Per Wisconsin SOR response
letter (2019), a procedure is
available for removal from registry after departure.
Residency/Presence and Other Restrictions:
Registrants must provide notice before going on school grounds. §
301.475.
Duration & updates:
15 years to life. Verification: SVPs – 90 days; others annually. §301.45(4).
Most recent visit: June 2025
For registered visitors, Wisconsin is one of the easier states to get along with. Ten consecutive days should be enough for most visits. Per Wisconsin SOR’s response to a Florida Action Committee (FAC) letter (2019), there may be no limit per month or year. However, to be safe, visitors should assume the 30 day per year limit that applies to employment in the state will also apply to visitors.
In June 2025 I decided to take Wisconsin up on its relative hospitality. I wanted to explore northern parts of the state I hadn’t looked closely at before. Entering from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula I soon surrounded by the recreational tourist mecca that is Northern Wisconsin.
On one hand this entire region, including the enormous Northern Highlands American Legion State Forest, has been fully developed with every manner of winter and summer recreation you could ask for – snowmobile and ATV trails, interconnected region-wide bike paths and paved pedestrian trails, skiing, water sports, boating, fishing, camping, RV resorts, vacation homes, anything you want. I remember seeing a Great Wolf Lodge somewhere (maybe Hayward?), so your pack can "wolf out" too. The Snowmobile Hall of Fame and Museum is in St. Germaine.
On the other hand the creation of this tourist mecca has killed the goose that laid the golden egg. Every formerly beautiful country road is lined with mile upon mile of all the commercial crap and roadside attractions necessary to support all this vacation tourism. The two towns I drove through, Eagle River and Woodruff, no longer exist as distinguishable entities. They have become mere place names awash in an ocean of crap.
However … one thing I’m sure of is that there are a lot of people – including many of you – who love outdoor sports, winter and summer. For you I can heartily recommend Northern Wisconsin. You get nine days in this state, and if you really wanted a two week vacation Michigan’s Upper Peninsula is just a few miles away. Either spend your second week there (they could use your patronage) or make a side trip to the UP, stay there at least one full calendar day and the two nights on either side, then return to Wisconsin and re-start the clock for a up to a total of 30 days per calendar year.
While in Wisconsin I noticed that northern Wisconsin and Minnesota together host an archipelago of Ojibwe Nation reservations and I resolved to take a closer look at several of them. It was way more interesting than even I imagined, and very different than the tourist wonderland I just described. I will be reporting on the Ojibwe Nation Archipelago in my next blog.
Small Town Notes:
Rhinelander – It’s
just outside the main tourist area so not destroyed. Downtown okay, but neighborhoods not so much.
Antigo – Just goes
to show that when the surrounding agricultural economy is good the town will
prosper.
Phillips – Just
finishing up installing new curbs, but there’s no street beautification to go
with it.
Hayward – Guess what? Behind all that shlock on US 63 there’s a real town! Downtown is right off US 63 and benefiting from tourist growth.
Previous visits: June & August 2021
In June 2021, entering from Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, I stayed overnight at a National Forest campground and spent the next two days seeing the sights. At a welcome center I picked up a map of every cheese store in Wisconsin, showing which ones are located right on the farm where you can buy the fresh cheese curds that squeak in your mouth.
In addition to eating lots of cheese, I came upon a small town “Party on the Pavement” and had street food for lunch. I toured Milwaukee’s lakefront and Historic Third Ward, and of course I’m a sucker for cave tours – this time it was Cave of the Mounds after staying overnight at Blue Mound State Park (nice park, clean campgrounds, hot showers).
Continuing southwest, I ended up at Prairie du Chien where I tried to visit Villa Louis State Historic Site but found it still closed on account of the COVID 19 pandemic. However, this was an opportunity to rest and have lunch at a picnic table overlooking the Mighty Mississippi River before crossing over into Iowa.
In August 2021 I was taking a five day mini road trip to northern Minnesota but decided to swing through western Wisconsin on my way up to Duluth. Entering at Prairie du Chein where I had left on my previous trip I headed north along the Mississippi River Scenic Highway – and yes it was scenic. Then veered off to my intended stop on my way through Wisconsin, the Leinenkugel Beer factory in Chippewa Falls where I took the one hour factory tour.
Then continuing as
far north as I could get before nightfall I camped at Amnicon Falls State Park,
which is quite beautiful but unfortunately has no showers! Oh well – it was on
to Minnesota!
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