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Abstract We evaluated the first 6 years (2019–2024) of a standardized national wild turkey ( Meleagris gallopavo ) brood survey designed to provide comparable indices of wild turkey population productivity across states and regions of the United States. Our goal was to address the long‐recognized need for consistent, standardized indices to inform wild turkey management. We analyzed >321,000 summer wild turkey observations, contributed by 38 states, using a standardized protocol for data collection, cleaning, analysis, and reporting. We used nonparametric bootstrapping and generalized linear models to characterize the primary wild turkey productivity index, the poult‐per‐hen ratio (PPH), at state, Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (AFWA) region, and Bird Conservation Region (BCR) scales. Results indicated substantial spatial and temporal variation in productivity. Baseline expected PPH was greater in the Northeast (4.2), Midwest (3.2), and West (3.9) than in the Southeast (2.6). Regional trends differed over the 6‐year time span: holding day of survey at the 1 August midpoint, PPH per year declined slightly in the Southeast (−2.1%) and West (−1.7%) but increased slightly in the Northeast (+0.9%) and Midwest (+3.7%). Within survey seasons (1 Jul–31 Aug), holding year at the 2022 midpoint, PPH per day declined in the Southeast (−0.1%) and Northeast (−0.2%) but increased in the Midwest (+0.3%) and West (+0.8%). Predictions at the BCR scale revealed further heterogeneity, with largest expected PPH in Western and Northeastern BCRs (3.1–4.1) and lowest expected PPH in Southeastern BCRs (2.0–2.3). Variation within regions and states arose from differences in the probability of females observed without broods, a potential indicator of nesting success, rather than brood size. Our results demonstrate that standardized brood surveys can generate useful indices of wild turkey productivity at multiple spatial scales, providing state agencies with an efficient tool for monitoring regional trends and informing management strategies.