The Pampas fox can be found primarily in northern and central
Argentina,
Uruguay, eastern
Bolivia,
Paraguay, and southern
Brazil. It prefers open pampas habitats, often close to agricultural land, but can also be found in montane or
chaco forest, dry scrubland, and wetland habitats. It is most common below elevation, but can inhabit
puna grasslands up to . Five subspecies of
L. gymnocercus are generally recognized •
L. g. antiquus (Ameghino, 1889:298); — Found in the Pampas grasslands, Monte shrublands and Espinal open woodlands of central Argentina, from Córdoba and San Luis Provinces to the Río Negro and the Atlantic coast. •
L. g. domeykoanus (Philippi, 1901:168); Found in Copiapó Province, Chile. •
L. g. gracilis (Burmeister, 1861:406); Found in the Pampas surrounding Mendoza, Argentina. •
L. g. gymnocercus (Fischer, 1814:178); Found in the subtropical grasslands of northeastern Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia and eastern Brazil. •
L. g. maullinicus (Philippi, 1903:158); Found in Llanquihue Province, Chile, east of Llanquihue Lake An earlier (1982) taxonomical revision recognized only and , along with the otherwise unaccepted subspecies (Massoia, 1982:149), which is restricted to the Chaco-Yungas Mountain Tropical Forest in Salta and Jujuy Provinces. That revision classified , , and as subspecies of , in part due to their falling outside the known present range of . Fossils of this species are known from the late
Pliocene to early
Pleistocene in Argentina. ==Local names==