Last updated March 25th 2026
Disclaimer: This is an editorial round-up of Arizona gun laws. We do our best to make sure it’s correct, but do not rely on this as legal advice. If you’re unsure about anything, consult a lawyer.
- Treat every gun as loaded
- Point the muzzle in a safe direction
- Keep your finger off the trigger until you’re ready to shoot
- Know your target and what’s beyond
Arizona was constitutional carry before constitutional carry was cool. Governor Jan Brewer signed SB 1108 back in July 2010, making Arizona one of the first states to let any law-abiding adult carry concealed without a permit. Fifteen years later, 29 states have followed. Arizona was ahead of the curve and the state hasn’t looked back.
This is a state that genuinely respects the Second Amendment. No magazine limits. No assault weapons ban. No red flag law. No waiting period. No purchase permit. No registration. Strong state preemption. Stand Your Ground with Castle Doctrine. All NFA items legal. Open carry at 18, concealed carry at 21, no permit needed for either. If you’re looking at the map and trying to figure out where to live as a gun owner, Arizona belongs on the short list.
The only real friction point right now is the governor’s office. Katie Hobbs vetoed three significant gun bills in 2025 (campus carry, suppressor decriminalization, and preemption enforcement). The Republican legislature keeps pushing and the Democratic governor keeps blocking. That tension is worth watching if you’re planning a move.
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Key Information: Arizona Gun Laws at a Glance (2026)
Fast answers first, with statutes and sources below.
| Permitless Carry | Yes (since 2010, 21+) |
|---|---|
| Open Carry | Legal, no permit, 18+ |
| Concealed Carry | No permit required, 21+ |
| CWP (Optional Permit) | Available for reciprocity + NICS bypass ($60, 5-year) |
| Min. Purchase Age | 18 long guns / 21 handguns (FFL) |
| Background Checks | Dealer sales only. No private sale requirement. |
| Waiting Period | None |
| Magazine Capacity Limit | None |
| Assault Weapon Ban | No |
| Red Flag Law | No |
| Stand Your Ground | Yes (ARS 13-411) |
| NFA Items | All legal |
| State Preemption | Strong (ARS 13-3108) |
Official Arizona Resources
Arizona Gun Laws: The Highlights
- Constitutional Carry: Yes (since July 2010). Concealed carry without a permit for anyone 21+ who can legally possess a firearm.
- CWP (Optional Permit): $60, shall-issue through DPS. Worth getting for reciprocity in 37+ states and to bypass NICS at the counter.
- Open Carry: Legal at 18+ with no permit. Always has been.
- Purchase Age: 18 for long guns, 21 for handguns from an FFL. 18 for handguns through private sale.
- Background Checks: Dealer sales only. No universal background check law.
- Waiting Period: None.
- Magazine Limit: None. Buy whatever you want.
- Assault Weapons Ban: None.
- Red Flag Law: None. Repeated attempts have died in committee.
- Stand Your Ground: Yes (ARS 13-411). No duty to retreat anywhere you have a right to be.
- NFA Items: All legal with federal registration.
- Preemption: Strong. Cities and counties cannot pass their own gun laws (ARS 13-3108).
Constitutional Carry and Permitless Carry
Arizona adopted constitutional carry on July 29, 2010, when Governor Jan Brewer signed SB 1108 into law. Under ARS 13-3112, any person 21 years of age or older who is not a prohibited possessor may carry a concealed firearm without a permit anywhere in the state. Active military members may qualify at age 19.
Arizona was only the third state to go permitless (after Vermont and Alaska). At the time it was considered radical. Now it’s mainstream, with 29 states following the same path. The permit system still exists through the Arizona Department of Public Safety, but it’s optional. Most people who get one do it for reciprocity when traveling out of state or to skip the NICS check at the gun counter.
The CWP costs $60 for a new application and $43 for renewal, valid for 5 years. You’ll need to show proof of firearms training (an NRA course, hunter safety course, military DD-214, or any state-approved course qualifies). No live-fire requirement. Renewal doesn’t require additional training. Arizona issues the same permit to residents and non-residents, which makes the Arizona CWP popular with out-of-state applicants who want broad reciprocity coverage on the cheap.
Open Carry
Open carry has never been restricted in Arizona. It’s legal for anyone 18 or older who can lawfully possess a firearm. No permit, no registration, no questions asked. This applies to handguns and long guns alike.
In practice, open carry is common and unremarkable across most of the state. You’ll see people carrying openly in Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, and the rural areas without anyone blinking. Phoenix proper is more mixed, but it’s perfectly legal. Businesses can post “no weapons” signs, but in Arizona those signs don’t carry the force of law. If you ignore a sign and the business asks you to leave, refusing becomes a trespass issue, not a weapons charge.
Purchase Requirements
Buying a gun in Arizona is about as simple as it gets under federal law. No state purchase permit. No waiting period. No registration. No owner licensing. No limit on the number of firearms you can buy.
For dealer purchases, it’s the standard federal process: pick your gun, fill out the ATF Form 4473, and pass the NICS background check. If you hold a valid Arizona CWP, the dealer can skip the NICS call entirely since the permit serves as an alternative. You walk out with your gun the same day, sometimes the same hour.
Private sales between individuals don’t require a background check, a bill of sale, or any government involvement. You can sell a firearm to another Arizona resident face-to-face with no paperwork. The only restriction: it’s illegal to sell to someone you know or reasonably should know is a prohibited possessor under ARS 13-3102.
Age minimums follow federal rules for FFL purchases: 18 for rifles and shotguns, 21 for handguns. But state law allows private handgun sales to anyone 18 or older, which is less restrictive than some states that set 21 across the board.
Purchasing Process Step by Step
- Choose your firearm at any licensed dealer. No pre-qualification, no state permit, no FOID card, no purchase permit.
- Complete ATF Form 4473 and provide a valid government-issued photo ID.
- Pass the NICS background check. Arizona uses the federal NICS system directly. If you have an Arizona CWP, the dealer can skip the NICS call.
- Walk out with your gun. No waiting period. No cooling-off period. No second trip.
That’s it. Arizona doesn’t add any state-level friction to the process.
Background Checks
Arizona does not operate as a state Point of Contact for background checks. All dealer checks go through the federal NICS system. The state has no universal background check law, so private sales, gun show sales between individuals, and online transfers between residents do not require a background check.
There have been legislative attempts to introduce universal background checks, but none have gained traction. Arizona is firmly in the “dealer sales only” camp and that’s unlikely to change with the current legislature.
Magazine Capacity and Assault Weapons
Arizona has no magazine capacity restrictions. Buy a 10-round magazine. Buy a 30-round magazine. Buy a 100-round drum. It doesn’t matter. There’s no ban, no limit, and no registration requirement for magazines of any size.
Same story with so-called “assault weapons.” Arizona has no assault weapons ban. No feature tests, no pistol grip restrictions, no barrel shroud nonsense. Semi-automatic rifles with any combination of features are completely legal. An attempt to introduce an AWB and magazine ban (HB 2619 in 2025) died in committee without a floor vote.
Self-Defense Laws
Arizona’s self-defense framework is one of the strongest in the country. There is no duty to retreat in any place where you have a lawful right to be. The state has both Stand Your Ground and Castle Doctrine protections, backed by multiple statutes.
Under ARS 13-404, you’re justified in using physical force when a reasonable person would believe it’s immediately necessary to protect against unlawful physical force. ARS 13-405 extends this to deadly force when facing unlawful deadly physical force. No duty to retreat. No requirement to exhaust alternatives first.
ARS 13-411 is the big one. It explicitly authorizes deadly force to prevent serious crimes including arson, burglary, kidnapping, manslaughter, murder, sexual assault, armed robbery, and aggravated assault. And it spells out in black and white: there is no duty to retreat as long as you’re in a place where you have a lawful right to be.
The Castle Doctrine under ARS 13-418 creates a presumption of reasonableness if someone unlawfully and forcibly enters your home or occupied vehicle. That presumption means the burden shifts away from you. If an intruder kicks in your door at 3 AM, the law assumes your use of force was justified. The prosecution has to prove otherwise. That’s a powerful legal shield.
Arizona also protects defense of others (ARS 13-406), defense of premises (ARS 13-407), and defense of property (ARS 13-408, though only non-deadly force for property). It’s a comprehensive system that gives law-abiding people real legal protection when they’re forced to act.
Red Flag Law
Arizona does not have a red flag law, an extreme risk protection order, or any similar mechanism. Attempts to introduce ERPO legislation have repeatedly failed. The legislature has shown zero appetite for it and the governor hasn’t pushed for it either. This is one of the few areas where both parties in Arizona seem to agree: no red flag law for now.
NFA Items
All NFA items are legal in Arizona when possessed in compliance with federal law. Suppressors, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, machine guns (pre-1986), AOWs, and destructive devices are all on the table.
Here’s the quirk: ARS 13-3101(A)(8) technically lists suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, and machine guns as “prohibited weapons.” But ARS 13-3101(B) immediately carves out an exception for anything “possessed, manufactured or transferred in compliance with federal law.” So if you’ve got the ATF paperwork (or as of January 2026, just the registration since the $200 tax stamp was eliminated), you’re good.
The legislature tried to clean this up with SB 1014 in 2025, which would have removed suppressors from the prohibited weapons list entirely. Governor Hobbs vetoed it on May 12, 2025. The veto is largely symbolic since suppressors are already legal with federal registration, but it would have eliminated any potential confusion in the statute. Expect a refiled version in 2026.
ARS 17-251 separately authorizes suppressors specifically for hunting, which is a nice belt-and-suspenders protection if you’re taking a suppressed rifle into the field.
State Preemption
Arizona has strong state preemption under ARS 13-3108. Cities, counties, and any political subdivision are prohibited from enacting ordinances, rules, or taxes relating to the transportation, possession, carrying, sale, transfer, purchase, storage, licensing, registration, discharge, or use of firearms, ammunition, or related accessories.
That’s a broad list and it’s intentionally comprehensive. Tucson tried to implement a mandatory destruction policy for firearms turned in at buybacks (instead of allowing resale), and the state sued. The law is clear: local governments don’t get to freelance on gun policy in Arizona.
The one exception: cities can restrict firearm discharge within a quarter mile of an occupied structure without the owner’s consent. That’s about noise and safety in residential areas, not about possession or carry rights.
SB 1705 in 2025 would have added teeth by authorizing civil penalties against public officials who knowingly enforce local gun ordinances in violation of preemption. Hobbs vetoed it. The enforcement mechanism is still through the courts rather than direct penalties.
Reciprocity: Out-of-State Permits
Arizona is one of the most generous states for reciprocity. The state recognizes concealed carry permits from all 50 states under ARS 13-3112. If you have a valid permit from anywhere, it works in Arizona. No bilateral agreement needed.
Going the other direction, the Arizona CWP is recognized by 37 states. Since Arizona issues the same permit to residents and non-residents, the Arizona non-resident CWP is one of the most popular “add-on” permits in the country. At $60 with straightforward training requirements, it’s a smart investment for anyone who travels with a firearm.
States That Recognize Arizona CWP
| Full Reciprocity (37) | Constitutional Carry (No Permit Needed) |
| Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming | In 29 states with constitutional carry, any legal gun owner 21+ can carry without any permit. But you must follow that state’s specific laws on age, prohibited places, duty to inform, and vehicle carry. |
States That DO NOT Recognize Arizona CWP
Your Arizona permit has no legal standing in these states:
- California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, Washington D.C.
Critical Details for Travelers
- Resident vs. Non-Resident: Arizona issues one permit type for both residents and non-residents. However, Colorado and Michigan only honor Arizona resident permits. If you hold an Arizona non-resident CWP, verify the destination state’s specific rules before carrying.
- Age Matters: Even if a state recognizes Arizona’s permit, many require the holder to be 21+. Arizona military members who got their CWP at 19 should verify age requirements in each state they visit.
- Constitutional Carry Isn’t Universal: Just because you can carry without a permit in Arizona doesn’t mean you can do the same in other states. Your permitless carry rights stop at the state line. Get the CWP if you travel.
Prohibited Places
Even in Arizona, there are places you can’t carry. The list is shorter than most states, but it exists. Under ARS 13-3102:
- Polling places on election day
- K-12 school grounds (unloaded and locked in a vehicle is OK)
- Public college and university campuses (SB 1020 campus carry was vetoed in 2025)
- Hydroelectric and nuclear power facilities
- Correctional facilities
- Federal buildings (courthouses, post offices, etc.)
- Secured areas of airports (past TSA checkpoints)
- State or local government buildings that post signage and provide secure storage
You can carry in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol under ARS 4-229, but you cannot consume alcohol while carrying. That’s a bright line. Carry sober or don’t carry at all.
Private business “no guns” signs do not carry the force of law in Arizona. You won’t catch a weapons charge for ignoring one. But if the business asks you to leave and you refuse, that’s trespass. Be respectful and leave if asked.
Recent Changes (2025-2026)
The 2025 legislative session was defined by three gun bills that passed the Republican legislature and were all vetoed by Governor Hobbs:
- SB 1014 (Suppressor Decriminalization): Would have removed suppressors from the prohibited weapons list in ARS 13-3101. Vetoed May 12, 2025. Largely symbolic since suppressors are already legal with federal registration.
- SB 1705 (Preemption Enforcement): Would have authorized civil penalties against public officials who enforce local gun ordinances violating state preemption. Vetoed May 2, 2025.
- SB 1020 (Campus Carry): Would have allowed concealed carry on public college and university campuses. Vetoed May 12, 2025.
On the other side, HB 2619 attempted to ban assault weapons and large-capacity magazines. It died in committee without a floor vote. Don’t hold your breath on that one.
All three vetoed bills are expected to be refiled with modified language in the 2026 session. Campus carry in particular has strong momentum and may eventually pass, either through legislation or a change in the governor’s office.
On the federal side, the elimination of the $200 NFA tax stamp (effective January 1, 2026) makes suppressors, SBRs, and SBSs more accessible. ATF registration is still required, but the cost barrier is gone. Expect to see a lot more suppressed rifles at Arizona ranges.
Our Take on Arizona Gun Laws
Arizona is one of the top five states in the country for gun owners. Constitutional carry since 2010, no waiting periods, no magazine limits, no AWB, no red flag law, strong preemption, and Stand Your Ground with Castle Doctrine. The purchasing process is as fast and frictionless as federal law allows. Open carry is legal at 18 and nobody bats an eye.
The only asterisk is the governor’s veto pen. Hobbs has blocked campus carry, suppressor cleanup, and preemption enforcement. None of those vetoes changed the fundamentals of Arizona gun law (you could already legally own a suppressor, you just can’t carry on campus), but they’ve stalled incremental progress. If the governor’s office flips, expect Arizona to push even further into gun-friendly territory.
Get the CWP even though you don’t need it. The $60 buys you reciprocity in 37 states and a NICS bypass at the counter. That’s worth it even if you never leave Maricopa County. For the complete statutes, visit the Arizona Legislature’s statute database. For permit information, check the Arizona DPS Concealed Weapons Permit Unit. And when you’re ready to shop, check out our best gun stores in Arizona guide.
FAQ: Arizona Gun Laws
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