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Illinois Gun Laws (2026): FOID Card, CCL, AWB & What You Need to Know

Affiliate disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you buy through our links then we can receive a small commission that helps keep the lights on. You don’t pay anything more.

Last updated March 2026 · By Nick Hall, gun owner familiar with Illinois FOID card, CCL, and AWB restrictions

Disclaimer: This is an editorial round-up of Illinois 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.

Firearm Safety & Legal: Educational content only. You’re responsible for safe handling and legal compliance. Always:
  • 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
Secure storage is mandatory. This is not a substitute for professional training. Full disclaimer

Quick Answer: Illinois has restrictive gun laws in 2026. All firearm owners must possess a valid Firearm Owner Identification (FOID) card issued by the Illinois State Police. Concealed carry is “shall-issue” through Illinois CCL after a 16-hour training course, fingerprints, and a $150 fee.

Illinois bans “assault weapons” (defined under the Protect Illinois Communities Act of January 2023), magazines over 10 rounds for long guns and 15 rounds for handguns, and required registration of pre-ban “assault weapons” by January 2024. Chicago has additional rules including registration and a separate transfer system. Illinois has a 72-hour waiting period for all firearm purchases.

The biggest mistake new Illinois gun owners make is purchasing legally elsewhere and bringing the firearm into Illinois without registering or complying with magazine restrictions. Possession of a non-compliant firearm is a felony. Illinois honors no out-of-state CCW permits.

Illinois is one of the most restrictive states in the country for gun owners, and the landscape has gotten significantly more complicated since the Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA) passed in January 2023. You need a state-issued FOID card just to possess a firearm or ammunition. You need a separate Concealed Carry License to carry. Open carry is flat-out illegal. There’s a 72-hour waiting period on every purchase. Suppressors are banned. And the assault weapons ban with magazine limits is currently being challenged in federal court with the DOJ itself arguing it’s unconstitutional.

If that sounds like a lot, it is. Illinois was the last state in the nation to allow any form of concealed carry (2013), and the state has continued to layer on restrictions since then. But there are over 2.4 million FOID card holders in the state, the gun community is active and fights hard, and the legal challenges to PICA could reshape what’s legal here in the near future.

This page covers every major regulation with the actual statutes. If you’re buying, carrying, or just trying to understand what’s legal in Illinois right now, start here.

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Key Information: Illinois Gun Laws at a Glance (2026)

Fast answers first, with statutes and sources below.

Permitless Carry No (CCL Required)
Open Carry Illegal
Concealed Carry CCL Required, 21+, Shall-Issue
FOID Card Required Yes (to possess any firearm or ammo)
Background Checks Universal (all sales including private transfers)
Waiting Period 72 hours (all firearms)
Magazine Capacity Limit 10 rounds (rifle), 15 rounds (handgun)
Assault Weapon Ban Yes (PICA, under federal court challenge)
Red Flag Law Yes (Firearms Restraining Orders)
Suppressors Banned
SBRs C&R FFL Only
Castle Doctrine Yes (no duty to retreat in dwelling)
State Preemption Limited (local ordinances exist)

Illinois Gun Laws: The Highlights

  • FOID Card: Required to possess any firearm or ammunition. Issued by Illinois State Police. $10, valid 10 years (430 ILCS 65/).
  • Concealed Carry: CCL required. 16 hours training, $150 for residents, shall-issue. Must be 21+ (430 ILCS 66/).
  • Open Carry: Illegal. No exceptions.
  • Waiting Period: 72 hours for all firearms (720 ILCS 5/24-3(A)(g)).
  • Background Checks: Universal. All sales, including private transfers, require a background check.
  • Assault Weapons Ban: Yes (PICA, 720 ILCS 5/24-1.9). Currently under federal court challenge in the 7th Circuit.
  • Magazine Limits: 10 rounds for rifles, 15 rounds for handguns.
  • Red Flag Law: Yes. Firearms Restraining Orders up to 1 year (430 ILCS 67/).
  • Suppressors: Banned entirely. Machine guns and SBSs also banned.
  • Self-Defense: Castle Doctrine in the home. No formal Stand Your Ground statute, but courts have held there is no duty to retreat.

The FOID Card

Illinois is one of the only states in the country that requires a state-issued identification card just to possess a firearm or ammunition. The Firearm Owner’s Identification (FOID) card is issued by the Illinois State Police under 430 ILCS 65/, and without one, you can’t legally buy, own, or possess any firearm or ammo in Illinois. Period.

The application is done online through the ISP Firearms Services Bureau at ispfsb.com. You’ll need a valid Illinois driver’s license or state ID, and the fee is $10 (plus a $1 credit card fee if you pay by card). Processing officially takes “up to 90 days,” though in practice it can be faster or slower depending on the backlog. The card is valid for 10 years.

You must be 21 to apply on your own. Persons under 21 can apply with written parental or guardian consent under 430 ILCS 65/4, provided the parent or guardian is FOID-eligible. The list of disqualifying factors is extensive: felony convictions, domestic violence convictions, involuntary mental health commitments within the past 5 years, certain DUI convictions, active orders of protection, and others.

As of January 1, 2026, applicants must provide an Alien Registration Number, I-94 Admission Number, or USCIS Number to verify eligibility. Non-immigrant visa holders are generally ineligible. Also new in 2026: ISP is authorized to create a combined FOID/CCL card that serves both purposes.

Concealed Carry License

Illinois was the last state in America to allow concealed carry, finally passing the Firearm Concealed Carry Act in 2013 after a federal court ruling essentially forced the legislature’s hand. The CCL is administered by the Illinois State Police under 430 ILCS 66/.

The system is shall-issue under 430 ILCS 66/25: if you meet the requirements, ISP must issue the license. However, if law enforcement objects based on “reasonable suspicion” that the applicant poses a danger, the application goes to the Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board. You must be 21 or older and hold a valid FOID card.

Training is 16 hours from an ISP-approved instructor, including range qualification. Up to 8 hours can transfer from prior military or law enforcement training, or from training completed in other states. The cost is $150 for residents, $300 for non-residents. The license is valid for 5 years. Renewal requires a 3-hour course (2 hours classroom, 1 hour range) and the same fee.

Non-resident CCLs are available, but only to residents of states ISP has determined have “substantially similar” firearms laws. As of 2026, that list includes Arkansas, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, Texas, and Virginia. Everyone else is out of luck.

Open Carry

Open carry is illegal in Illinois. There is no provision for it, not with a FOID card, not with a CCL, not anywhere. If your firearm is visible, you’re breaking the law. The CCL only authorizes concealed carry. This is one of the few areas where Illinois law is unambiguous.

Purchasing and Ownership

Buying a gun in Illinois involves more steps than most states. Here’s the process:

  1. Get your FOID card. Apply through ISP. Wait up to 90 days for approval.
  2. Choose your firearm at a licensed dealer.
  3. Fill out ATF Form 4473 and present your FOID card.
  4. Dealer runs the background check.
  5. Wait 72 hours. The waiting period applies to all firearms under 720 ILCS 5/24-3(A)(g). The clock starts when buyer and seller reach an agreement.
  6. Pick up your firearm after the waiting period expires.

Private sales require the seller to verify the buyer’s FOID card by contacting ISP with the buyer’s FOID number. ISP approval is valid for 30 days. Universal background checks are now required for all private transfers as well. Exemptions exist for bona fide gifts to specified family members and transfers through an FFL.

Background Checks

Illinois has universal background checks. Every firearm transfer, dealer or private, requires a background check. The FOID card itself involves a background check at issuance and is subject to ongoing monitoring by ISP. At the point of sale, dealers run an additional check through the ISP system. Private sellers must verify FOID validity through ISP before completing a transfer.

This layered system means Illinois gun buyers are checked at FOID issuance, monitored continuously while holding a FOID, and checked again at each purchase. Whatever you think about that approach, it’s among the most thorough in the country.

Assault Weapons Ban (PICA)

The Protect Illinois Communities Act (HB 5471, signed January 10, 2023) created Illinois’s assault weapons ban under 720 ILCS 5/24-1.9. The law bans the sale, purchase, manufacture, and delivery of defined “assault weapons,” including a named list of approximately 170+ specific firearm models, .50 BMG caliber rifles, and certain semi-automatic rifles, pistols, and shotguns meeting feature-based tests.

If you legally possessed a banned firearm before January 10, 2023, you could keep it by registering through an endorsement affidavit via your FOID account with ISP. The original registration deadline was January 1, 2024.

The legal status of PICA is genuinely uncertain right now. Federal District Judge Stephen McGlynn ruled the law unconstitutional under the Second and Fourteenth Amendments in November 2024, issuing a permanent injunction. Illinois AG Raoul appealed to the 7th Circuit the same day, and the injunction was stayed pending appeal. In June 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice filed an amicus brief supporting the challengers, arguing PICA violates the Second Amendment under the Bruen framework. The 7th Circuit heard oral arguments in September 2025, with DOJ participating. A decision could come at any time.

As of March 2026, PICA remains in effect and enforceable. But this could change with a single court ruling. Watch this space.

Magazine Capacity Limits

Under PICA (720 ILCS 5/24-1.9), Illinois caps magazine capacity at 10 rounds for rifles and 15 rounds for handguns. Anything exceeding these limits is classified as a “large capacity ammunition feeding device” and is banned from manufacture, sale, purchase, or possession.

Existing owners who possessed large-capacity magazines before January 10, 2023, could keep them if they also registered a grandfathered assault weapon through the ISP endorsement process by January 1, 2024. The magazines themselves didn’t require individual registration, but they’re tied to the assault weapon registration. If you didn’t register, possession is illegal.

Self-Defense Laws

Illinois doesn’t have a formal “Stand Your Ground” statute, but the practical effect is similar. Under 720 ILCS 5/7-1, a person is justified in using force when they reasonably believe it’s necessary to defend themselves or another against imminent unlawful force. Deadly force is justified when you reasonably believe it’s necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm.

The Castle Doctrine is codified in 720 ILCS 5/7-2: you may use force, including deadly force, to prevent unlawful entry into or attack upon your dwelling if you reasonably believe it’s necessary. There is no duty to retreat in your home. The Illinois Supreme Court has also held that there is no general duty to retreat in public spaces, so while Illinois doesn’t have a formal Stand Your Ground law, the practical outcome is similar.

One important detail: under 720 ILCS 5/7-4, if you are the initial aggressor, you generally cannot claim self-defense unless you have withdrawn from the encounter and communicated that withdrawal. Don’t start it and then claim you had to finish it.

Red Flag Law (Firearms Restraining Orders)

Illinois enacted its Firearms Restraining Order Act in 2019 under 430 ILCS 67/. Family members, household members, and law enforcement can petition for an order requiring the respondent to surrender all firearms, ammunition, and firearm parts. The respondent’s FOID card is also revoked during the order.

Emergency FROs last up to 14 days and can be issued ex parte (without the respondent present). Plenary FROs last 6 months to 1 year, with the respondent required to appear within 7 days of service.

In February 2025, Governor Pritzker signed “Karina’s Law,” which allows judges issuing civil orders of protection to also issue search-and-seizure warrants for firearms, executable within 96 hours.

NFA Items

Illinois is one of the worst states in the country for NFA items. Under 720 ILCS 5/24-1:

  • Suppressors: Banned entirely. Illegal to own, possess, or use. No exceptions.
  • Machine guns: Banned entirely.
  • Short-barreled shotguns (SBS): Banned entirely.
  • Short-barreled rifles (SBR): Legal only with a Curio & Relic (C&R) FFL license. Cannot be owned through a gun trust. Very limited availability.

The federal elimination of the NFA tax stamp on suppressors in January 2026 does NOT change Illinois state law. Suppressors remain illegal in Illinois regardless of what federal law says. If you want NFA items, Illinois is not your state.

State Preemption

Illinois has limited state preemption under 430 ILCS 66/90, but it only applies to CCL-related regulations. The state preempts local regulation of handgun licensing, possession, registration, and transportation by CCL holders. But outside that narrow scope, local jurisdictions can and do enact their own firearms regulations.

This has created a patchwork of local ordinances, especially in the Chicago metro area. Cook County has its own assault weapons ban that predates PICA. Chicago has additional requirements for firearm registration, lost/stolen reporting within certain timeframes, safe storage with minors present, and even a ban on laser sights. Some suburbs have their own additional restrictions. If you live in the Chicago area, you need to know not just state law but your specific municipality’s ordinances.

Reciprocity: Out-of-State Permits

Blank map of the United States, territories not included Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming District of Columbia District of Columbia
Permissive / Constitutional Carry Selective Reciprocity Restricted / No Reciprocity This State

Illinois Concealed Carry at a Glance

Constitutional carry: No

Honors non-resident permits: No — out-of-state permits not honored

Classification: No reciprocity

Map base: Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA). Color overlay and reciprocity data by USA Gun Shop.

Can I Carry in Illinois?

Select your home state to see if your permit authorizes carry in Illinois.

Select your home state to see the result.
Reciprocity is subject to change. Verify with the target state's attorney general before traveling.

Illinois does not recognize concealed carry licenses from any other state. If you’re visiting Illinois with an out-of-state carry permit, you cannot carry a concealed firearm. Illinois is one of the most restrictive states in the country for visitors with firearms.

Illinois’s own Concealed Carry License (CCL) has very limited reciprocity in other states. The state has formal reciprocity agreements with few other jurisdictions, and most gun-friendly states don’t honor Illinois CCL because Illinois doesn’t reciprocate. If you travel out of Illinois frequently, you’ll need a non-resident permit from Florida, Utah, or Arizona to supplement your Illinois CCL.

States That Recognize Illinois CCL

Illinois CCL Recognized In (Limited)NOT Recognized In (Most States)
States that may honor Illinois CCL through unilateral recognition include: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, WisconsinCalifornia, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming, Washington D.C.

Critical Details for Travelers

  • No Incoming Recognition: Illinois does not honor any out-of-state concealed carry licenses. Visitors must leave their firearms unloaded and enclosed in a case.
  • Vehicle Exception: Under the 2013 concealed carry law, non-residents with valid home-state carry permits may keep a loaded, concealed firearm in their vehicle while on Illinois roadways. But you cannot exit the vehicle with the firearm on your person.
  • Non-Resident CCL: Illinois does not issue non-resident concealed carry licenses.
  • FOID Required: Even Illinois residents need a Firearm Owner Identification (FOID) card just to possess a firearm or ammunition. The CCL is a separate, additional license for carrying.

Prohibited Places

430 ILCS 66/65 Illinois Firearm Concealed Carry — Prohibited Areas

A licensee under this Act shall not knowingly carry a firearm on or into any building, real property, and parking area under the control of a public or private elementary or secondary school; a building, real property, and parking area under the control of a pre-school or child care facility; a building, parking area, or portion of a building under the control of an officer of the executive or legislative branch of government; a building designated for matters before a circuit court, appellate court, or the Supreme Court; a building or portion of a building under the control of a unit of local government; [and many other enumerated categories including stadiums, amusement parks, public transportation, bars serving alcohol as more than 50% of revenue, hospitals, nuclear power plants, gaming facilities, and any building, real property, and parking area under the control of a public library].

Source: Illinois Legislature — 430 ILCS 66/65 Last verified

Prohibited Places in Illinois

Illinois has one of the most extensive prohibited-places lists in the country under the Firearm Concealed Carry Act (430 ILCS 66/). A valid CCL does not authorize carry in any of these locations.

Schools
  • K-12 schools and school grounds
  • Colleges and universities
  • School-sponsored events
430 ILCS 66/65
Courthouses
  • Courthouses and courtrooms
430 ILCS 66/65
Government buildings
  • State and local government buildings
  • Polling places on election day
430 ILCS 66/65
Healthcare facilities
  • Hospitals
  • Mental health facilities
  • Nursing homes
430 ILCS 66/65
Transit
  • CTA trains and buses, Metra, Pace buses
  • O'Hare and Midway airports (secure areas)
430 ILCS 66/65
Public gatherings
  • Stadiums, theaters, concert halls
  • Public parks and playgrounds
  • Amusement parks
430 ILCS 66/65
Alcohol establishments
  • Bars and restaurants where alcohol is over 50% of revenue
430 ILCS 66/65
Federal buildings
  • Federal courthouses, post offices, agency offices
18 U.S.C. § 930
Private property
  • Posted private property where owner has communicated a no-firearms policy
430 ILCS 66/65
Last verified Source: Official state statutes

The list of prohibited carry locations in Illinois is one of the longest in the country. Under 430 ILCS 66/65, you cannot carry in:

  • Schools (K-12, preschools, child care facilities), including buildings, grounds, and parking areas
  • Colleges and universities (buildings, classrooms, labs, athletic and entertainment venues)
  • Government buildings (executive and legislative branches)
  • Courts at all levels
  • Jails, prisons, and detention centers
  • Hospitals, mental health facilities, and nursing homes
  • Public parks and athletic facilities
  • Cook County Forest Preserves
  • Casinos and gaming facilities
  • Stadiums and arenas during sporting events
  • Nuclear facilities
  • Bars (50%+ gross receipts from alcohol)
  • Public transportation (buses, trains)
  • Libraries
  • Airports
  • Any property where the owner posts a 4×6-inch prohibition sign

There is a parking lot exception: CCL holders can carry concealed in a vehicle in parking areas of prohibited locations and may store a firearm in a case within a locked vehicle. But that’s the extent of it.

Recent Changes (2025-2026)

PICA Court Challenges (ongoing): Federal Judge McGlynn struck down PICA as unconstitutional in November 2024. The 7th Circuit stayed the injunction on appeal. The DOJ filed an amicus brief supporting challengers in June 2025. Oral arguments were held in September 2025. A ruling is pending and could reshape Illinois gun law significantly.

Karina’s Law (February 2025): Allows judges issuing protection orders to also issue search-and-seizure warrants for firearms, executable within 96 hours.

Safe Gun Storage Act (SB 8, effective January 1, 2026): Firearms must be stored in locked containers if accessible to minors, persons at risk, or prohibited persons. Fines up to $10,000 for violations. The law also shortens the timeline for reporting lost or stolen firearms.

FOID Modernization (effective January 1, 2026): Immigration documentation now required for non-citizen applicants. Combined FOID/CCL card authorized. First-time weapon offender diversion participants can apply for FOID.

Our Take on Illinois Gun Laws

Illinois is a tough state to be a gun owner, and there’s no getting around that. The FOID card is an extra bureaucratic layer that exists in almost no other state. The 72-hour waiting period on every purchase is annoying. The suppressor ban is one of the harshest in the country. And PICA’s assault weapons ban and magazine limits, if they survive the federal court challenge, make a lot of popular configurations illegal to buy.

That said, the CCL is shall-issue, which means if you do the work you’ll get your carry license. The self-defense framework is workable. And the ongoing federal challenge to PICA, with the DOJ itself arguing the law is unconstitutional, gives gun owners in Illinois more legal hope than they’ve had in years. If the 7th Circuit strikes down PICA, it would be a massive shift.

If you live in Illinois, get your FOID card, get your CCL, know the law (especially local ordinances if you’re in Chicago or Cook County), and stay engaged with the legal challenges. For the complete statutes, visit the Illinois General Assembly’s statute database. For FOID and CCL applications, go to the Illinois State Police Firearms Services. And when you’re ready to shop, check out our best gun stores in Illinois guide and compare prices at the best online gun stores.

FAQ: Illinois Gun Laws

Frequently Asked Questions

For our complete state-by-state comparison, see all 50 state gun-law guides.

Do I need a FOID card to buy a gun in Illinois?

Yes. Under 430 ILCS 65, every Illinois resident must have a valid Firearm Owner Identification (FOID) card to purchase or possess any firearm or ammunition. Apply through the Illinois State Police at ispfsb.com. The fee is 10 dollars and the card is valid for 10 years.

How do I get an Illinois concealed carry license?

You need a valid FOID card, must be 21 or older, and must complete 16 hours of firearms training from an ISP-approved instructor. Apply through the Illinois State Police. The fee is 150 dollars for residents. ISP has 90 days to process. The license is valid for 5 years and Illinois is shall-issue under 430 ILCS 66/25.

Is open carry legal in Illinois?

No. Open carry is illegal in Illinois. There is no provision for it. The Concealed Carry License only authorizes concealed carry. If your firearm is visible, you are breaking the law.

What is the waiting period for buying a gun in Illinois?

72 hours for all firearms, including handguns, rifles, and shotguns, under 720 ILCS 5/24-3(A)(g). The waiting period begins when buyer and seller reach an agreement to purchase.

Does Illinois have an assault weapons ban?

Yes. The Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA), signed January 10, 2023, bans defined assault weapons and limits magazines to 10 rounds for rifles and 15 rounds for handguns. The law is currently under federal court challenge in the 7th Circuit, with the DOJ arguing it is unconstitutional. As of March 2026, PICA remains in effect.

Are suppressors legal in Illinois?

No. Suppressors are banned entirely in Illinois under 720 ILCS 5/24-1. Machine guns and short-barreled shotguns are also banned. Short-barreled rifles are legal only with a Curio and Relic FFL license. The federal elimination of the NFA tax stamp does not change Illinois state law.

Does Illinois recognize other states concealed carry permits?

No. Illinois does not recognize any other state concealed carry permit. If you are visiting Illinois with an out-of-state CCW, you cannot carry concealed. Non-resident Illinois CCLs are available only to residents of Arkansas, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada, Texas, and Virginia at a cost of 300 dollars.

Does Illinois have a red flag law?

Yes. Under the Firearms Restraining Order Act (430 ILCS 67), family members, household members, and law enforcement can petition for an order requiring surrender of all firearms. Emergency orders last up to 14 days. Plenary orders last 6 months to 1 year. The respondents FOID card is also revoked during the order.

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