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Kansas Gun Laws (2026): Constitutional Carry, Stand Your Ground & Full Immunity

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Last updated March 2026 · By Nick Hall, CCW instructor familiar with Kansas constitutional carry and stand your ground law

Disclaimer: This is an editorial round-up of Kansas 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: Kansas is a constitutional carry state as of July 1, 2015. Any Kansan 21 or older (18 with military service) who can legally possess a firearm may carry concealed without a permit. Kansas still issues Concealed Carry Handgun Licenses (CCHLs) through the Kansas Attorney General because they offer reciprocity with 30+ states.

Kansas has no magazine capacity limit, no assault weapon ban, no statewide gun registration, and no waiting period for handgun purchases. Open carry of long guns and handguns is legal at age 18+ without a permit.

The biggest mistake new Kansas carriers make is forgetting that constitutional carry does not extend to federal facilities, K-12 schools, courthouses, or other prohibited locations. Only CCHL holders are exempt from federal Gun-Free School Zone restrictions. Kansas honors all valid out-of-state CCW permits. NICS checks are required for all FFL purchases.

Kansas has been a constitutional carry state since 2015, and the legislature has only gotten more aggressive about protecting gun rights since then. No purchase permits. No waiting periods. No magazine limits. No assault weapons ban. No red flag law. Stand Your Ground with Castle Doctrine and full immunity from both criminal prosecution and civil lawsuits for justified use of force. Strong state preemption that retroactively voids any local gun ordinance. Kansas takes the Second Amendment seriously.

The state still issues concealed carry licenses through the Attorney General’s office for reciprocity purposes, and they recently dropped the AG fee to zero, making the total cost just $32.50. Concealed carry is legal on public university campuses. And as of March 2026, the legislature is moving to remove suppressors and short-barreled firearms from the state’s controlled weapons list entirely, prompted by the federal tax stamp elimination.

Here’s the complete breakdown with the actual statutes.

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

Fast answers first, with statutes and sources below.

Permitless CarryYes (Constitutional Carry, 21+)
Open CarryLegal, 18+, no permit
Concealed CarryLegal without permit, 21+
Purchase PermitNot required
Background ChecksDealer sales only (federal NICS). Not required for private sales.
Waiting PeriodNone
Magazine Capacity LimitNone
Assault Weapon BanNo
Red Flag LawNo
Suppressors / NFA ItemsAll legal
Stand Your GroundYes (with immunity)
Castle DoctrineYes (presumption of reasonable fear)
State PreemptionYes (strong, retroactive)
Campus CarryYes (public universities)

Kansas Gun Laws: The Highlights

K.S.A. 21-5222 Kansas Stand Your Ground

A person is justified in the use of force against another when and to the extent it appears to such person and such person reasonably believes that such use of force is necessary to defend such person or a third person against such other's imminent use of unlawful force. A person is justified in the use of deadly force under circumstances described in subsection (a) if such person reasonably believes that such use of deadly force is necessary to prevent imminent death or great bodily harm to such person or a third person. A person who is not engaged in an unlawful activity and who is attacked in a place where such person has a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand such person's ground.

Source: Kansas Legislature — K.S.A. 21-5222 Last verified
  • Constitutional Carry: Yes. Anyone 21+ who can legally possess a firearm can carry concealed or openly without a permit (KSA 75-7c10, effective July 1, 2015).
  • Open Carry: Legal without a permit, 18+.
  • Concealed Carry License: Still issued ($32.50, 4-year, shall-issue). Get one for reciprocity in ~39 states.
  • Purchase Permit: Not required for any firearm.
  • Background Checks: Dealer sales only (federal NICS). No requirement for private sales.
  • Waiting Period: None.
  • Magazine Limit: None.
  • Assault Weapons Ban: No.
  • Red Flag Law: No.
  • NFA Items: All legal with federal compliance.
  • Self-Defense: Stand Your Ground with Castle Doctrine and full immunity from prosecution and civil action (KSA 21-5222, 21-5223, 21-5230, 21-5231).
  • Campus Carry: Legal on public university campuses since July 2017.

Constitutional Carry

Kansas adopted constitutional carry through Senate Bill 45, signed by Governor Sam Brownback on April 2, 2015, effective July 1, 2015. The key language is in KSA 75-7c10: the availability of concealed carry licenses “shall not be construed to impose a general prohibition on the carrying of handguns without such license, whether carried openly or concealed, or loaded or unloaded.”

The age threshold is 21 for permitless concealed carry. Persons 18 to 20 may carry concealed only on their own land, home, or fixed place of business under KSA 21-6302. Open carry is legal for anyone 18 or older. If you’re 21+, not a prohibited person, and legally allowed to possess a firearm, you can carry anywhere in Kansas that isn’t a designated prohibited location. No permit, no training, no registration.

Kansas Concealed Carry License, relatively easy to get, and free

Concealed Carry Handgun License

Kansas still issues the Concealed Carry Handgun License (CCHL) through the Attorney General’s office under KSA 75-7c03 through 75-7c05. The system is shall-issue. The AG fee was reduced to zero as of July 2023, bringing the total cost to just $32.50 (paid to the county sheriff). The license is valid for 4 years.

Training is 8 hours covering safe storage and handling, live-fire practice, and Kansas concealed carry and deadly force law. The AG accepts certified courses from NRA instructors, law enforcement, and college programs. Kansas also issues provisional licenses to 18-to-20-year-olds. HB 2052 (signed April 2025) allows provisional holders to upgrade to a standard license when they turn 21 rather than waiting for the provisional to expire.

Why get one? Reciprocity. Kansas’s CCHL is recognized by approximately 39 states. Without the license, you can only carry under permitless carry within Kansas borders. Kansas does not issue non-resident licenses, but recognizes all valid out-of-state permits for visitors.

Open Carry

Open carry is legal in Kansas for anyone 18 or older who can legally possess a firearm. No permit required. Local governments may regulate the manner of openly carrying loaded firearms by non-permit holders on public or private property under KSA 12-16,124, but they cannot regulate permit holders on public property. The same prohibited-places restrictions apply to open carry as to concealed carry.

Purchasing and Ownership

Kansas keeps the purchasing process as simple as federal law allows. No state purchase permit. No waiting period. No registration. No owner licensing. At a dealer, it’s the standard process: choose your gun, fill out the 4473, pass the NICS check, and walk out. Kansas uses the federal NICS system directly rather than operating as a state Point of Contact.

Private sales require no background check, no bill of sale, and no government involvement. Federal prohibited-person laws still apply. Age minimums follow federal rules: 18 for long guns from an FFL, 21 for handguns from an FFL. One note: KSA 21-6301(a)(6) prohibits cartridges with plastic-coated bullets containing less than 60% lead by weight (armor-piercing ammunition restriction).

Background Checks

Kansas does not have universal background checks. Checks are required only for sales through licensed dealers via the federal NICS system. Private sales are unregulated at the state level. The state does not operate as a Point of Contact and adds no additional databases to the federal check.

Magazine Capacity and Assault Weapons

Kansas has no magazine capacity restrictions and no assault weapons ban. No feature tests, no named firearm lists, no cosmetic restrictions. Buy whatever you want. Your AR-15 with a 60-round drum is perfectly legal.

Self-Defense Laws

Kansas has one of the strongest self-defense frameworks in the country, with Stand Your Ground, Castle Doctrine, and full immunity all codified in statute.

Stand Your Ground (KSA 21-5230): A person who is not engaged in unlawful activity and is attacked in a place where they have a right to be has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand their ground and use any force they would be justified in using.

Castle Doctrine (KSA 21-5223): Justifies the use of force, including deadly force, against an unlawful intruder in your dwelling, workplace, or occupied vehicle. Creates a presumption that you had reasonable fear of imminent death or great bodily harm. That presumption matters enormously in court.

Immunity (KSA 21-5231): A person who uses justified force is immune from both criminal prosecution AND civil action. Unless the person you used force against was a law enforcement officer acting in official duties who identified themselves, you can’t be prosecuted or sued. That’s as strong a protection as any state in the country offers.

Red Flag Law

Kansas does not have a red flag law. No ERPO legislation has been enacted. HB 2198 proposed gun violence restraining orders in the 2025-2026 session but has seen no committee movement. Kansas has been consistently hostile to red flag proposals.

NFA Items

All NFA items are legal in Kansas with proper federal registration: suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, machine guns (pre-1986 transferable), AOWs, and destructive devices.

Kansas passed the Second Amendment Protection Act (KSA 50-1201 through 50-1211) in 2013, which claimed that firearms and accessories manufactured and kept within Kansas are exempt from federal regulation. A word of caution: this law has NOT been upheld by federal courts. Shane Cox manufactured suppressors in Kansas relying on this act and was convicted federally. The conviction was upheld on appeal. Federal NFA compliance is still required regardless of what the Kansas statute says.

As of March 2026, HB 2501 passed the Kansas Senate 37-3 and would remove suppressors and short-barreled firearms from the state’s controlled weapons list under KSA 21-6301. This was prompted by the federal elimination of the $200 NFA tax stamp. AG Kris Kobach called the current state/federal discrepancy a “trap” for Kansas gun owners. The bill returns to the House.

State Preemption

Kansas has strong, retroactive state preemption under KSA 12-16,124. No city or county may adopt or enforce any ordinance governing fees, licenses, permits, commerce, sale, purchase, transfer, ownership, storage, carrying, transporting, or taxation of firearms or ammunition. Any conflicting local ordinance adopted before, on, or after July 1, 2015, is null and void.

Limited exceptions exist for local government employee policies, retailers’ sales tax, and building security provisions under KSA 75-7c20. Local governments can regulate the manner of openly carrying loaded firearms by non-permit holders, but not by permit holders on public property.

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

Kansas Concealed Carry at a Glance

Constitutional carry: Yes

Honors non-resident permits: Yes — broad reciprocity

Classification: Constitutional carry / honors all valid permits

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

Can I Carry in Kansas?

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

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

Kansas recognizes all valid concealed carry permits from every other state under KSA 75-7c03. Blanket recognition, no formal agreements needed. If you have a permit from anywhere, it works in Kansas. Kansas also allows permitless carry for anyone 21+, so even visitors without permits can carry.

Kansas’s own Concealed Carry Handgun License (CCHL) is recognized by approximately 39 states, which is one of the broadest reciprocity networks in the country. The CCHL costs just $32.50 (the AG dropped their fee to zero), is valid for 4 years, and requires an 8-hour training course. At that price, it’s almost free reciprocity in 39 states.

States That Recognize Kansas CCHL

Full Reciprocity (39)NOT Recognized In
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut (limited), Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, 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, WyomingCalifornia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, Washington D.C.

Critical Details for Travelers

  • .50 Permit: Kansas CCHL is one of the cheapest permits in the country with one of the broadest reciprocity networks. The Kansas AG eliminated their processing fee, leaving only the county portion.
  • No Non-Resident Permits: Kansas does not issue non-resident concealed carry licenses. Visitors carry under permitless carry (21+) or on their home-state permit.
  • Campus Carry: Kansas allows concealed carry on public college and university campuses. No special permit required beyond the standard CCHL or constitutional carry.

Prohibited Places

Prohibited Places in Kansas

Kansas is a constitutional carry state. Prohibited places are listed in K.S.A. 75-7c10 and apply to both permitless carriers and CCH licensees.

Schools
  • K-12 schools and school grounds
  • School-sponsored events
K.S.A. 21-6309
Courthouses
  • Courthouses and courtrooms
K.S.A. 75-7c10
Government buildings
  • State and municipal buildings with adequate security measures
  • State Capitol
K.S.A. 75-7c20
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
K.S.A. 75-7c10
Last verified Source: Official state statutes

Under KSA 75-7c10 and KSA 21-6301, firearms are prohibited in:

  • Police, sheriff, and highway patrol stations.
  • Detention facilities, prisons, jails.
  • Courtrooms (by chief judge order, must have adequate security).
  • State Capitol building and Governor’s residence.
  • Polling places on election day.
  • Meetings of governing bodies of counties, cities, or political subdivisions.
  • State or municipal buildings with adequate security AND proper signage. If a building lacks adequate security (metal detectors, armed guards), concealed carry is permitted.
  • Federal property (post offices, federal courthouses, military installations).
  • Posted private property with proper signage at all exterior entrances.

The “adequate security” rule is important. If a state or municipal building doesn’t have metal detectors and armed guards, it cannot prohibit concealed carry. That means many government buildings in Kansas are effectively carry-allowed because they haven’t invested in the security infrastructure required to ban firearms. Public university campuses have allowed concealed carry since July 2017.

Recent Changes (2025-2026)

HB 2052 (signed April 2025): Allows provisional CCH holders (18-20) to upgrade to standard license upon turning 21. Also prohibits collection of personal info from off-duty LEOs entering buildings while armed.

SB 137 (signed April 2025): Authorizes the state to sell seized/forfeited firearms to FFL dealers for resale.

HB 2501 (2026, passed Senate 37-3): Removes suppressors and short-barreled firearms from the state controlled weapons list. Prompted by the federal NFA tax stamp elimination. Returns to House.

HCR 5006 (2026, in committee): Constitutional amendment to recognize the right to bear arms as fundamental with strict scrutiny, similar to Iowa’s 2022 amendment.

Federal: The “One Big Beautiful Bill” eliminated the $200 NFA tax stamp on suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, and AOWs effective January 1, 2026.

Our Take on Kansas Gun Laws

Kansas is one of the best states in the country for gun owners. Constitutional carry, Stand Your Ground with full immunity, strong retroactive preemption, campus carry, no magazine limits, no AWB, no red flag law, and all NFA items legal. The $32.50 CCHL gives you reciprocity in 39 states and the training is solid. If the legislature follows through on removing suppressors from the controlled weapons list and passes the strict scrutiny constitutional amendment, Kansas will be nearly untouchable on gun rights.

The military presence at Fort Riley and Fort Leavenworth makes Kansas a state where a lot of gun buyers are experienced, knowledgeable, and specific about what they want. Dealers in the Manhattan/Junction City and Leavenworth corridors serve that customer base well. For the complete statutes, visit the Kansas Statutes Annotated database. For CCH applications, contact the Kansas Attorney General’s Concealed Carry Licensing division. And when you’re ready to shop, check out our best gun stores in Kansas guide and compare prices at the best online gun stores.

FAQ: Kansas Gun Laws

Frequently Asked Questions

For our complete state-by-state comparison, see this state’s place in the national patchwork.

Do I need a permit to carry a gun in Kansas?

No. Kansas is a constitutional carry state as of July 1, 2015. Anyone 21 or older who can legally possess a firearm can carry concealed or openly without a permit under KSA 75-7c10. The state still issues concealed carry licenses for 32.50 dollars for reciprocity in approximately 39 other states.

Can I carry a gun on a college campus in Kansas?

Yes. Concealed carry has been legal on Kansas public university campuses since July 1, 2017. Individual universities cannot ban concealed carry in public areas unless the building has adequate security measures including metal detectors and armed guards.

Does Kansas have magazine capacity limits?

No. Kansas has no restrictions on magazine capacity and no assault weapons ban. There are no feature-based tests or named firearm lists.

Is Kansas a Stand Your Ground state?

Yes. Under KSA 21-5230, a person who is not engaged in unlawful activity and is attacked in a place where they have a right to be has no duty to retreat. Kansas also has Castle Doctrine under KSA 21-5223 and provides full immunity from both criminal prosecution and civil lawsuits for justified use of force under KSA 21-5231.

Are suppressors legal in Kansas?

Yes. All NFA items are legal in Kansas with proper federal compliance. As of March 2026, HB 2501 has passed the Kansas Senate and would remove suppressors and short-barreled firearms from the state controlled weapons list entirely. The federal tax stamp was eliminated in January 2026.

Does Kansas have a red flag law?

No. Kansas has no red flag law or Extreme Risk Protection Order system. Proposals have been introduced but have seen no committee movement. Kansas has been consistently opposed to ERPO legislation.

How much does a Kansas concealed carry license cost?

32.50 dollars total. The AG fee was reduced to zero as of July 2023, leaving only the county sheriff fee of 32.50 dollars. The license requires 8 hours of training and is valid for 4 years. Provisional licenses are available for 18 to 20 year olds.

Does Kansas recognize out-of-state carry permits?

Yes. Kansas recognizes all valid concealed carry permits from every other state under KSA 75-7c03. This is blanket recognition. Additionally, since Kansas is a constitutional carry state, any visitor 21 or older who can legally possess a firearm can carry without any permit at all.

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