“Concealed firearm” is a loaded or unloaded handgun which is
carried upon a person in such a manner as not to be discernible by ordinary
observation (
NRS
202.3653), this
includes
in a carried bag/purse.
Concealing a firearm
without a permit is a felony. Nevada is not a constitutional carry
state.
Part 1
Take an eight hour concealed firearm permit course approved
by the sheriff. Out-of-state or military training does not qualify.
Residents: Apply to the sheriff of your county.
Non-residents: Apply to the sheriff of any county (for
example, Clark County routinely takes 90-100 days to approve a concealed
firearm permit). Visiting America/Nevada?
You can open carry!
Illegal immigrants cannot possess firearms and non-citizens generally have
their permit applications denied.
Part 2
Only one application is needed for every firearm you own and
you do not have to list each firearm individually; the
'revolver/semi-automatic' distinction has been abolished as of 2011. The issued
permit will cover every handgun you own or acquire.
Part 3
The sheriff shall issue a permit to any applicant who is
qualified to possess a handgun under state and federal law and must do so
within 120 days or deny the permit for lawful reasons
(NRS 202.366).
In rare cases, temporary permits may be issued for delayed applications.
Qualifications:
1. Be 21 or older
2. Not a felon, a fugitive, a drug addict, have never been
adjudicated mentally ill or committed, not an illegal alien, nor have been
convicted of a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence (
NRS 202.360).
You must also: Demonstrate competence with a handgun by
successfully completing a course in firearm safety approved by a sheriff in
this State; or successfully complete a course in firearm safety offered by a
federal, state or local law enforcement agency, community college, university
or national organization that certifies instructors in firearm safety. The
course must include instruction in the use of handguns and in the laws of this
State relating to the use of a firearm and must meet
the
standards of the Nevada Sheriffs’ and Chiefs’ Association. Out-of-state
permits or military training/discharge does not qualify as in other states.
Note: Make sure the sheriff you are applying to approves
your specific handgun course.
Part 4
Your permit shall be denied if you fail to meet the above
requirements or at least one of the following is true:
1. You have an outstanding arrest warrant.
2. You have been declared incompetent or insane or have been
have been admitted to a mental health facility within the last 5 years.
3. You have been convicted of DUI within the last 5 years or
committed to rehab for drugs or alcohol within the last 5 years.
4. You have been convicted of a violent misdemeanor within
the last 3 years or are a felon.
5. You have been convicted of a domestic violence crime or
have a restraining order against you due to domestic violence.
6. You are on parole or probation or you have a suspended
felony against you within the last 5 years.
7. You made a false statement on your application.
Your permit will be suspended or revoked if the sheriff
finds out about you being disqualified by anything in Part 4.
Important
Do not sign your
application until you are directed to
so by a sheriff's employee, unless you have the form notarized.
Be sure to provide a passport style color photo of you from
the front. One may be taken of you by the sheriff. You will also pay fees of
not more that $60 to the sheriff (FBI fees will be extra).
The sheriff will fingerprint you. You will be 'run' through
the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, the
Central Repository for
Nevada Records of Criminal History, and through the FBI database (
NRS 202.366).
Be sure to carefully
review and follow all the instructions on the application form. Refer to the
sheriff's instructions for how each office handles the actual application and
fingerprinting process, which may vary slightly from above.
If your application is denied, you may appeal in district
court for the county in which you applied (
NRS 202.3663).
The process can take up to 120 days, especially in Clark
County. Be prepared to wait and open carry in the mean time.
Renewal
Unless suspended or revoked, a permit is valid five (5)
years from the issue date. Plan the renewal in advance, as in Clark County,
renewal application processing can take between 90-120 days.
Complete the process as above for applying for a permit,
except the fees are $25 and the class is four (4) hours (
NRS 202.3677).
When You Get Your Concealed Firearms
Permit
Check the information on your card! If it is incorrect, call
the sheriff's office immediately.
You must carry your permit and proper ID (such as a driver
license) when carrying a concealed firearm. Both the permit and proper
identification must be presented if asked by a peace officer (no duty to first
inform). A violation is an infraction punishable by a $25 fine (
NRS 202.3667).
Note that this does not require you to carry your concealed firearm permit when
carrying openly. Nevada does not require you to notify a peace officer that you
are carrying a firearm, but out of courtesy and for your own safety, if you are
being detained, you may choose to inform the officer you are lawfully carrying
a concealed firearm.
Changes and lost
permits
If your permanent address changes (i.e. you move), you must
notify the sheriff in writing within 30 days. If your permit is lost, stolen,
or destroyed, you must within 30 days, submit a written statement to the
sheriff that your permit was lost, stolen, or destroyed and pay a replacement
$15 fee. Should you recover your original permit, you must return the duplicate
permit and notify the sheriff in writing within 10 days (
NRS 202.367).
Guns Carried
For permits issued on or after July 1, 2011, any owned
handgun, semi-automatic pistol or revolver, can be carried concealed by a
permittee. If the permit was issued before July 1, 2011, the permit will list
the specific authorized handguns that can be legally carried. There is no legal
opinion whether that requirement for pre 7/1/2011 permittees would still have
legal force or is actively being enforced. All 'listed weapons' permits will
expire on July 1, 2016 and licensee's renewals will cover any handgun the
permittee owns.
As a licensed
concealed carrier, is my personal information public record?
No. Bare statistics, such as how many permits have been
issued are permissible public records, but personally identifying information
is only available to law enforcement officers/agencies in their official duties
(
NRS
202.3662).
Can I get a temporary
concealed firearm permit?
In theory, yes. Practically, they are issued very rarely to
those who have taken the course of instruction and applied for a permanent
permit, usually when a clerical error delays the issuing (or denial) of the
permanent permit beyond the 120-day deadline. Issuing temporary permits is
solely at the discretion of the sheriff and the expiration date is set by the
sheriff.
Background Check
Exemption
Most Nevada permittees qualify for an exemption from the
requirement to undergo the background check (as they've already been vetted)
when buying a firearm from a dealer and paying the $25 fee. The Form 4473 is
still completed and a copy of the permit is needed for the dealer's records.
For permits issued on or after July 1, 2011, the permittee
would be exempt from the Brady Bill background check when buying from a licensed
dealer. Permits issued before this would be invalid because the ATF decertified
the state after it was revealed some sheriffs were not complying with certain
renewal requirements required to qualify for the exemption. This would not
qualify to avoid the duty to obtain a private-sale background check if the
universal background check initiative (
Ballot
Question 1) passes in 2016 or if those background checks would still be
free.
Non-residents and
non-resident permits (reciprocity)
Recognized states are set by the Nevada Sheriffs’ and
Chiefs’ Association pursuant to
state law.
If you hold a recognized permit on the reciprocity list, and you do not reside
in Nevada, you may legally carry a concealed firearm in Nevada.
Nevada residents must hold a Nevada-issued concealed firearm
permit to carry a concealed firearm. Non-resident or out-of-state permits are
not recognized for Nevada residents. There is no specific exemption for
military members or their spouses.
If you have recently become a resident of Nevada and hold a
non-resident or out-of-state permit, there is a 60 day grace period if the
sheriff of your county has not issued you a Nevada permit. For example, if you
hold a concealed firearm permit from Arizona, but you live in Laughlin, it
would be illegal to carry a concealed firearm in Nevada using an out-of-state
permit.
Our state, our rules.
Holders of a non-resident concealed firearm permit must
abide by the same restrictions in carrying a concealed firearm as they would as
if they held Nevada concealed firearm permit (
NRS 202.3688).
On the plus side, Nevada's concealed carry laws are among the most relaxed
among the states that require a permit. You can carry in bars and drink alcohol
(don't get intoxicated), in cars, and signage doesn't have the force of law.
Where is concealed carry illegal?
Federally prohibited places
- Firearms, loaded or unloaded, concealed or openly carried,
are prohibited in the following places:
- Inside federal facilities
(including courthouses and offices like a Social Security office);
- On military bases (military personnel should refer to DoD
policy and post orders);
- Post Office property (includes the parking lot), but not
post-office windows in stores (contract stations), 39 CFR 232.1(l);
- VA
hospitals/facilities including federal veterans' cemeteries (carrying).
Firearms
are banned in "a building or part thereof owned or leased by the Federal
Government, where Federal employees are regularly present for the purpose of
performing their official duties" and includes essentially all parts of
federal court facilities (
18 USC § 930). 'No
weapons' signs must be posted at federal facilities in order for someone to be
convicted (but you may be arrested).
On
National Park Service lands
(National Parks, Monuments, etc.), the only restrictions on firearm carry are
state and local laws (
54 USC § 104906).
If you can carry legally outside the park, you can carry legally inside the
park. The park buildings (visitor centers, offices, etc.) are still federal
facilities and off-limits to firearms.
Red Rock National Conservation Area is
'special' and does not allow loaded firearms (no magazine/clip inserted, no
rounds attached to the weapon or in the chamber). It is not a part of the
National Park System and is managed by the Bureau of Land Management. More
in
this article and
sign the
petition here. National Forest lands in Nevada have no ban on the carry of
firearms.
State prohibited
places
All firearms are prohibited in the following places:
- On the premises of a public school, on the property of the
Nevada System of Higher Education, or a child care facility without written
permission of the college president, school principal, or head of a public
child care facility, including in the parking lot (NRS 202.265).
- A private in-home child care facility, except by the
homeowner(s) or residents. [Ibid.]
- The legislative building or wherever the legislature is
conducting business (NRS 218A.905).
- The secure area of an airport (for instance, employee-only
areas or past the TSA checkpoints).
- Inside a building of a public airport (open carry is legal
outside of the secure area).
- Inside a public building (government building) with either 'no guns' signs or metal
detectors at each public entrance
(open carry may be legal). See below for more details.
The Legislative Counsel (the state legislature's attorney)
found
in this opinion that
open carry is legal
in public areas of public buildings. Concealed carry is legally restricted
in more locations than
open
carry is.
Two Important
Exceptions to Public Buildings
Per NRS 202.3673(4)(c) Permittees who are employees of a
public building may carry a concealed firearm in that posted building, however,
the state preemption
laws, allow local authorities to make their own policies regarding
firearms. So while a permittee may carry legally inside the building, they can
be disciplined or fired if they carry in violation of their employer's ban on
carrying firearms.
If the permittee has received written permission from the
person in control of the public building to carry a concealed firearm, they may
do so, but permission is rarely granted. Employees in a public building (except
a school) can carry concealed, but are not exempted from their employer's
policies which may ban firearms.
Do I have to obey ‘no
guns’ signs on private property?
No, signs do not have the force of law in Nevada on private
property. If the owner or management wants you to leave or disarm, you must
comply or you can be arrested for trespassing. Making sure that the owner or
corporate management knows they lost your business for denying you the right to
lawfully carry is a good course of action. The majority of Nevada businesses
are firearm friendly.
Can I carry
concealed on private property or in my home?
No. Concealed carry without a permit is illegal everywhere
in the state. While it is unlikely you will be arrested for carrying a
concealed firearm without a permit on your own private property, it is not
legal. See
NRS
202.350 1.(d)
Can I carry concealed
at the mall? Can I carry concealed at a casino?
Yes, legally you can carry on private property (except
private schools and daycares) even if there is a 'no guns' sign. However, most
indoor malls and casinos will ask you to disarm or leave the property if you
are discovered. All they can do is ask you to disarm or tell you to leave.
Failure to do so would be a trespassing violation.
Can I carry concealed
in a bar? Can I drink while carrying?
There is no law against carrying openly or concealed in bar
or while drinking, however, it is a crime to be in possession of firearm when
one’s blood alcohol content (BAC) is .10 or greater.
NRS 202.257
Do I need to carry my
blue card with me when I carry my gun?
No. The
'blue
card' system has recently been abolished. A blue card was never a license to
carry a firearm, simply a receipt of registration. Concealed carry requires a
concealed firearms permit.
Does Nevada recognize
my state’s permit?
I have a non-resident
permit from another state, but I live in Nevada. Can I carry concealed?
No. You must have a Nevada permit to carry a concealed
firearm if you have reside in the state, but new residents have 60 day grace
period until they must have a Nevada permit to carry concealed legally in
Nevada.
I'm from Arizona or
another constitutional carry state and don't have a permit. Can I carry concealed
in Nevada? No, you must have a concealed firearm permit in your home state
or a non-resident state that Nevada recognizes, or one from Nevada. Open carry
does not require a permit.
Concealed carry is
better than open carry because surprise will work to my advantage.
The idea behind this is that an openly carried weapon may
make the carrier a primary target of the criminal/terrorist. The concealed
carrier would blend in with the crowd, and then draw at when it was to their
advantage.
This assumption is generally false in the absence of
evidence that an openly carried weapon leads to victimization. Abundant
evidence is available that open carry is indeed a deterrent to crime. Concealed
carry lacks that deterrent factor. The 'gray man' element, appearing
unremarkable and blending in with the crowd, only has application when one may
be specifically sought out; such as in the case of a police officer. The desire
not to be spotted carrying a firearm or otherwise identified typically comes
from the police influence in the concealed carry training world.
The advantage of concealed carry lies in the fact that it
may be possible to carry in places where open carriers would be shunned or
asked to leave, such as casinos. Legally speaking, the advantage is with open
carry, yet due to modern sensitivities, the discreet option of undetected
concealed carry would prevent any debates with anti-gunners or objections to
having the weapon on private property where the owner/management might prohibit
it. Also, given one’s choice of dress or activities, concealed carry may be
more appropriate.
The debate is largely a matter of taste and environment. A
citizen carrier with anti-gun customers or friends may want to protect
themselves without alienating others. Some may feel uncomfortable carrying
openly. Whatever the choice, it is a personal one and not to be judged or
criticized.
Open carry and
concealed carry each have their own unique advantages and disadvantages;
neither is inherently superior to the other. Both methods complement each other
and allow for flexibility in self-defense.
Training? Contact your local gun store or
range for recommendations or ask your sheriff’s office for a list of certified
instructors that they recognize (but not endorse).