Nevada gun laws allow for the open carry of firearms without the need for a license or registration. However, you are required to obtain a CCW permit in order to carry a concealed weapon or risk facing felony charges.
You also face stiff prison sentences for violating such firearm laws as:
However, it is possible just to pay a fine for other firearm crimes, such as
Guns are largely prohibited at certain locations, as the following table illustrates:
Background checks are required for all gun sales. If you lose your Nevada gun rights, you might be able to get them back through a pardon. With some exceptions, children under 18 may not possess guns at all. Plus, immigrants convicted of a firearm crime risk deportation.
In this article, our Las Vegas criminal defense attorneys answer faqs about Nevada firearm laws with links to our in-depth articles on each subject.
- 1. Where are firearms illegal?
- 2. Is open carry legal?
- 3. Is concealed carry legal?
- 4. Do criminal records or restraining orders affect firearm rights?
- 5. What are the penalties for firearms crimes?
- 6. Will having a firearm increase my sentence?
- 7. How can gun rights be restored?
- 8. Is it a crime to carry a gun while drinking?
- 9. When can hunters have guns?
- 10. Can children carry guns?
- 11. Are assault weapons legal?
- 12. Can I transport guns in my car?
- 13. Are background checks required?
- 14. What are immigrants’ firearms rights?
- 15. What is the red flag law?
- 16. Are ghost guns legal in Nevada?
- Related articles
- Additional reading
1. Where are firearms illegal?
The Second Amendment protects the right to bear arms for security, hunting, recreational use, and other lawful purposes in the United States, but there are limitations. Pistols, handguns, and rifles/long guns are off-limits at the following Nevada locations:
- public airports (past the secure areas) and planes,
- childcare facilities (without written permission),
- public schools and private schools (without written permission),
- Nevada System of Higher Education property (without written permission),
- legislative buildings,
- post offices,
- VA facilities,
- federal facilities,
- military bases (with some exceptions)
- Hoover Dam
Many of these public buildings have metal detectors at each public entrance.
Possessing a gun in a prohibited location is a misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to six (6) months in jail, and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines, and
- maybe community service
Note that firearm registration in Nevada is not required to have a firearm.1
2. Is open carry legal?
Open carry is legal throughout Nevada unless otherwise forbidden by federal or state law. Eighteen is the minimum age to possess firearms (with some exceptions). Learn more in our articles on open carry laws and carrying loaded guns/loaded firearms/loaded rifles.2
3. Is concealed carry legal?
Concealed carry is legal throughout Nevada as long as you have a valid carrying concealed weapons (CCW) permit. Nevada is a shall-issue state.
If you are a Nevada resident, you need a conceal carry permit from the county where you reside. This requires demonstrating firearm safety, usually by taking a course. (Click here for a list of Nevada sheriffs, including the Clark County Sheriff.) For non-Nevada residents, the Department of Public Safety recognizes CCW permits from Nevada and these states.
A law enforcement agency will deny CCW permits to you if:
- you have been admitted to a mental health facility within the last 5 years or
- you have an outstanding warrant.
Carrying a concealed firearm without a valid permit is a category C felony in Nevada, carrying:
- one to five (1 – 5) years in prison, and
- maybe a $10,000 fine
Learn more in articles about concealed carry laws, CCW reciprocity with non-residents, and how to obtain a CCW permit.3
4. Do criminal records or restraining orders affect firearm rights?
Criminal records
If you have felony convictions or domestic violence convictions, you may not have a firearm in Nevada. Firearm possession is also prohibited for:
- fugitives,
- drug addicts,
- convicted stalkers,
- people subject to a domestic violence protection order,
- people adjudicated as mentally ill or who have been committed and
- illegal aliens
Being an ex-felon, fugitive, or drug addict in possession of a firearm is a category B felony. The punishment is:
- one to six (1 – 6) years in prison, and
- maybe a $5,000 fine
The maximum prison sentence goes down to four (4) years if you are an illegal alien or mentally ill. Learn more in our article about being a prohibited person in possession of a firearm (NRS 202.360).4
Restraining orders
If you are the subject of a restraining order, you must surrender your guns and refrain from possessing firearms. Possessing firearms in violation of a restraining order is a gross misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to 364 days in jail, and/or
- up to $2,000 in fines
Learn more in our article about laws for firearms and restraining orders.5
5. What are the penalties for firearm crimes?
5.1. Crimes involving shooting firearms
Shooting a gun from inside a vehicle or structure in a wanton or malicious way in a populated area is a category B felony, carrying:
- two to fifteen (2 – 15) years in prison, and/or
- maybe a $5,000 fine
Otherwise, the discharge of firearms in an unpopulated area is a misdemeanor carrying:
- up to six (6) months in jail and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines
The same penalties apply for firing a gun into an abandoned vehicle or structure. But if the vehicle or building is occupied, shooting is a category B felony carrying:
- one to six (1 – 6) years in prison, and/or
- up to $5,000 in fines
Learn more in our articles about shooting guns from a car or structure (NRS 202.287), shooting guns into a car or structure (NRS 202.285), discharging a weapon in public (NRS 202.280), and drive-by-shootings.6
5.2. Crimes involving aiming or drawing firearms
Assaulting a person with a gun is a category B felony, carrying:
- one to six (1 – 6) years in prison, and/or
- up to $5,000 in fines
Merely aiming a gun at a person is a gross misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to 364 days in jail, and/or
- up to $2,000 in fines
And simply brandishing a gun in a threatening manner is a misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to six (6) months in jail, and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines
Learn more in our articles about
- assault with a deadly weapon,
- aiming a gun at a person (NRS 202.290), and
- brandishing a gun (NRS 202.320).7
5.3. Crimes involving possessing, making, and selling guns and ammo
It is a category C felony to sell or give a firearm to either a:
- fugitive,
- illegal alien,
- mentally ill person,
- felon, or
- person indicted for a felony
The sentence carries:
- one to ten (1 – 10) years in prison, and
- maybe a $10,000 fine.
Knowingly possessing, making, or disposing of a short-barreled rifle or shotgun is a category D felony, carrying:
- one to four (1 – 4) years in prison, and
- maybe a $5,000 fine.
And making or selling metal penetrating bullets for shotguns is a gross misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to 364 days in jail, and/or
- up to $2,000 in fines
Learn more in our article about possessing and selling guns and ammo. Also see our article about other gun crimes including spring gun laws (NRS 202.255) and ammunition laws (NRS 202.273).8
5.4. Crimes involving gun serial numbers and theft
Intentionally altering a firearm’s serial number is a category C felony, carrying:
- one to five (1 – 5) years in prison, and
- maybe a $10,000 fine
Meanwhile, knowingly possessing a gun with a changed serial number is a category D felony, carrying:
- One to four (1 – 4) years in prison, and
- maybe a $5,000 fine
Stealing a gun is a category B felony, carrying
- one to ten (1 – 10) years in prison, and
- up to $10,000 in fines, and
- victim restitution
Also, see our articles about changing gun serial numbers (NRS 202.277) and stealing guns (NRS 205.226).9
6. Will having a firearm increase my sentence?
When you use a gun to carry out a crime in Nevada, the courts may double that crime’s sentence to up to twenty (20) extra years in prison. For example, the maximum sentence for the robbery (NRS 200.380) is 15 years in prison. If you had a gun, the judge could double it to 30 years.
Note that enhanced sentences for gun use do not apply to cases where the gun was a necessary element of the crime itself, such as aiming a gun at someone or brandishing a gun (see the previous section for more examples). Learn more in our article about using a firearm in the commission of a crime.10
Note that committing burglary (NRS 205.060) or home invasion (NRS 205.067) while possessing a gun is a category B felony, carrying:
- two to fifteen (2 – 15) years in prison, and
- maybe a $10,000 fine.
Without gun possession, the prison sentence for burglary or home invasion is one to ten (1-10) years.11
7. How can gun rights be restored?
The only way to restore gun rights in Nevada is to get a pardon (which is different from record sealing).
There is a mandatory waiting period to petition for pardons. The length depends on the class of crime you were convicted of:
Category of crime in Nevada | Waiting period to apply for pardon |
---|---|
Misdemeanor battery domestic violence | 5 years after release from actual custody, or
5 years after the case ends. (whichever is later) |
Category E felony | 6 years from release from probation, parole or prison. |
Category D felony | 8 years from release from probation, or
9 years from release from parole or prison. |
Category C felony | 8 years from release from probation, or
9 years from release from parole or prison. |
Category B felony | 8 years from release from probation, or
10 years from release from parole or prison |
Category A felony | 12 years from release from probation, parole or prison |
Learn more in our article on restoring gun rights in Nevada.12
8. Is it a crime to carry a gun while drinking?
Carrying a gun while drinking or in a bar is not itself illegal. However, it is a misdemeanor in Nevada to possess a gun with a blood alcohol level (BAL) of .08% or higher or while under the influence of controlled substances. The location does not matter, such as
- at home,
- at work,
- during lawful hunting, or
- at a shooting range.
The sentence is:
- up to six (6) months in jail, and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines
Learn more in our article about gun possession under the influence (NRS 202.257).13
9. When can hunters have guns?
You are required to have licenses in order to hunt with guns in Nevada. Hunting without a license is a misdemeanor, carrying:
- up to six (6) months in jail, and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines
Learn more in our article about laws for hunting with a firearm.14
10. Can children carry guns?
With some exceptions, children under eighteen (18) may not have guns in Nevada. Children adjudicated delinquent for violating gun laws may be ordered (for a first offense):
- to perform 200 hours of community service, and
- to lose their driver’s license for up to one (1) year
Children who break Nevada’s hunting laws will lose their hunting license for at least two (2) years. Learn more in our article about Nevada juvenile gun laws.15
Giving a gun to children
If you unlawfully aid a child in possessing a gun, you face criminal charges as well. Helping a child get a hold of a gun if there is a substantial risk the child will be violent is a category C felony, carrying:
- one to five (1 – 5) years in prison, and
- maybe a $10,000 fine.
If there is no substantial risk the child will be violent, unlawfully giving a child a gun is a misdemeanor (for a first-time offense). The sentence is:
- up to six (6) months in jail, and/or
- up to $1,000 in fines
Learn more in our article about aiding children to come into possession of a gun (NRS 202.300).16
11. Are assault weapons legal?
Nevada law does not mention assault weapons. However, federal law forbids machine gun possession unless it was lawfully possessed and registered prior to May 19, 1986. Illegal possession of a machine gun is a felony carrying:
- up to ten (10) years in federal prison, and/or
- a fine of up to $250,000.
Note that bump stocks – which essentially turn semiautomatic firearms into automatic ones – were illegal to own under federal law as of March 26, 2019. However, this federal ban was lifted on June 14, 2024 by the U.S. Supreme Court. The ban had been a reaction to the Las Vegas Mandalay Bay shooting on October 1, 2017.17
Learn more in our article about assault weapon laws.
12. Can I transport guns in my car?
In Nevada, it is legal to open-carry handguns in vehicles. To conceal carry a handgun in a vehicle, you must have a CCW permit.
You do not need a CCW permit in order to transport firearms in a glove box, the center console, the trunk, or other location where it is out-of-sight. But note that Nevada law prohibits driving with a loaded rifle or shotgun: There can be a loaded magazine as long as no cartridge is in the firing chamber.18
Learn more in our article about Nevada car carry.
13. Are background checks required?
You need to submit to a Nevada background check in both commercial and private gun sales and transfers.
In 2016, Nevada voters approved a new law that would have required private gun merchants to run criminal background checks on prospective buyers, though the law never went into effect. On February 15, 2019, the Nevada governor signed Senate Bill 143 (2019) into law, now requiring background checks in private gun sales as well.19
14. What are immigrants’ firearm rights?
An immigrant’s legal status determines whether they may possess firearms.
In general, green card holders may possess firearms. Non-immigrant visa holders may possess firearms in certain situations, such as if they have a valid hunting license. And illegal aliens usually may not possess guns. Learn more in our article about immigrant and firearm laws.
Note that violating firearm laws is a deportable offense. Therefore, non-citizens charged with firearm crimes should retain an experienced criminal defense attorney to try to get the charge dropped or reduced to a non-removable offense.20
15. What is the “red flag” law?
Nevada’s red flag law allows courts to issue an order prohibiting you from possessing firearms if you have displayed “high-risk” behavior. “High-risk behavior” is when you either:
- Use, attempt to use or threaten the use of physical force against another person;
- Communicate a threat of imminent violence toward yourself or against another person;
- Commit an act of violence directed toward yourself or another person;
- Engage in a pattern of threats of violence or acts of violence against yourself or another person;
- Exhibit conduct which a law enforcement officer reasonably determines would present a serious and imminent threat to the safety of the public;
- Engage in conduct that presents a danger to yourself or another person while in possession, custody or control of a firearm or while purchasing or otherwise acquiring a firearm;
- Abuse a controlled substance or alcohol while engaging in high-risk behavior;
- Acquire a firearm or other deadly weapon within the immediately preceding six months before you otherwise engage in high-risk behavior;
- Have been previously convicted of a felony crime of violence (as defined in NRS 200.408); or
- Have been previously convicted of violating a restraining order to protect against domestic violence or sexual assault.
The following people can ask the court to issue this “order for protection against high-risk behavior” against you:
- Law enforcement officers who have probable cause to believe that you pose an imminent risk of causing a self-inflicted injury or a personal injury to another person by having a gun.
- Family or household members who believe you pose an imminent risk of causing a self-inflicted injury or a personal injury to another person by having a gun. (“Family and household members” comprise guardians, co-parents, domestic partners, significant others, and family by blood, adoption or marriage within the first degree of consanguinity.)
Nevada courts can grant a seven-day-long emergency order prohibiting you from having a gun without you being at the hearing or even receiving notice of the hearing. The court just has to find by a preponderance of the evidence that:
- You pose an imminent risk of causing a self-inflicted injury or a personal injury to another person by possessing, controlling, purchasing or otherwise acquiring any firearm; and
- You engaged in high-risk behavior; and
- Less restrictive options have been exhausted or are not effective.
Before the emergency order ends, the court will hold a second hearing to determine whether to grant a one-year extended order. (You must have been given notice of the hearing and an opportunity to appear.) The court will grant the extended order if it finds the above three conditions by clear and convincing evidence.
You must surrender your firearms to police immediately after you get served with the order. Plus you may not get the guns back until the order expires or is dissolved by the court.
The purpose of this red flag law is both to prevent shootings but also to get help to the would-be shooters before they misuse a dangerous weapon.21
16. Are ghost guns legal in Nevada?
Assembly Bill 286 (2021) made it unlawful to possess or sell untraceable weapons (guns lacking serial numbers), including frames and receivers made with 3D printers or in unassembled gun kits. However, a Lyon County judge recently nullified the part of the ban covering gun kits. The state will likely appeal.22
In addition, the federal government may soon be banning ghost guns by requiring serial numbers on gun parts and background checks to purchase them.23
Related Articles
For more information from our Las Vegas criminal defense attorneys, refer to the following articles:
- Nevada Gun Storage Laws – What you need to know
- Self-defense laws
- Bringing firearms to schools (NRS 202.265)
- Short-barreled shotguns (NRS 202.275)
- Carrying a concealed weapon in Las Vegas – 3 things to know
- Nevada taser laws: 3 key things to know
- Federal crime of using firearms to carry out drug trafficking or violent crimes (18 U.S.C. § 924(c))
- Las Vegas Gun Lawyer.
Additional Reading
For more in-depth information, refer to these scholarly articles:
- What’s Going Wrong in Nevada? A Comparative Analysis of California and Nevada Gun Control Laws as They Relate to Gun Violence – Claremont McKenna thesis
- State gun laws and the movement of crime guns between states – International Review of Law and Economics
- Guns in the Sky: Nevada’s Firearm Laws, 1 October, and Next Steps – Nevada Law Journal forum
- In-State and Interstate Associations Between Gun Shows and Firearm Deaths and Injuries – Annals of Internal Medicine
- The relation between state gun laws and the incidence and severity of mass public shootings in the United States, 1976–2018 – Law and Human Behavior
Legal References
- NRS 218A.905; NRS 202.265; The Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990; 38 CFR §1.218 (13); 39 CFR § 232.1(l); 18 USC § 930; 54 USC § 104906; 49 CFR § 1540.111; 49 USC § 46505; 43 CFR § 423.30.
- NRS 202.360; NRS 202.300; NRS 33.031; 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9).
- NRS 202.350; NRS 202.3657; Attorney General Opinion No. 93-14; Nevada state law has preemption over local laws, though local authorities can regulate the discharge of firearms. NRS 268.418. Neighboring states that have CCW reciprocity with Nevada include Utah, Idaho, and Arizona.
- NRS 202.360.
- NRS 33.031.
- NRS 202.287; NRS 202.285.
- NRS 200.471; NRS 202.290; NRS 202.320.
- NRS 202.362.
- NRS 202.277; NRS 205.226.
- NRS 193.165.
- NRS 205.060; NRS 205.067.
- NRS 213.
- NRS 202.257.
- NRS 502.
- NRS 62D.
- NRS 202.300.
- 18 USC § 922 (o); Devlin Barrett, “Justice Department will ban bump-stock devices that turn rifles into fully automatic weapons,” Washington Post (December 18, 2018). Lawrence Hurley, Supreme Court rules gun ‘bump stocks’ ban is unlawful, NBC (June 14, 2024).
- NRS 503.165. NRS 202.350.
- Lois Beckett, “Nevada voters approved a new gun control law – so why was it not enforced?” The Guardian (October 3, 2017). Nevada Senate Bill 143 (2019); Bill Dentzer, “Sisolak signs Nevada gun background checks bill into law,” Las Vegas Review-Journal (February 15, 2019).
- 8 USC § 1227.
- Nevada Legislature Assembly Bill 291 (2019). NRS 33.500 – NRS 33.670.
- Bill Dentzer, Assembly bill targets ‘ghost guns’ in Nevada, Las Vegas Review-Journal (March 17, 2021); see also Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S. Code § 921). Sean Golonka, State judge strikes down key parts of Nevada’s ‘ghost gun’ ban, Nevada Independent (December 13, 2021).
- Lauren Egan and Shannon Pettypie, Biden targets ‘ghost guns’ and ‘red flag’ laws in new gun control measures, NBC News (April 8, 2021).