2025 Session Last amended: 2025 session

§ 624.714 — Carrying of Weapons Without Permit; Penalties

Plain-Language Summary

This is Minnesota's permit-to-carry law, also known as the Minnesota Citizens' Personal Protection Act of 2003. It makes it a crime to carry a pistol in public without a permit and lays out the entire system for applying for, issuing, renewing, and revoking carry permits. The permit is shall-issue, meaning the sheriff must grant it if the applicant meets the statutory criteria.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When any person wants to carry a pistol on their person or in a vehicle in a public place in Minnesota. Who this affects: Anyone who carries or wishes to carry a pistol, county sheriffs who issue permits, and private establishment owners. Key points: Carrying without a permit is a gross misdemeanor (felony for second offense); applications go to the county sheriff where the applicant resides; applicants must be at least 21, a U.S. citizen or permanent resident, complete firearms training, and not be prohibited from possessing firearms; the sheriff must act within 30 days or the permit is deemed issued; permits last 5 years, cost up to $100 (new) or $75 (renewal), and are valid statewide; no permit is needed to keep a pistol at home, at your business, or to transport an unloaded pistol in a closed case; private businesses may post signs banning firearms but violation is only a petty misdemeanor; employers and colleges may restrict carry by employees and students but cannot ban firearms in parking areas; denied applicants can appeal to district court; out-of-state permits may be recognized depending on the commissioner’s annual list.