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Gun laws in New Hampshire

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Gun laws in New Hampshire
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Gun laws in New Hampshire regulate the sale, possession, and use of firearms and ammunition in the state of New Hampshire in the United States.[1][2][3]

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Location of New Hampshire in the United States

New Hampshire allows the concealed or open carry of handguns without a permit. Background checks are not required for privates sales of firearms. The state has no laws defining or restricting certain firearms as assault weapons.

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Summary table

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State constitutional provisions

Article 2-a of the Constitution of New Hampshire states:

"All persons have the right to keep and bear arms in defense of themselves, their families, their property and the state."

Concealed and open carry

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Since February 22, 2017, New Hampshire has been a constitutional carry state, requiring no license to open carry or concealed carry a firearm in public. Concealed carry permits are still issued for purposes of reciprocity with other states.[4]

The New Hampshire license is issued for carry of a "pistol or revolver", and is not a license to carry "weapons" as exists in some other states. The New Hampshire license is issued by the local mayor, selectmen, or police department at a cost of $10 for residents, and by the New Hampshire State Police at a cost of $100 for non-residents (changed from $20 on July 1, 2009). The term of issue of the license is five years. Turn around time is generally one to two weeks, with fourteen days being the maximum time allowed by law.[5]

New Hampshire has no laws restricting the age at which a person may possess and carry firearms.[6][7][8]

On June 2, 2016, the New Hampshire Supreme Court, in Bach v. New Hampshire Dept. of Safety, No. 2014–0721, 2016 WL 3086130, threw out a rule imposed by concealed carry permit issuing authorities that had required non-residents to have a permit to carry issued by the state in which they resided. The basis for invalidating such rule was that it denied a New Hampshire non-resident permit to residents of jurisdictions that are effectively No-Issue, such as New Jersey, California, Hawaii, and others.

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