Connecticut requires a person who wishes to carry a handgun concealed in public to obtain a permit. 1 Effective October 1, 2023, no permit is needed to carry a handgun within a person’s “dwelling house, on land leased or owned by such person, or within the place of business of such person. 2
A chief of police, warden or selectman shall issue a permit to carry a handgun to a person who: 3
Connecticut courts have held that the “suitable person” standard precludes permits only to those “individuals whose conduct has shown them to be lacking the essential character of temperament necessary to be entrusted with a weapon.” 8
Any person violating the concealed weapons permitting provisions will, in addition to other criminal penalties, be forced to forfeit any handgun found in his or her possession. 9
In N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n v. Bruen, the U.S. Supreme Court indicated that Connecticut’s concealed carry permit system did not violate the Second Amendment because it contained “narrow, objective, and definite standards” guiding licensing officials and was designed “to ensure only that those bearing arms . . . are, in fact, law-abiding, responsible citizens.” 10
Connecticut requires that applicants for a state concealed weapons permit first successfully complete a course approved by the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection in the safety and use of pistols and revolvers including, but not limited to, a safety or training course in the use of pistols and revolvers available to the public offered by a law enforcement agency, a private or public educational institution or a firearms training school, utilizing instructors certified by the National Rifle Association or the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection, and a safety or training course in the use of pistols or revolvers conducted by an instructor certified by the state or the National Rifle Association. 11
Beginning July 1, 2024, applicants must have completed the training within two years prior to the submission of their application; the training must also include instruction in state law requirements for the safe storage of firearms in the home and in vehicles, lawful use of firearms and lawful carrying of firearms in public. 12 .
A permit to carry a handgun is valid for up to five years from the date the permit became effective. 13 Each renewal permit is valid for five years. 14 Connecticut enacted a law in 2011 allowing individuals to renew permits by mail. 15 There is no safety training requirement upon renewal.
Connecticut does not allow personal application or permit information of concealed weapons permit holders to be made public. The name and address of a person issued a state permit to carry a handgun or a local permit to carry a handgun issued prior to October 1, 2001 (the effective date of the law authorizing state-issue permits in place of local permits), may not be disclosed, except to:
A bona fide resident of the United States who does not reside or work in Connecticut and holds a concealed handgun permit issued by another state may apply to the Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection for a permit to carry a handgun in Connecticut. 17
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