Oregon Bans Ghost Guns with Strict Serialization Requirements
Analysis of new Oregon gun law: Relating to Firearms; and Declaring an Emergency. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.
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Comprehensive analysis of Oregon gun laws, permit requirements, carry regulations, knife laws, and recent legislative updates for responsible gun owners.
Oregon is a shall‑issue state for concealed handgun licenses (CHL) issued by county sheriffs. Permitless (constitutional) carry is not allowed. Open carry is generally lawful, but many cities and counties restrict loaded carry in public places unless you have a CHL. Oregon has statewide preemption for most firearm regulation, with limited local authority over loaded carry and certain public buildings. Measure 114 (2022) was upheld by the Oregon Court of Appeals in March 2025 but is scheduled to take effect March 15, 2026 (permit‑to‑purchase and >10‑round magazine ban) pending any further legal developments.

Schools, Federal buildings

Public buildings and posted local government facilities; courts; sterile areas of airports; locations posted under SB 554/SB 243 policies

Owners may prohibit firearms; posted signage + trespass enforcement

No specific statewide ban on carrying while intoxicated; impairment can trigger other offenses and CHL revocation
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Eligibility Requirements
Permitless Carry Limitations
Advantages of Licensed Carry
Application Requirements
Disqualifying Factors
This state has a Red Flag law, which allows authorities to restrict a resident’s ability to own or purchase a gun. These are enforced through Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs).
Emergency orders are one-sided and only last until a court hearing, when the “red flag” person can present their case, and the judge decides if a final order is necessary.
ERPOs are registered nationally in the NICS, and prevent any new purchases that require a background check.
Permitted with Local Limits Open carry is generally lawful, but cities/counties may ban loaded firearms in public places; a CHL typically exempts you from those local loaded‑carry bans.
Carry Methods
General Provisions
Background Check Process
Age Requirements
Oregon-Specific Purchase Laws
Waiting Periods
Purchase Limitations
Business Prohibition Authority
Owners must secure unattended firearms with a lock, locked container, or gun room; violations can carry civil/criminal penalties and civil liability exposure.
Licensed/Constitutional Carry Holders
Unlicensed Individuals
Federal Safe Passage (FOPA)
Home Protection
Vehicle and Workplace
Public Places
Legal Protections
Maximum Legal Blade Length
Categories of Knives
Oregon broadly allows possession of knives; the main restrictions concern concealed carry of specific knife types and possession in public buildings/schools.
Prohibited and Federally Regulated Knives
State-Specific Legal Knives
Generally Legal Knives
Carry Restrictions
Local Ordinance Preemption
Significant Differences from Gun Laws
Recent Updates
Analysis of new Oregon gun law: Relating to Firearms; and Declaring an Emergency. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.

Analysis of new Oregon gun law: Relating to firearms; creating new provisions; amending ORS 166.360, 166.370, 166.438, and 659A.885; repealing section 5, chapter 1, Oregon Laws 2023; and declaring an

Analysis of new Oregon gun law: Changes to Firearm Ownership and Purchase Requirements Initiative. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.