
Vermont Bans Ghost Guns: Serial Number Mandate Begins 2024
Analysis of new Vermont gun law: An act relating to prohibiting unserialized firearms. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.
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Comprehensive analysis of Vermont gun laws, permit requirements, carry regulations, knife laws, and recent legislative updates for responsible gun owners.
Vermont is a long‑standing constitutional carry state: law‑abiding adults may carry openly or concealed without a permit. The state does not issue a carry permit. Vermont has statewide preemption of most local firearm possession/carry rules, universal background checks (including most private transfers), a 72‑hour waiting period on dealer transfers, and limits on new “large‑capacity” magazines. Self‑defense is governed by statute and case law; Vermont has no stand‑your‑ground statute, but courts recognize no duty to retreat in appropriate circumstances. Recent laws add hospital and polling‑place bans, safe‑storage duties, and serialization requirements for “ghost guns” (effective 2025).

Schools, Federal buildings

loaded long guns in vehicles, magazine‑capacity rules, “ghost gun” serialization (2025)

Owners may prohibit firearms by posting or direct notice; refusal to leave after notice can be enforced as trespass

negligent use, disorderly conduct, and other crimes apply; never carry while impaired
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Eligibility Requirements
Effective since Vermont’s founding tradition (commonly called “Vermont carry”), the state allows permitless carry for individuals who:
Permitless Carry Limitations
Advantages of Licensed Carry (Travel Options)
Application Requirements (for out‑of‑state permits vary by issuing state)
Disqualifying Factors (Vermont possession/carry)
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. Openly carrying a handgun is lawful without a permit for those who may lawfully possess firearms. All sensitive‑place and private‑property rules apply.
Carry Methods
General Provisions
Background Check Process
Age Requirements
Vermont‑Specific Purchase Laws
Waiting Periods
Purchase Limitations
Business Prohibition Authority
if a child or prohibited person is likely to gain access. Safe storage is strongly recommended in all homes.
Permitless Carriers (everyone who may lawfully possess)
Federal Safe Passage (FOPA)
Home Protection
Vehicle and Workplace
Public Places
Legal Protections
Maximum Legal Blade Length
Categories of Knives
Vermont is generally knife‑permissive, with restrictions focused on switchblades (by blade length), intent, and location bans (schools, courts, hospitals, polling places).
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 Vermont gun law: An act relating to prohibiting unserialized firearms. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.

Analysis of new Vermont gun law: An act relating to prohibiting unserialized firearms. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.

Analysis of new Vermont gun law: An act relating to implementing mechanisms to reduce suicide. Constitutional implications, impact on law-abiding gun owners, and Second Amendment considerations.