Secure Gun Storage
What does it solve?
Gun owners can make their homes and communities safer by storing their guns securely. This means storing them unloaded, locked, and separate from ammunition.
Research shows secure storage practices play a vital role in reducing the risk of gun violence. Storing firearms securely protects children and adults by preventing unintentional shootings, gun suicides, and gun theft.
Which states have child-access and/or secure storage laws?
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Alabama has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Alaska has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Arizona has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Arkansas has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
California has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- Any time not in owner's immediate control
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Colorado has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Connecticut has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- Any time not in owner's immediate control
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Delaware has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Florida has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 16
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Georgia has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Hawaii has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Idaho has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Illinois has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 14
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Indiana has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Iowa has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 14
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Kansas has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Kentucky has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Louisiana has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Maine has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 16
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Maryland has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Massachusetts has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- Any time not in owner's immediate control
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Michigan has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Minnesota has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Mississippi has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Missouri has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Montana has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Nebraska has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Nevada has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
New Hampshire has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 16
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
New Jersey has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 16
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
New Mexico has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
New York has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 16
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
North Carolina has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
North Dakota has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Ohio has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Oklahoma has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Oregon has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- Any time not in owner's immediate control
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Pennsylvania has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Rhode Island has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- Any time not in owner's immediate control
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
South Carolina has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
South Dakota has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Tennessee has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Texas has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 17
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Utah has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Vermont has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Virginia has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- When child may or is likely to access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 14
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Washington has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 18
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- Yes
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
West Virginia has not adopted this policy
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Wisconsin has adopted this policy
- When does the law apply?
- After child gains access
- How does the state define child?
- Under 14
- Does the state law require storage to prevent access by other prohibited people?
- No
Secure Storage or Child Access Prevention Required
Wyoming has not adopted this policy
Myth & Fact
Myth
Fact
There are many affordable options for firearm storage that provide owners with quick access to their guns while still preventing access by children and people at increased risk of harming themselves or others.
Further, it is possible that unsecured guns may actually increase the likelihood of crime and violence through an increased risk of gun theft. Each year, an estimated 200,000 to 500,000 guns are stolen, and many are funneled into the underground market, where once-legally-owned firearms can be transferred to people with dangerous histories.
How it works
Secure storage prevents shootings by disrupting unauthorized access to firearms.
Many states and Washington, DC, as well as several cities including New York and San Francisco, have enacted gun storage laws that hold gun owners accountable when children can or do access an unsecured gun. The strongest systems have consequences for any failure to secure a gun. Less-strong policies, sometimes called “Child-Access Prevention (CAP) laws,” penalize gun owners only if a child actually gains access to a firearm. While some state laws are concerned only with the threat of child access, others also include consequences if an un-secure gun is likely to be obtained by an adult who is legally prohibited from possession.
Public awareness is also critical to ensuring that guns are stored securely. Everytown’s Be SMART campaign is one of many models that can be used by public officials and members of the community to build awareness of the importance of secure firearm storage.
School districts across the country have also taken action by passing resolutions to require that information be sent home with students to educate parents about the importance of securely storing any firearms they own.1Students Demand Action, “Urge Your School Board to Act on School Safety,” January 26, 2022, https://studentsdemandaction.org/report/urge-your-school-board-to-act-on-school-safety/. And in 2022, California became the first state in the country to enact a statewide secure storage notification policy.2Everytown for Gun Safety, ”Following Tireless Advocacy by California Moms Demand Action, Students Demand Action, California Legislature Passes Groundbreaking Gun Violence Prevention Bills,” press release, August 9, 2022, https://www.everytown.org/press/following-tireless-advocacy-by-california-moms-demand-action-students-demand-action-california-legislature-passes-groundbreaking-gun-violence-prevention-bills/.
We are all safer when guns are stored unloaded, locked, and separate from ammunition. One study found that households that locked both firearms and ammunition were associated with a 78 percent lower risk of self-inflicted firearm injuries and an 85 percent lower risk of unintentional firearm injuries among children and teens, compared to those that locked neither.3David C. Grossman et al., “Gun Storage Practices and Risk of Youth Suicide and Unintentional Firearm Injuries,” JAMA 293, no. 6 (2005): 707–14, https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.293.6.707.
Another estimated that if half of households with children that have at least one unlocked gun switched to locking all their guns, one-third of youth gun suicides and unintentional deaths could be prevented, saving an estimated 251 lives in a single year.4Michael C. Monuteaux et al., “Association of Increased Safe Household Firearm Storage with Firearm Suicide and Unintentional Death Among US Youths,” JAMA Pediatrics 173, no. 7 (2019): 657–62, https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.1078.
By the numbers
54%
An estimated 54 percent of gun owners don’t lock all of their guns securely.
360
Every year, nearly 360 children under the age of 18 unintentionally shoot themselves or someone else.
4.6M
4.6 million children in the US live in a home with at least one unlocked and loaded firearm.
76%