LAWS AND SAFE HANDLING
Are automatic or semi-automatic guns legal in Canada?
Automatic firearms - anything that keeps firing while the trigger is held - are prohibited in Canada, and no licence a new applicant can get changes that. Semi-automatics - one shot per trigger pull, self-reloading - are a different story: they’re legal to own where the specific model and configuration sits in the non-restricted or restricted class, and a large share of Canadian hunting rifles and shotguns are exactly that.
The two get blended constantly in headlines and forum threads, so here’s where each actually stands.
Automatic: prohibited, with a closed grandfather clause
Full-auto has been effectively off the table for private acquisition since 1978. Automatic firearms are prohibited-class; so are firearms converted to fire automatically, even if converted back. The only automatics in private hands belong to a shrinking grandfathered group who owned registered ones before the cutoff - a status you cannot join by any course, licence, or payment.
Two related rules new owners should hear once, bluntly:
- Converting a semi-auto to automatic is a serious criminal offence, and the resulting firearm is prohibited regardless of the licence you hold.
- Rate-increasing devices (bump-stock-style hardware, trigger devices marketed to approximate automatic fire) sit in prohibited territory - treat anything sold on that promise as legally radioactive and verify with the RCMP before touching it.
Semi-automatic: legal, by class and by name
Semi-automatic action is itself completely legal - semi-auto shotguns for waterfowl and semi-auto .22s are among the most common firearms in the country. What decides a specific semi-auto’s status:
- Class criteria. A centre-fire semi-auto rifle with a barrel under 470 mm is restricted; ordinary-length ones are non-restricted unless named otherwise.
- Named prohibitions. The May 2020 Order in Council prohibited about 1,500 models and variants (the AR-15 platform most famously), and December 2024 regulations added several hundred more. “Variant” matters: firearms derived from a named platform are captured even under other brand names.
- Magazine limits do the practical work. A legal centre-fire semi-auto rifle is limited to 5-round magazines - the capacity rules are their own topic: magazine limits in Canada.
The consequence for buyers: never assume from looks or forum consensus. Two similar rifles can sit in different classes because one is a named variant. Before buying any semi-auto - especially used, especially anything tactical-styled - confirm the exact make and model against the RCMP’s Firearms Reference Table via the Canadian Firearms Program (1-800-731-4000). Lists have grown twice since 2020; the classes guide covers how to run that check.
What this means for a first-time buyer
- With a basic PAL from the standard path, you can own non-restricted semi-autos - which covers most practical hunting uses.
- Restricted-class semi-autos require the RPAL and bring registration, storage, and transport obligations.
- Nothing on any shelf, at any licence level, gets you automatic fire - and anything promising a workaround is a criminal case waiting for an owner.
The action-type distinctions (and how to safely handle each) are course material: the CFSC spends real time on semi-automatic actions precisely because PROVing one safe has extra steps. Find a course near you and the automatic-vs-semi-auto question gets answered with the firearms on the table.
Questions people ask
Can you own a machine gun in Canada with any licence?
No. Automatic firearms are prohibited-class, and no licence available to a new applicant permits acquiring one. A small grandfathered group has kept registered automatics owned since 1978, but that door is closed - it can't be joined.
What's the difference between automatic and semi-automatic?
Automatic fires continuously while the trigger is held. Semi-automatic fires one round per trigger pull and reloads itself. Automatics are prohibited; semi-automatics are legal or banned model by model and class by class.
Are AR-15s legal in Canada?
No for individuals. The May 2020 Order in Council moved the AR-15 platform and about 1,500 named models and variants to the prohibited class. Further models were added by regulation in December 2024.
Is converting a semi-auto to full-auto illegal?
Criminally so. A converted firearm is a prohibited firearm, the conversion itself is an offence, and devices that approximate automatic fire from a semi-auto trigger sit in prohibited-device territory. There's no legal version of this project.
Keep reading
- Firearm classes in Canada: Non-restricted vs restricted - Canada sorts firearms into three legal classes that decide which licence you need. What's in each class, the barrel-length rules, and why classifications change.
- Magazine capacity limits in Canada: The 5 and 10 round rules - Canada caps centre-fire semi-auto rifle magazines at 5 rounds and handgun magazines at 10. The design-based rule, pinning, rimfire exceptions, penalties.
- PAL vs RPAL: What's the difference and which do you need? - PAL covers rifles and shotguns; RPAL adds handguns and other restricted firearms. Compare courses, costs, rules and the handgun freeze before choosing.
- How to get a PAL in Canada: Step-by-step guide for beginners - The full path to a Canadian firearms licence (PAL) in 7 steps: take the CFSC, pass both tests, apply to the RCMP, and wait out the 28-day period. Start here.
