Canadian flagCFSC.ca

LAWS AND SAFE HANDLING

Are automatic or semi-automatic guns legal in Canada?

Independent information This page explains the process in plain language. Use the RCMP Canadian Firearms Program for current official rules, forms, fees, and decisions.

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 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:

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.

Find a course or instructor

Search the independent CFSC.ca directory. Confirm a provider’s current designation, price, and availability before booking.