AFTER THE COURSE
Got your PAL? How buying a gun in Canada actually works
The PAL card arrives and the licensing system goes quiet - now it’s transactions. Buying a gun in Canada with a PAL is straightforward: a store verifies your licence and sells you the firearm; a private seller must verify your licence with the Registrar first; online retailers ship to your door after the same checks. What changes at purchase is your obligations - storage and transport law attach to the firearm the moment it’s yours.
Here’s each way firearms change hands, plus the lending, gifting, and inheritance questions that fill new-owner forums.
Buying from a store
The counter process for a non-restricted rifle or shotgun:
- You present your physical PAL - the card, not a photo of it.
- The retailer verifies the licence and records the transaction per business rules.
- You pay, the firearm is cased, and transport law governs the drive home - the handbook’s advice is a locked or opaque case from the first trip.
Buying ammunition takes the same card, no separate paperwork. Buying magazines requires a licence too, with the capacity rules already settled at the factory - the 5/10-round system.
Restricted-class purchases are a longer transaction - transfer approval, registration to your address, transport authorization for the trip home - and currently the handgun freeze blocks most of the category anyway (the RPAL picture).
Buying online
Fully legal and routine: Canadian retailers list non-restricted firearms, verify your licence during checkout, and ship. Notes that save grief:
- Buy from Canadian retailers. An order from a US site is an import, which is a different project entirely.
- The courier hands over a firearm that is immediately your storage problem - have the lock or cabinet ready before the box arrives.
- Ammunition ships too, with carrier rules layered on top.
Private sales: verification is mandatory now
Since 2022, transferring a non-restricted firearm between individuals requires the seller to verify the buyer’s licence with the Registrar (online through the Individual Web Services portal or by phone at 1-800-731-4000) and receive a reference number before handing over the firearm. Practical shape of a lawful private sale:
- Buyer shows their PAL; seller checks the face of it.
- Seller runs the verification and gets the reference number - minutes, not days.
- Firearm and payment change hands; both parties keep a record of the reference number and details.
Selling without verification is an offence, and “they showed me a card” is no longer enough. There’s no federal registration of non-restricted firearms (Quebec’s provincial SIAF registry is the exception - register after a purchase there), so the verification record is the transaction’s paper trail.
Lending, gifts, spouses, inheritances
- Lending: legal to a person licensed for that class - a PAL holder can borrow your rifle for the season, no paperwork. Unlicensed borrowers only under your direct and immediate supervision (how supervised use works).
- Spouses share a house, not a licence. Your partner using your firearm alone needs their own PAL; storage in a shared home is the licensed owner’s responsibility.
- Gifts are transfers - same verification as a sale. You cannot lawfully gift a firearm to an unlicensed person, including family.
- Inheritances are transfers too. Heirs need a licence covering the class; unlicensed heirs should contact the CFP about their options (getting licensed, selling through a licensed party, or disposal) rather than quietly keeping the estate rifle - the farm-gun version of this problem is common enough to have its own guide.
How many can you own?
No limit exists - a PAL is a licence, not a quota. The real constraint is that every firearm must be stored legally all the time, so collections grow with cabinet space. Nothing extra is filed as you acquire non-restricted firearms; restricted ones each register individually.
If you’re reading this ahead of the licence itself, the buying part will wait - the course and the 2–4 month application tail won’t. Book a CFSC seat near you, and the counter transaction will be the easiest step of the whole path.
Questions people ask
How many guns can you own with one PAL?
There's no limit. A PAL is a licence to possess and acquire the class it covers, not a quota. Practical limits come from storage - every firearm you own must be stored legally.
How do private gun sales work in Canada now?
For non-restricted firearms, the seller must verify the buyer's licence with the Registrar before transferring - done online or by phone, producing a reference number. Selling without verification is an offence. Restricted transfers involve full registration transfer and approval.
Can you buy guns online in Canada?
Yes. Canadian retailers sell non-restricted firearms online and ship them, with licence verification as part of checkout. It's the same legal transaction as in-store, and transport/storage rules apply the moment it arrives.
Can I lend my rifle to a friend?
If the friend holds a licence covering that class, yes - borrowing is legal and no paperwork changes hands. Lending to an unlicensed person is only lawful under your direct and immediate supervision.
Keep reading
- Firearm storage laws in Canada: The rules in plain language - How to legally store non-restricted and restricted firearms in Canada: locking devices, containers, ammunition rules, remote-area exceptions, penalties.
- Transporting firearms in Canada: Vehicle, air and ATT rules - How to legally transport firearms in Canada: unloaded always, vehicle and unattended-car rules for non-restricted, locked-case and ATT requirements for restricted.
- 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.
