WHO CAN APPLY
Do farmers need a gun licence? PAL rules on Canadian farms
Farmers need a PAL like everyone else - there’s no landowner exemption, no grandfathered “farm gun” category, and buying a box of .22 shells for gophers requires the same licence as anything else. What the law does provide is a set of predator-control and rural exceptions inside the storage and transport regulations, written for exactly the situation where a working firearm and a locked cabinet don’t mix.
Here’s the licence reality, the exceptions that apply on a farm, and the local rules that catch rural owners off guard.
The licence: one path, no shortcuts
Owning the farm rifle means the standard PAL path: the one-day CFSC, both tests, the RCMP application, and the two-to-four-month wait. A few farm-specific notes:
- Inherited farm guns count. Grandpa’s rifle in the barn is possession, licence required - even if it hasn’t been fired in a decade. If you’re holding inherited firearms unlicensed, call the Canadian Firearms Program (1-800-731-4000) about getting compliant rather than hoping the question never comes up.
- Everything a mixed farm uses is non-restricted - rifles and shotguns - so the basic PAL covers it; no farmer needs restricted privileges for farm work.
- Kids on the farm follow the normal age rules: Minor’s Licence at 12–17 to use non-restricted firearms under its conditions, supervised use before that.
The predator-control exceptions, precisely
The Storage, Display, Transportation and Handling Regulations contain carve-outs that exist for farms, and they’re narrower than rural folklore says:
- Temporary unlocked storage: where it’s legal to discharge a firearm, a non-restricted firearm being used for predator control may be stored temporarily unlocked and out in the open - but still unloaded, and still not within easy access to ammunition. This is the “rifle by the porch door during lambing” provision; it is not a year-round exemption from storage law.
- Remote-area storage: in wilderness where hunting reasonably occurs, an unloaded non-restricted firearm may be stored unlocked and accessible to ammunition. Genuinely remote means genuinely remote - an acreage twenty minutes from town isn’t it.
- Vehicle access: the regulations contemplate rural owners needing reasonable access for predator control and allow exemption from some storage and transport requirements - the handbook’s own advice is to confirm with a local firearms officer (and check provincial and municipal law) before treating the truck gun as covered. That confirmation call is free; an unsafe-storage charge is not.
Everything outside those moments is the ordinary regime: unloaded, trigger-locked or cabinet-locked, ammunition managed, transported unloaded and secured.
The wildlife side: your land changes the hunting rules, not the gun rules
Shooting the coyote in the sheep pen involves two legal systems, and the farm only helps with one:
- Provincial wildlife law generally lets landowners (and their agents) control predators and pest species on their own land without a hunting licence - species lists, methods, and reporting duties vary by province, so check the local wildlife regs.
- Municipal discharge bylaws sit on top and surprise people: many rural municipalities restrict discharge near roads, dwellings, or within hamlet boundaries. The quarter section may be yours while the road allowance beside it is off limits.
- None of it touches the PAL requirement - the licence attaches to possessing the firearm, not to the reason you’re firing it.
The practical farm setup
- Get licensed - find a CFSC course nearby; rural sessions often run through ag societies and rod-and-gun clubs.
- A locked steel cabinet in the house for the everyday standard; trigger locks for the rest.
- Ammunition locked separately; a working supply is compatible with the predator-control provision as long as “easy access” is respected.
- One call to the provincial firearms officer about your truck-gun and lambing-season setup, so the exceptions you rely on are the ones that actually exist.
The CFSC covers all of these rules in a day, with an instructor who - in farm country - has answered the coyote question a hundred times. Book a course in your province before the season that needs the rifle.
Questions people ask
Can I shoot coyotes on my own farm without a licence?
No. Possessing the firearm requires a PAL regardless of whose land you're on. What your farm changes is the wildlife side - provinces generally let landowners control predators and pest animals on their own property without a hunting licence, subject to provincial rules and municipal discharge bylaws.
Do the storage rules apply on a farm?
Yes, with one carve-out: where discharge is legal, a non-restricted firearm in use for predator control may be stored temporarily unlocked and in the open - still unloaded and not next to ammunition. The everyday storage standard applies the rest of the time.
Can I keep a rifle in the farm truck?
Unloaded, yes, within the transport rules: locked in the trunk or, without one, locked vehicle and out of sight when unattended. Rural exemptions for reasonable predator-control access exist - confirm the specifics with a firearms officer before relying on them.
Is there a special farm or landowner firearms licence?
No. There is one licence - the PAL - and one course behind it, the CFSC. The system accommodates farming through targeted storage and transport exceptions, not a separate licence class.
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.
- Do you need a PAL to hunt in Canada? Hunting licence vs CFSC - Hunting in Canada takes two credentials: a PAL to own the firearm (federal, via CFSC) and a provincial hunting licence via hunter education. How both work.
- 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.
