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Do farmers need a gun licence? PAL rules on Canadian farms

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

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

  1. Get licensed - find a CFSC course nearby; rural sessions often run through ag societies and rod-and-gun clubs.
  2. A locked steel cabinet in the house for the everyday standard; trigger locks for the rest.
  3. Ammunition locked separately; a working supply is compatible with the predator-control provision as long as “easy access” is respected.
  4. 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.

Find a course or instructor

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