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Do you need a PAL to hunt in Canada? Hunting licence vs CFSC

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

Hunting with a firearm in Canada requires two separate credentials from two separate governments: a PAL (federal) to possess the firearm and buy ammunition, and a hunting licence (provincial) to hunt game. The CFSC gets you the first; a provincial hunter-education course gets you the second. Neither substitutes for the other, and most new hunters need both.

The two-system split confuses almost everyone at the start, so here’s exactly what each covers and the efficient order to collect them.

The federal half: PAL, via the CFSC

The PAL answers one question: may you possess a firearm and ammunition at all? For hunting that means:

  • owning your rifle or shotgun - any acquisition requires a PAL;
  • buying ammunition - checked at the counter, PAL required;
  • transporting to the hunt - under the transport rules, which for hunters include the remote-wilderness storage exceptions.

The path is the standard one: one-day CFSC, two tests, RCMP application, two to four months end to end. Ordinary hunting long guns are non-restricted, so the basic PAL covers the entire pursuit - no hunter needs an RPAL.

The provincial half: hunting licence, via hunter education

The hunting licence answers a different question: may you take game in this province? Every province and territory runs its own system - Ontario’s hunter education and Outdoors Card, Alberta’s hunter education through AHEIA, and so on - with its own course, exam, tags, seasons, and rules like blaze-orange requirements. Moving provinces means new hunting credentials even though your PAL travels with you.

Two practical notes:

  • Hunter education doesn’t touch firearms law. It covers game identification, ethics, survival, and provincial regulations. Passing it earns you nothing toward a PAL - the same one-way street as military training.
  • Combo weekends exist. In several provinces, providers run the CFSC and hunter education back-to-back. If you’re starting from zero in the fall, one weekend can bank both certificates.

Trying hunting before committing

You don’t need any licence to discover whether hunting suits you: an unlicensed person may use a firearm under the direct and immediate supervision of a licence holder. A mentored hunt with a licensed friend or outfitter - they possess the firearm, you shoot under their control where provincial rules allow - is the traditional first season. Youth have their own route: the Minor’s Licence lets 12–17-year-olds borrow non-restricted firearms for hunting.

Confirm the provincial side separately - some provinces have their own mentored-hunt or apprentice programs with specific conditions.

The efficient sequence for a new hunter

  1. Book the CFSC now - its two-to-four-month licence tail is the long pole. Find a course near you; ask whether they run hunter-education combos.
  2. Take provincial hunter education while the PAL processes.
  3. Buy the hunting licence and tags once the provincial certificate is in hand - usually same-week.
  4. The PAL arrives last; only then buy your own firearm and ammunition - and set up legal storage before the firearm comes home.

Time it backward from opening day: starting the CFSC less than three months before the season risks watching it from the couch. Courses fill fastest in late summer for exactly this reason - book the seat first.

Questions people ask

Is the CFSC the same as a hunter safety course?

No. The CFSC is the federal firearms-safety course that leads to a PAL. Hunter education is a separate provincial course required for a hunting licence. Most new hunters need both, and some providers teach them back-to-back.

Can I hunt with a borrowed gun without a PAL?

Under the direct and immediate supervision of a licensed person, yes - that's how many people try hunting before committing to the licence. Hunting alone with a borrowed firearm requires your own PAL.

Do I need a PAL to buy hunting ammunition?

Yes. Buying ammunition requires a valid firearms licence, with narrow exceptions. No PAL means no box of shells at the counter.

Which comes first, the CFSC or hunter education?

Either order works - they're independent systems. Practically, take the CFSC first if the licence wait matters: the PAL takes two to four months to arrive, while provincial hunting licences usually issue quickly once hunter education is done.

Find a course or instructor

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