Arizona has not enacted a red-flag law. No Arizona statute authorizes courts to issue an "extreme risk protection order" (ERPO), a "gun violence restraining...
Reviewed by Will Luker, Founder of CCW Hub. USCCA Training Counselor, USCCA Certified Instructor, NRA Certified Instructor, Law Enforcement.
Arizona has not enacted a red-flag law. No Arizona statute authorizes courts to issue an "extreme risk protection order" (ERPO), a "gun violence restraining order" (GVRO), or a similarly named civil order whose purpose is to temporarily strip a person of firearms based on a finding of risk to self or others. Petitioning frameworks of that kind exist in other states; Arizona is not one of them. The only Arizona civil order that produces a firearm-disability effect is an order of protection issued under Arizona's domestic-violence and related civil-procedure statutes (A.R.S. 13-3601 et seq.), which interacts with federal 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(8) rather than with a state ERPO regime.
Arizona's firearm-possession disabilities are codified in A.R.S. 13-3101(A)(7), the "prohibited possessor" definition. The seven categories in A.R.S. 13-3101(A)(7) include a person found to constitute a danger to self or others, or to have a persistent, acute, or grave disability, by court order under A.R.S. 36-540, and whose right to possess a firearm has not been restored under A.R.S. 13-925. This is a mental-health-commitment-based disability, not an ERPO. It does not allow a family member, law-enforcement officer, or other petitioner to seek a stand-alone firearm-removal order outside of the civil commitment, criminal conviction, or protective-order frameworks already on the books.
Arizona also recognizes that a person under any order of protection issued under A.R.S. 13-3602 (domestic violence) or A.R.S. 12-1809 (injunction against harassment) may, depending on the order's specific terms and on whether the federal 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(8) prohibitor attaches, be barred from possessing a firearm during the order's effective period. That federal disability is independent of any Arizona-state ERPO scheme.
Because Arizona has not enacted an ERPO statute, the procedural elements that distinguish red-flag regimes elsewhere are absent in Arizona:
Because there is no ERPO statute, Arizona has no parallel state criminal penalty for violating an ERPO. Violation of an order of protection issued under A.R.S. 13-3602 is its own offense under A.R.S. 13-2810 (interfering with judicial proceedings) and A.R.S. 13-2810-adjacent provisions; that is a protective-order penalty, not a red-flag penalty. A person found to possess a firearm while subject to a qualifying domestic-violence restraining order can face federal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(8); that, again, is a federal disability rather than a state ERPO consequence.
Arizona's legislature has considered red-flag proposals in recent sessions, but no such bill has been enacted. The state's policy posture has been to address risk-based disarmament through (a) civil commitment under Title 36, (b) protective orders under Title 13 Chapter 36, and (c) prohibited-possessor classifications under A.R.S. 13-3101(A)(7), rather than through a free-standing ERPO statute. Operators tracking pending legislation should consult the Arizona Legislature's bill tracker at azleg.gov for any active red-flag or ERPO bill in the current session.
This summary is informational and is not legal advice. Consult an Arizona attorney for fact-specific questions about protective orders, civil commitment, or firearm-disability restoration. Always verify current statutes at azleg.gov.
<!-- federal-context-block:added-2026-05-20 -->United States v. Rahimi (2024). In United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. ___ (2024), the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the federal firearm prohibition at 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(8) for persons subject to a qualifying domestic-violence restraining order, holding the federal disability survives the historical-tradition test of N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1 (2022). Rahimi is the controlling SCOTUS authority on the constitutionality of federal firearm disabilities tied to domestic-violence findings; it bears on any state-level red-flag / ERPO analysis to the extent those frameworks borrow federal § 922(g)(8) prohibitor mechanics.
This page covers one part of our Arizona concealed carry guide.
Read the complete Arizona guideBrowse local instructors offering state-approved training in your area. Book online, complete your training, and get one step closer to your concealed carry permit.