This section explains how Michigan law treats firearms carried or stored in a vehicle. Different rules apply to pistols and to long guns, and different...
Reviewed by Will Luker, Founder of CCW Hub. USCCA Training Counselor, USCCA Certified Instructor, NRA Certified Instructor, Law Enforcement.
This section explains how Michigan law treats firearms carried or stored in a vehicle. Different rules apply to pistols and to long guns, and different rules apply depending on whether the person holds a Michigan Concealed Pistol License (CPL). Every statute cited below was checked against the primary text of the Michigan Compiled Laws (MCL).
Under MCL 750.227(2), a person shall not carry a pistol concealed on or about the person, or, whether concealed or otherwise, in a vehicle the person operates or occupies, without a license to carry the pistol as provided by law. A violation is a felony punishable by imprisonment for not more than 5 years or a fine of not more than $2,500 under MCL 750.227(3).
In practice, this means there is no general right to "open carry" a loaded pistol inside a vehicle. A person who is not licensed to carry a concealed pistol, and who is not otherwise exempt (for example, a police officer), and who transports a pistol in a vehicle to a place where the person intends to open carry, may violate MCL 750.227(2) unless the pistol is transported under one of the exceptions described below.
A person with a valid Michigan CPL may carry a pistol in a vehicle, loaded or unloaded, concealed or non-concealed, without the unloaded-cased-in-trunk restrictions that apply to unlicensed transport. The CPL is the license referred to in MCL 750.227(2). CPL holders remain subject to any restrictions printed on the license and to the pistol-free zone rules in MCL 28.425o, discussed below.
MCL 750.231a(1) lists situations in which the felony prohibition in MCL 750.227(2) does not apply. The two exceptions that matter most for vehicle transport by a person who does not hold a CPL are MCL 750.231a(1)(d) and (e). Read together, these provisions allow a person to transport a pistol "for a lawful purpose" only if all of the following statutory conditions are met:
Note carefully what the statute does and does not say. MCL 750.231a uses the phrase "for a lawful purpose" but does not itself define that phrase with a list of approved destinations. The widely circulated list of destinations (a hunting or target area, a place of repair, moving a household or business, a law enforcement agency for a safety inspection, a gun show or place of sale, a public shooting range, public land where shooting is legal, or private property where a pistol may lawfully be used) comes from a Michigan State Police Legal Update, not from the text of MCL 750.231a. Those destinations are useful real-world examples of a lawful purpose, but they are guidance from a secondary source rather than an enumerated statutory definition. The conditions that actually control under the statute are the licensed-by-owner-or-occupant, unloaded, cased, and trunk-or-inaccessible requirements listed above.
Two distinct Michigan statutes regulate the transport of non-pistol firearms (rifles, shotguns, muzzleloaders, and similar long guns) in vehicles. They have different scopes and different operative requirements, and a person may need to comply with both at the same time.
Under MCL 750.227c(1), except as otherwise permitted by law, a person shall not transport or possess in or upon a sailboat, a motor vehicle, an aircraft, a motorboat, or any other vehicle propelled by mechanical means either of the following:
The operative requirement of this section is that the non-pistol firearm be unloaded. A person who violates MCL 750.227c is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 2 years or a fine of not more than $2,500, or both, under MCL 750.227c(2).
Under MCL 750.227d(1), except as otherwise permitted by law, a person shall not transport or possess in or upon a motor vehicle, or any self-propelled vehicle designed for land travel, a firearm other than a pistol, unless the firearm is unloaded and is one or more of the following:
The same rule applies to a pneumatic gun that expels a metallic BB or metallic pellet greater than .177 caliber. A person who violates MCL 750.227d is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for not more than 90 days or a fine of not more than $100, or both, under MCL 750.227d(2).
Michigan uses a pistol-purchase licensing and records system. A person who is not a CPL holder generally obtains a license to purchase before acquiring a pistol, and the pistol-purchase license referenced in MCL 28.422 is the document tied to the lawful-purpose vehicle transport conditions in MCL 750.231a(1)(d)-(e).
A non-resident does not need a Michigan license to purchase a pistol if all of the conditions in MCL 28.422(9) are met:
The own-the-pistol condition in MCL 28.422(9)(c) and the 180-days-or-less condition in MCL 28.422(9)(e) are both required. A non-resident who does not own the pistol, or who is present for more than 180 days or intends to establish residency, does not qualify for this exemption.
When transporting a pistol in Michigan, a non-resident who relies on the MCL 28.422(9) exemption (rather than carrying under a concealed pistol license recognized by Michigan) must still comply with the unloaded, cased, trunk-or-inaccessible conditions of MCL 750.231a when the pistol is in a vehicle.
A separate path exists for a non-resident who holds a concealed pistol license. Under MCL 750.231a(1)(a), the felony prohibition in MCL 750.227(2) does not apply to a person holding a valid license to carry a pistol concealed upon his or her person issued by his or her state of residence, except where the pistol is carried in nonconformance with a restriction appearing on the license. MCL 28.432a is the related licensure-exemption statute, and MCL 28.432a(h) addresses an individual licensed by another state.
Michigan recognizes a concealed pistol license only when it was issued by the holder's state of residence. If a person carries a license issued by a state where the person does not reside, Michigan does not recognize that license for concealed carry. A non-resident carrying under MCL 750.231a(1)(a) remains subject to any restrictions printed on the out-of-state license. The pistol-free zone restriction below is triggered by a separate statute: MCL 28.425o(1) applies to a person who is licensed under the act to carry a concealed pistol or who is exempt from licensure under MCL 28.432a(h). MCL 750.231a(1)(a) itself only lifts the MCL 750.227(2) vehicle-carry felony and does not by its own terms invoke the pistol-free zones. In practice the same out-of-state license holder is covered as an MCL 28.432a(h) person, so the pistol-free zones below apply.
Under MCL 28.425o(1), a person who is licensed to carry a concealed pistol, or who is exempt from licensure under MCL 28.432a(h), shall not carry a concealed pistol on the premises of any of the following (the parking areas of these places are excluded under MCL 28.425o):
This statute restricts concealed carry only. A CPL holder may carry a non-concealed pistol in these areas unless another law prohibits it. The penalties in MCL 28.425o(6) are tiered:
A list of statutory exceptions to the pistol-free zone rule appears in MCL 28.425o(5) and covers categories such as certain retired and active law enforcement officers, licensed security personnel, certain court personnel, and others.
Statutes change. Confirm the current text of any provision on the Michigan Legislature website before relying on it.
This page covers one part of our Michigan concealed carry guide.
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