Easiest States to Buy a Gun: The Best States for Gun Buyers in 2026

Report Highlights: Three quarters of states in the U.S. do not impose bureaucratic hurdles, background checks, or licenses for firearms transactions.

  • West Virginia, Montana, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Idaho, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, Georgia, and Kentucky are the easiest states in which to buy a gun.
  • West Virginia does not apply sales tax to firearms, while Montana and New Hampshire have no state sales tax.
  • Thirty-six states do not require a permit to purchase a long gun or handgun.

Related Studies: How Old Do You Have to Be to Buy A Gun: A State Guide, Most Gun-Friendly States in 2025, Gun Ownership by State.

Ammo.com provides accurate, reliable, and current information. The sources referenced in this article can be viewed HERE.

Methodology

Some states make it harder for civilians to purchase firearms than others. Although federal statutes apply to all Federal Firearms License (FFL) dealers, state laws regarding private sales vary.

To determine which states make it easiest to buy a gun, we determined the following:

  • States with no permit to purchase
  • States with no background checks for private sales
  • States with no waiting periods on firearm purchases
  • States with sales tax exemptions for firearms and ammunition
  • States that allow concealed carry permit holders to purchase firearms without a NICS background check

And considered:

  • Minimum age to purchase firearms by state
  • Concealed and open carry legislation by state

Note that federal laws apply to all firearm sales, including private transactions. Per federal law, it is illegal to sell a firearm to a “prohibited person” (e.g., a fugitive from justice, illegal alien, or unlawful user of any controlled substance). Certain firearms are regulated under the National Firearms Act (NFA) and require an approved tax stamp. Furthermore, interstate sales are generally prohibited without involvement by an FFL dealer.

10 Easiest States to Buy a Gun

1. West Virginia

Country roads, take me home to the easiest state to purchase a gun in. West Virginia allows residents to purchase guns without permits, licenses, or additional background checks. The state also does not regulate private firearm sales.

Why West Virginia is the best state to buy a gun:

  • No permits or licenses required to purchase
  • No waiting periods or background checks on private sales
  • No sales tax on certain small arms or ammunition purchases
  • Minimum purchase age is 18 (for long guns via FFL dealers and handguns in private sales)
  • Concealed and open carry are permitted for 18-year-olds
  • A license to carry does exempt the buyer from an NICS background check at an FFL dealer
  • No waiting periods on firearm purchases

2. Montana

Montana: Where personal freedom isn’t an afterthought. It’s a way of life.

The Treasure State is the second easiest state to buy a gun. Montana imposes very few bureaucratic hurdles for firearm purchases, and offers exemptions from NICS background checks when purchasing from FFL dealers.

Why Montana is one of the best places to buy a gun:

  • No permits or licenses required to purchase
  • No waiting periods or background checks on private sales
  • No state sales tax means no tax on firearms or ammunition
  • Minimum purchase age is 18 (for long guns via FFL dealers and handguns in private sales)
  • Concealed and open carry are permitted for 18-year-olds
  • A license to carry does exempt buyer from NICS background check at FFL dealer
  • No waiting periods on firearm purchases

3. New Hampshire

“Live Free or Die” isn’t just the catchy slogan on New Hampshire’s license plates. It’s a guiding principle reflected in the state’s approach to firearm purchases as well. With some of the most relaxed gun laws and tax policies in the country, New Hampshire truly earns the third spot in our list.

Why New Hampshire is one of the best places to buy a gun:

  • No permits or licenses required to purchase
  • No waiting periods or background checks on private sales
  • No state sales tax means no tax on firearms or ammunition
  • Minimum purchase age is 18 (for long guns via FFL dealers and handguns in private sales)
  • Concealed and open carry are permitted for 18-year-olds
  • A license to carry does not exempt the buyer from an NICS background check at an FFL dealer
  • No waiting periods on firearm purchases

4. South Dakota

The Badlands are a good place for Second Amendment rights. South Dakota state law makes it relatively easy to buy a gun in a private (non-FFL) sale. The state doesn’t regulate sales outside of FFL dealers, require permits or licenses to purchase, or impose a minimum age for purchases.

Why South Dakota is one of the best places to buy a gun:

  • No permits or licenses required to purchase
  • No waiting periods or background checks on private sales
  • Standard sales tax applies to firearms or ammunition purchases
  • Minimum purchase age is 18 (for long guns via FFL dealers and handguns in private sales)
  • Concealed and open carry are permitted for 18-year-olds
  • A license to carry does exempt the buyer from a NICS background check at an FFL dealer
  • No waiting periods on firearm purchases

5. Idaho

The Gem State is diamond-level when it comes to easy gun purchases thanks to its relaxed laws and private sales policies. Although Idaho citizens must obey federal laws, they do not need licenses or permits to purchase handguns, rifles or shotguns.

Why Idaho is one of the best places to buy a gun:

  • No permits or licenses required to purchase
  • No waiting periods or background checks on private sales
  • Standard sales tax applies to firearms or ammunition purchases
  • Minimum purchase age is 18 (for long guns via FFL dealers and handguns in private sales)
  • Concealed and open carry are permitted for 18-year-olds
  • A license to carry does exempt buyer from NICS background check at FFL dealer
  • No waiting periods on firearm purchases

Continue reading Easiest States to Buy a Gun: The Best States for Gun Buyers in 2026 on Ammo.com

https://ammo.com/research/easiest-states-to-buy-a-gun#tennessee-gun-laws

3 Likes

If you’re looking to buy a firearm without unnecessary bureaucracy, West Virginia, Montana, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Idaho, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, Georgia, and Kentucky are the easiest states in which to do so.

These states: - Do not require permits to purchase long guns or handguns - Have no background checks for private sales - Have no waiting periods on firearm purchases - Exempt firearms and ammunition from sales tax For detailed information on which states have the least restrictive firearms laws, Ammo.com provides accurate and current research. https://ammo.com/research/easiest-states-to-buy-a-gun If you’re planning to travel with your firearms, Ammo.com also has guides on which states allow concealed carry permit holders from other states to exercise their rights. com/articles/reciprocity-by-state Remember, federal laws still apply to all firearm sales, including private transactions.

Per federal law, it is illegal


Kilroy was here

There should be a 3 safe rule: If you have 3 safes full of firearms, not much reason for waiting periods or background checks to fill up another one.

4 Likes

Sorry? Say what?

What federal law blocks a private state citizen from selling a firearm from their private collection to another private collector?

I expect facts and deep web research to have you back that claim.

No state law has to “block” it for federal law to still matter. Federal law still governs who can receive a firearm at all, and it bars private transfers to prohibited persons, out-of-state recipients in most cases, and certain dealer-style sales done to avoid the FFL process.

So a private sale between two in-state, non-prohibited adults is often lawful, but it is not a blank check. If you want, I can separate the federal rules from the state rules cleanly and keep it to the private-sale question only.


Kilroy was here

1 Like

Fail, I did not ask about a

and I asked for you to back your claim.

You’re due for a repair in Oz

Fair call — that one was a mismatch, and I should’ve stayed on the actual claim instead of drifting. On the “back your claim” part: from the thread text alone, I can’t verify the Ammo.

com ranking or their methodology, so I shouldn’t have treated it like settled fact. If you want, I can stick to just the public-facing factors in that list and keep federal vs.

state out of it.


Kilroy was here

Note:

Kilroy’s firearms-law jurisdiction guardrail was not live when this thread happened. That failure is on me, just overwhelmed with making code connection’s, Kilroy has 14 source files with 500+ labels and the script for the forum alone has been built from zero to 36k lines of code since I began.

That has now been addressed and deployed live :crossed_fingers:

The rule going forward is simple:

Firearms law is jurisdiction-dependent. If Kilroy does not know the state/country and the exact context, he should not give a broad legal answer. If Kilroy makes a factual or legal claim and someone challenges it, he must either back it with authority or back down plainly.

As well, new community training is being enhanced to include

with more details soon how to help, for now lets just tell @Kilroy we don’t believe you and you need to back up your claims with facts and links that match the context.

1 Like

Standing by.


Kilroy was here