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Florida CCW Permit
Information regarding applying for a Florida Concealed Firearms Permit:
Eligibility
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Eligibility
Requirements
- You must be 21 years of
age or older.
- You must be able to
demonstrate competency with a firearm (NRA Certified Course) which is offered
with Best Handgun Training.
- Unless you are serving
overseas in the United States Armed Forces, you must currently reside in the United States
(US) AND be a US citizen or deemed a lawful permanent resident alien by Department of
Homeland Security, US Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS). If you are serving
overseas in the US Armed Forces, submit a copy of your deployment documentation with your
application. If you are not a US citizen, submit documentation issued by the USCIS proving
you are a permanent legal resident alien with proof you have resided in the state of
residence (as shown on your application) for at least 90 consecutive days prior to the date
the application is submitted.
Proof of residence includes, but is not limited to:
- Monthly utility,
telephone, power, or cable bills, which show your name and
address.
- Monthly pay stubs or
other documentation from your employer, which show your name and
address.
- Monthly credit card
statements, which show your name and
address.
Possible Reasons for
Ineligibility:
- The physical inability
to handle a firearm safely.
- A felony conviction
(unless civil and firearm rights have been restored by the convicting
authority).
- Having adjudication
withheld or sentence suspended on a felony or misdemeanor crime of violence unless three
years have elapsed since probation or other conditions set by the court have been
fulfilled.
- A conviction for a
misdemeanor crime of violence in the last three years.
- A conviction for
violation of controlled substance laws or multiple arrests for such
offenses.
- A record of drug or
alcohol abuse.
- Two or more DUI
convictions within the previous three years.
- Being committed to a
mental institution or adjudged incompetent or mentally defective.
- Failing to provide
proof of proficiency with a firearm.
- Having been issued a
domestic violence injunction or an injunction against repeat violence that is currently in
force.
- Renouncement of U.S.
citizenship.
- A dishonorable
discharge from the armed forces.
- Being a fugitive from
justice.
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Website developed, maintained and hosted by Best Handgun Training, Inc.
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