Tag: first-time buyer

  • Understanding Texas Concealed Carry: What You Actually Need to Know

    g4gguns/
    May 5, 2026

    We get some version of this question at the counter almost every day: “Do I need a permit to carry in Texas?” The short answer is no — most eligible adults 21 and older can carry a handgun in Texas without a license. But the short answer leaves out a lot you should know about Texas concealed carry, and the stuff it leaves out is the stuff that keeps you legal.

    Texas adopted constitutional carry (also called permitless carry) in September 2021. That was a big change. Before that, carrying a handgun in public without a License to Carry was a criminal offense. Now it’s not — for most people, in most places. Those two qualifiers are where the details live, and the details matter.

    This article is our attempt to lay out the basics in plain language. We’re not lawyers, but we are gun store owners in Texas who help people navigate this every day. Here’s what we think you need to know.

    Constitutional Carry: What It Actually Means

    Constitutional carry means that most Texans 21 and older can carry a handgun — openly or concealed — in most public places without obtaining a license. You don’t need to take a class, pass a test, or apply for a permit. If you’re legally eligible to possess a firearm, you can carry one.

    To be eligible, you generally must be at least 21 years old (with some exceptions for 18–20-year-olds, which we’ll cover), must not have a felony conviction, must not have certain recent misdemeanor convictions, must not be subject to an active protective order, and must not be prohibited from possessing a firearm under federal law. That last one covers a range of situations including domestic violence convictions, active restraining orders, dishonorable military discharge, and unlawful drug use.

    The key point: permitless carry doesn’t mean unrestricted carry. It means you don’t need a license. You still need to follow every other rule about where, how, and when you can carry. Most people who get in trouble don’t get in trouble because they’re carrying — they get in trouble because they didn’t understand the restrictions.

    Open Carry vs. Concealed Carry

    Texas allows both open and concealed carry under constitutional carry. The rules are slightly different for each.

    Concealed carry means the handgun is not visible based on ordinary observation. It can be in a holster under your shirt, in your waistband, in a bag, or anywhere else that keeps it out of sight. There’s no specific holster requirement for concealed carry — but we’d strongly recommend a good holster for safety and retention.

    Open carry means the handgun is visible. Texas law requires that any openly carried handgun must be in a holster. It doesn’t have to be a belt holster specifically — shoulder, ankle, appendix, and chest holsters all qualify. But carrying in your hand or tucked visibly into your waistband without a holster does not.

    A practical note: just because you can open carry doesn’t always mean you should. In certain settings, open carry draws attention and can make other people uncomfortable. Many experienced carriers choose to carry concealed simply because it avoids unnecessary conversations. That’s a personal choice, not a legal one.

    Where You Cannot Carry — Period

    Texas law designates certain locations as absolute no-carry zones. Carrying a firearm in these places is a felony, regardless of whether you have a license. These include schools and school events (K–12 premises, school buses, school-sponsored activities), polling places on election day, courts and court offices, racetracks, secured areas of airports (past TSA checkpoints), and correctional facilities.

    For some of these locations, having a License to Carry provides a narrow exception — for example, LTC holders can carry concealed on public college and university campuses, while permitless carriers cannot. We’ll come back to that.

    The Signs on Every Door: 30.05, 30.06, and 30.07

    This is the part that confuses people the most, and honestly, it’s the part where we see the most mistakes. Texas has a specific system of signs that businesses and property owners can post to restrict firearms on their premises. Understanding these signs is not optional if you carry.

    SIGNWHO IT APPLIES TOWHAT IT MEANS
    30.05Permitless/constitutional carriers (people carrying without an LTC)No firearms allowed on this property for those carrying without a license. This is the general trespass-with-firearm notice.
    30.06LTC holders carrying concealedNo concealed carry by license holders on this property. Does not apply to permitless carriers (though other signs might).
    30.07LTC holders carrying openlyNo open carry by license holders on this property. Concealed carry may still be allowed unless a 30.06 is also posted.
    51%EveryoneThis business makes 51%+ of its revenue from on-premises alcohol sales. No firearms. This is a bar, and it’s a felony-level prohibited location.

    The critical takeaway: if a business wants to prohibit all firearms, they need to post all three signs (30.05, 30.06, and 30.07). A single sign doesn’t necessarily cover everyone. Read every sign, every time. If you’re told verbally by someone with authority that firearms aren’t welcome, leave. Don’t argue it on the premises.

    Violating a 30.05 sign is a Class C misdemeanor (up to a $200 fine). Refusing to leave when asked escalates to Class A misdemeanor criminal trespass. Violating 30.06 or 30.07 carries similar penalties. These aren’t catastrophic charges, but they’re entirely avoidable if you’re paying attention to the front door.

    So Why Would Anyone Still Get an LTC?

    This is probably the second most common question we get, right after “do I need a permit.” If you can carry without one, why bother?

    There are several practical reasons. First, reciprocity. If you travel out of state and want to carry legally, many states recognize a Texas LTC but don’t recognize permitless carry from another state. Without an LTC, your legal carry stops at the Texas border. Second, campus carry. LTC holders can carry concealed (with some exceptions) on public college and university campuses in Texas. Permitless carriers generally cannot enter campus buildings with a firearm. Third, the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act. LTC holders are exempt from the federal restriction on carrying within 1,000 feet of a K–12 school. If you live near a school or your daily route passes one, this matters more than you might think. Fourth, bypassing the NICS system. A valid Texas LTC serves as an alternative to the FBI’s NICS background check when purchasing from a dealer. You still fill out a 4473 — that doesn’t change — but as long as your LTC is valid and hasn’t been revoked, the dealer doesn’t need to call in for FBI approval. This matters because the FBI is not a tech company. The NICS system goes down more often than you’d think, and when it does, anyone without an LTC is out of luck until it comes back online. Customers with a valid LTC aren’t bypassing safety laws — Texas already runs a thorough background check as part of the LTC process — they’re bypassing tech headaches.

    The LTC requires a four-to-six-hour training course, a written exam, and a shooting proficiency demonstration. The course covers legal use of force, conflict de-escalation, and safe storage in addition to marksmanship. You must be 21 or older (18 if active military or veteran). The application goes through the Texas Department of Public Safety.

    Our honest take: the training alone is worth the time, even if you never plan to leave Texas. Most of the people who walk into our store carrying under constitutional carry have never taken a formal class. The LTC course forces you to learn the legal framework, practice your shooting under evaluation, and understand use-of-force law. That knowledge protects you as much as the firearm does.

    What About 18 to 20 Year Olds?

    This area has shifted in recent years. Following a federal court ruling, the Texas Department of Public Safety began issuing LTCs to adults 18 and older who are otherwise eligible. Permitless carry generally applies to those 21 and older, but the 18–20 age group can now obtain an LTC to carry legally under special circumstances. (FFLs still cannot legally sell you a handgun if you fit in this age gap… the rules here are tricky) If you’re in this age range and want to carry, the LTC is your path — and the training requirement that comes with it is genuinely valuable for younger carriers.

    Carrying in Your Vehicle

    Texas law allows most people to carry a concealed handgun in their vehicle without any license, under the Texas Motorist Protection Act. The handgun must be concealed (not in plain view) and you must not be engaged in criminal activity, prohibited from possessing a firearm, or intoxicated. If the handgun is visible — say, on the passenger seat or in a door pocket — it must be in a holster.

    If you’re pulled over and you have a firearm in the vehicle, Texas law does not require immediate disclosure for permitless carriers unless asked. LTC holders must present their license if they are carrying and are asked for identification. However, many attorneys and most experienced carriers recommend disclosing calmly and clearly. Keep your hands visible, tell the officer where the firearm is, and follow their instructions. Don’t reach for anything without being told to.

    The Mistakes We See Most Often

    After thirteen years of running a gun store in Texas, here are the most common misunderstandings we see:

    “Constitutional carry means I can carry anywhere.” It doesn’t. The prohibited locations list is long and the signage system is specific. “Permitless” means no license required, not no rules.

    “The signs don’t apply to me because I don’t have an LTC.” The 30.06 and 30.07 signs apply to LTC holders specifically. But the 30.05 sign applies to you. And if a property owner verbally tells you no firearms, that applies to everyone regardless of what’s on the door.

    “I can carry in a bar as long as I’m not drinking.” If the establishment has a red 51% sign, it’s a prohibited location regardless of your sobriety. Restaurants that serve alcohol but derive less than 51% of revenue from alcohol sales are different — you can carry there unless it’s posted otherwise.

    “I don’t need training because I don’t need a license.” Legally true. Practically unwise. Carrying a firearm without understanding use-of-force law, safe storage, and marksmanship fundamentals puts you and everyone around you at risk. The license isn’t the point — the knowledge is.

    Still Have Questions?

    We talk about this stuff every day. If you’re thinking about carrying for the first time, trying to decide between permitless carry and getting your LTC, or just want to understand what the signs on the door mean, come in and talk to us. No appointment needed, no purchase required. That’s what we’re here for.

    And if you’re ready to start carrying and need help choosing your first handgun, we’ve got a guide for that too.

  • 5 Questions to Ask Before Buying a Gun Online

    g4gguns/
    May 5, 2026

    By Patrick and Cassie at Good 4 Guns

    We sell guns online. Have for over a decade. So when we tell you to slow down and ask a few questions before you click “Add to Cart” on someone else’s website (or even our own), it’s not because we’re trying to scare you out of it. It’s because we’ve spent 13 years on the other side of that transaction, and we’ve seen what catches people off guard.

    Buying a gun online can be a great experience. The selection is wider, you can compare prices without anyone hovering over your shoulder, and you can do your research at midnight in your pajamas. We’re big fans of all of that.

    But there are a few things that work differently than ordering literally anything else on the internet, and if you don’t know about them upfront, they can turn a good deal into a frustrating one. Here are the five questions we’d want our own family to ask first.

    1. “Do I understand how shipping actually works?”

    This is the big one, and it surprises people more than you’d think: a firearm purchased online cannot be shipped directly to your house. By federal law, it has to be shipped to a licensed firearms dealer (called an FFL) who handles the transfer and runs your background check in person.

    That means your buying process looks like this: you purchase the gun online, the seller ships it to the FFL you choose, the FFL receives it and notifies you, you go in, fill out your paperwork, pass your background check, and walk out with your firearm.

    It’s straightforward once you know the process. But if you’re expecting an Amazon-style “it shows up on your porch” experience, you need to adjust those expectations before you order.

    A note about tracking your package We get it — you’re excited. But please don’t follow the delivery truck to the FFL. We are not exaggerating when we say this happens regularly. The driver pulls up, and someone’s already standing there waiting. That’s not a great look for anyone involved, and honestly, it freaks out the delivery drivers. Your FFL probably received 40 other packages that day. They need time to log yours in, verify the contents, and get it into their system. Give them a beat. They’ll let you know when it’s ready.

    2. “What’s this actually going to cost me — total?”

    The sticker price on the website is not your final number. You need to factor in at least two additional costs:

    Shipping. Some retailers offer free shipping, others charge anywhere from $15 to $50+ depending on the item and how it ships. Firearms require specific carriers and handling, which adds cost.

    FFL transfer fee. This is what the receiving dealer charges you for handling the paperwork and background check. This is where people get surprised. Transfer fees vary wildly — we’ve seen everything from $15 to over $100 depending on the shop. In our area of North Texas, most dealers charge $30 and up for a standard non-NFA firearm transfer. At G4G, our transfer fee is $15 per firearm, which is about as low as you’ll find anywhere.

    So before you celebrate finding a gun that’s $40 cheaper online, do the math. Add shipping. Add the transfer fee. If the total lands within $20 of what a local shop is charging — and that local shop lets you hold the gun, ask questions, and walk out the same day — the “deal” might not actually be one.

    That said, sometimes the online price really is significantly better, or the gun simply isn’t available locally. That’s when buying online makes perfect sense. Just go in with the real number, not the listed price.

    3. “What happens if something’s wrong with it?”

    Here’s where online firearms purchases differ most from, say, buying a pair of shoes from Zappos.

    Most online firearm sales are final. Returns are extremely limited or nonexistent. This is standard across the industry, not unique to any one retailer. The reason is practical: once a firearm leaves the seller’s possession, there’s no way for the manufacturer or seller to verify what happened to it while it was in yours. That’s why the moment you take ownership, it’s yours.

    But here’s the important part: you don’t take ownership until you complete the paperwork at the FFL. That’s your inspection window.

    What to do at the FFL before you sign anything When your firearm arrives and the FFL calls you to pick it up, inspect it before you fill out your 4473. Open the box. Check that the make, model, and caliber match what you ordered. Look for damage — scratches, dents, anything that shouldn’t be there. Confirm all accessories listed in the original product description are present. If anything is off, tell the FFL before you do paperwork. Most dealers, including us, will help you resolve the issue with the seller at that point. After you sign and take it home, your options shrink dramatically.

    4. “Is this seller actually legit?”

    The internet is full of “too good to be true” gun deals, and some of them are exactly that. Scams exist in this industry like any other, and because of the way firearm transactions work, getting your money back can be a nightmare.

    A few things to look for:

    Check reviews on independent platforms. Trustpilot, Google Reviews — not just testimonials on the seller’s own website. Look for patterns, not just individual complaints. No retailer can make everyone happy. What you’re watching for is a pattern of “order was canceled and refund took months” or “seller reached out for more money before they’d ship.”

    Verify they have a working customer service channel. Can you actually reach a human? Is there a phone number, email, or chat? A lot of stores are ditching the phones due to extreme spam and bot calls, but every retailer should have SOME way of communicating. Try it before you buy. If it takes three days to get a response to a pre-sale question, imagine what post-sale support looks like.

    5. “Do I actually need to buy this online, or would I be better off buying local?”

    This might seem like a weird question coming from an online retailer. But we’re a local shop too, and we watch people overcomplicate the process every week.

    Buying online makes sense when you know exactly what you want and can’t find it locally, when the price difference is large enough to justify the transfer fee and wait time, or when you want to browse at your own pace without someone trying to upsell you.

    Buying local makes sense when you’re not 100% sure what you need (nothing replaces holding a gun in your hand), when you want to walk out the same day, when you value being able to ask questions face-to-face, or when the total cost ends up being comparable anyway.

    There’s no wrong answer. The wrong move is not thinking about it at all and then being surprised when the process doesn’t look like what you expected.

    The Bottom Line

    Buying a gun online can be a smart move. We do it every day for customers across the country, and the vast majority of those transactions go smoothly. But the ones that go sideways almost always come down to the same thing: someone didn’t know what they didn’t know.

    Now you know. Ask these five questions, do the math on total cost, inspect before you sign, and you’ll be fine.

    And if you have a question we didn’t cover here, reach out. That’s what we’re here for.

    Ready to shop? Browse our full inventory at g4gguns.com/shop, or if you’re local to Van Alstyne, come see us in person. We’re the shop where you can ask anything without getting a lecture. New to all of this? Start with our first guide: What to Expect Your First Time in a Gun Store.

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