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Can you check a firearm when flying?

You may transport unloaded firearms in a locked hard-sided container as checked baggage only. Declare the firearm and/or ammunition to the airline when checking your bag at the ticket counter. The container must completely secure the firearm from being accessed. Locked cases that can be easily opened are not permitted.



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Some charge a handling fee for firearms, others include it in your free baggage allowance. While TSA in the United States may allow you to pack firearms and ammunition in the same bag or gun case, your airline or your connecting airline may not. Some airlines do not accept any firearms for carriage.

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Firearms and ammunition, as well as any replicas or imitations. Explosives and flammable items, such as fireworks, gas, and aerosols. Poisonous and toxic substances, including pesticides and certain chemicals. Lithium batteries and other hazardous materials, as these can pose a safety risk if not handled properly.

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Lock your gun case before you and the counter agent take it to be checked by TSA. Stay in the immediate area. If TSA needs the case opened for some reason or has questions, you must be present. At most airports you can stand in an area that provides you with a visual of the space where TSA checks special baggage.

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Here's what the TSA says about transporting guns and ammo, in a nutshell: Your firearm must be packed and unloaded in locked, hard-sided pistol cases in your checked baggage. Never attempt to carry on a firearm.

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According to TSA, agents find one firearm for roughly every 116,394 passengers screened at security checkpoints.

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The TSA will charge you a fine based on the type of prohibited item you possessed: Unloaded firearms: a fine of $2,050 to $4,100. Loaded firearms: a fine of $4,100 to $10,250. Unloaded firearms with accessible ammunition: treated the same as a loaded firearm.

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No you do not. It's a common misconception that you must have a TSA approved lock when checking in guns on a commercial flight however that is not the case.

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The program is conducted by specially trained undercover armed RCMP officers (known as aircraft protective officers – APOs) on selected domestic and international flights and all flights to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, in the United States.

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There are vast amounts of weapons seized in airports each year. These confiscated weapons, such as loaded firearms, unlicensed guns, and dangerous weapons, are usually destroyed, kept as prosecution's evidence, auctioned on eBay, or sold at a state surplus warehouse store.

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