Is It Legal to Carry a Gun in Your Car in Texas? (2026)

Short answer: Yes. If you’re at least 21, legally allowed to own a firearm, and not engaged in criminal activity, Texas lets you carry a handgun in your vehicle without a License to Carry (LTC). The gun can be loaded, and it can be in your glovebox, console, or on you — with one catch about plain view we’ll cover below.

Here’s how it actually works in 2026.

Do you need a permit to carry a gun in your car in Texas?

No. Since Texas adopted permitless carry (“constitutional carry”) in 2021, eligible adults can carry a handgun in a motor vehicle they own or control without an LTC. Under Texas Penal Code §46.02, the key conditions are:

  • You’re 21 or older (limited exceptions exist for younger adults in certain circumstances).
  • You’re not prohibited from possessing a firearm (for example, certain felony or domestic-violence convictions).
  • You’re not engaged in other criminal activity beyond a Class C traffic-type misdemeanor.

If you do hold an LTC, you get additional carry rights outside the vehicle — but inside your own vehicle, a permit isn’t required.

Loaded or unloaded? Where can the gun be?

Texas does not require the handgun to be unloaded in your vehicle. You may carry it loaded.

Where it can be:

  • Concealed anywhere in the vehicle — glovebox, center console, under the seat, or in a bag.
  • In plain view only if it’s holstered. This is the one rule people miss. A handgun that’s visible in the vehicle must be in a holster. If it’s not in a holster, it must be concealed.

Here’s the part that matters for vehicle carry: Texas law does not define what kind of holster, and the 2021 constitutional-carry law (HB 1927, along with HB 2112 and SB 550) specifically removed the old “belt or shoulder holster” wording. The statute now simply says “holster” — it no longer requires the holster to be on your body. That means a vehicle holster, including a cup holder holster, satisfies the “in a holster” requirement. A holstered handgun sitting in your cup holder is carried in a holster.

That “holstered or hidden” rule is the practical heart of in-car carry in Texas — and a cup holder holster closes it cleanly.

Who can’t carry in a vehicle

Permitless vehicle carry does not apply if you’re a prohibited person (e.g., certain felony convictions, certain protective orders, or other federal/state disqualifiers), or if you’re carrying while committing another crime. Gang-related activity also removes the protection.

Where you still can’t take the gun

Getting it to your destination legally is only half of it. Texas still restricts firearms in places like schools, certain government buildings, secured airport areas, and businesses that post valid §30.06/§30.07 notices. Carrying in your car doesn’t override those location limits once you step out.

The real-world problem: where do you put it while driving?

Legal to carry isn’t the same as easy to carry. Sit down and buckle up, and a hip holster is pinned under the belt and slow to reach. So people stuff the gun loose in the console or door pocket — now it’s unholstered, trigger exposed, sliding around every time you corner.

A cup holder holster solves it: the firearm stays holstered, secured, and reachable in your cup holder, and it satisfies the “in a holster” condition cleanly. No drilling, moves between vehicles.

The Cupolster by Vets Tactical — veteran-owned, made in the USA, seen on Surviving Mann — is built for exactly this. Find the model that fits your gun →

Traveling outside Texas?

Texas rules stop at the state line, and neighboring states differ. Grab our free 50-State Gun Laws Guide so you know the rules before you cross into New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, or Louisiana.

Frequently asked questions

Can I carry a loaded handgun in my glovebox in Texas without a permit? Yes, if you’re 21+, legally allowed to possess a firearm, and not engaged in criminal activity.

Does the gun have to be in a holster in Texas? If it’s carried in plain view without an LTC, yes — it must be in a holster. If it’s concealed, it doesn’t have to be holstered (though a holster is still safer).

Can passengers carry in the same vehicle? Each person is judged on their own eligibility. A passenger who meets the requirements may carry their own handgun under the same rules.

Do I need an LTC at all anymore? Not for basic vehicle or permitless carry — but an LTC still offers benefits like broader reciprocity in other states and carry in some additional locations.

Disclaimer: This article is general educational information, not legal advice. Firearm laws change and individual situations vary. Confirm the current Texas statutes and consult an attorney for your specific circumstances.

Vets Tactical — veteran-owned, patent-pending, made in the USA.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *