Short answer: Yes. Arizona has been a constitutional-carry state since 2010, and it’s one of the most straightforward states in the country for vehicle carry. An adult 21 or older who can legally possess a firearm may keep a loaded handgun in their vehicle — openly or concealed — with no permit required. A holstered handgun sitting in plain view is perfectly legal. Here’s the detail for 2026.
No. Arizona operates under constitutional carry. Anyone 21 or older who can lawfully possess a firearm may carry a handgun — concealed or openly — without a license. That applies inside your vehicle the same as on the street: console, glovebox, seat, or holstered in the open.
An optional concealed-carry permit is still available and useful for reciprocity when you travel to other states, but you don’t need it to carry in your own car in Arizona.
Arizona does not require the handgun to be unloaded, and it does not force you to pick concealed or open in your vehicle — both are legal for an eligible carrier 21+. You can keep a loaded handgun:
That “open carry is fine” point is what makes Arizona such a natural fit for a vehicle holster — you’re never fighting a concealment requirement.
Constitutional carry’s permitless concealed option is for 21 and older. If you’re 18 to 20, you can still have a handgun in the vehicle, but it generally needs to be carried openly — visible from outside the vehicle — or transported in a case, holster, glovebox, or luggage. A holstered handgun in a cup holder, in plain view, fits that open-carry requirement.
The constitutional-carry protection applies only to people who can lawfully possess a firearm. It does not extend to prohibited possessors — for example, those with a disqualifying felony conviction, certain domestic-violence offenders, or others barred under state or federal law. For a prohibited possessor, having a firearm anywhere — including in a vehicle — is a serious crime.
Permitless carry doesn’t override location limits. Arizona still restricts firearms in places like secured federal facilities, certain government buildings with screening, and other posted or statutorily restricted locations. Carrying in your car gets you there; it doesn’t get you inside a prohibited place.
Arizona makes the legal side easy. The practical side is universal: sit down, buckle up, and a hip holster gets pinned under the belt and slow to reach. The usual fallback — dropping the gun in the console or door pocket — leaves it unholstered, trigger exposed, and sliding around.
A cup holder holster keeps the firearm holstered, secured, and within reach in your cup holder. Because Arizona allows open carry, a holstered handgun in plain view is fully legal — no concealment gymnastics required. No drilling, and it moves from the truck to the daily driver in seconds.
The Cupolster by Vets Tactical — veteran-owned, made in the USA, featured on Surviving Mann — is built specifically for vehicle carry. Find the Cupolster that fits your handgun →
Cross into California and the rules change dramatically — California requires unloaded, locked transport for most people without a permit. Nevada, Utah, New Mexico, and Colorado each have their own rules too. Our free 50-State Gun Laws Guide gives you every state’s carry rules in one PDF.
Can I carry a loaded handgun in my car in Arizona without a permit? Yes — under constitutional carry, an adult 21 or older who can legally possess a firearm may carry a loaded handgun in a vehicle, openly or concealed, with no license.
Does the gun have to be concealed in Arizona? No. Open carry is legal, so a holstered handgun in plain view — like one in a cup holder holster — is allowed.
Do I still need an Arizona concealed carry permit? Not to carry in-state. Many people still get the permit for reciprocity when traveling to states that honor it.
Can an 18-year-old carry in a vehicle in Arizona? They can generally have a handgun in the vehicle carried openly (visible) or cased; the permitless concealed option is for 21 and older. Confirm current nuances for your situation.
Disclaimer: This article is general educational information, not legal advice. Laws change and circumstances vary. Confirm the current Arizona statutes (including A.R.S. §13-3102) and consult an attorney for your specific situation.
Vets Tactical — veteran-owned, patent-pending, made in the USA.
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