Short answer: Yes. Arkansas is a constitutional-carry state, and its vehicle rule is one of the most straightforward in the country. An eligible adult can keep a loaded handgun in the vehicle — openly or concealed — with no permit required. A holstered handgun sitting in plain view is legal here. Here’s the detail for 2026.
No. Arkansas’s carry statute, Ark. Code §5-73-120, is unusual: after Act 746 of 2013, merely possessing a handgun on your person or in your vehicle is only a crime if you have a “purpose to attempt to unlawfully employ” it as a weapon. In plain English — lawful carry isn’t the offense; criminal intent is.
Years of debate over what that actually meant ended in 2023, when Act 777 settled it explicitly: no license is required to carry a handgun, openly or concealed, for anyone legally allowed to possess one. The general threshold is 18 or older.
Arkansas still issues the Concealed Handgun Carry License (CHCL) and an Enhanced CHCL, mainly for reciprocity when traveling and access to certain locations in-state.
Arkansas does not require the handgun to be unloaded, and it does not force you to choose concealed or open in your vehicle — both are legal for an eligible carrier. You can keep a loaded handgun:
No concealment requirement means a vehicle holster in plain view is simply legal carry — nothing to hide, nothing to bury in the console.
Arkansas’s permitless framework generally applies at 18 for those legally able to possess a handgun, and following a federal court ruling the state also issues CHCLs to 18- to 20-year-olds. Rules for this age group have moved in recent years — if you’re under 21, confirm the current requirements for your situation.
Constitutional carry protects people who can lawfully possess a firearm and who aren’t carrying with unlawful intent. It does not extend to prohibited persons — for example, those with a disqualifying felony conviction or another state or federal disqualifier.
Permitless carry doesn’t override location limits. Arkansas still restricts firearms in places like courthouses, detention facilities, and areas of airports beyond security, plus secured federal facilities and posted or statutorily restricted locations. Some locations open up only to Enhanced CHCL holders. Carrying in your car gets you there; it doesn’t get you inside a prohibited place.
Arkansas 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 Arkansas 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 →
Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, and Louisiana each handle vehicle carry differently — some with age or concealment wrinkles. 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 Arkansas without a permit?
Yes — under constitutional carry (Act 746 of 2013, clarified by Act 777 of 2023), an eligible adult may carry a loaded handgun in a vehicle, openly or concealed, with no license.
Does the gun have to be concealed in Arkansas?
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 Arkansas CHCL?
Not to carry in-state. Many people get the CHCL or Enhanced CHCL for reciprocity when traveling and for access to certain locations.
Can an 18-year-old carry in a vehicle in Arkansas?
Generally yes, if they’re legally able to possess a handgun — and 18- to 20-year-olds can now also obtain a CHCL. Confirm current nuances for your situation.
Disclaimer: This article is general educational information, not legal advice. Laws change and circumstances vary. Confirm the current Arkansas statutes (including Ark. Code §5-73-120) and consult an attorney for your specific situation.
Vets Tactical — veteran-owned, patent-pending, made in the USA.
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