Concealed Carry & Florida Law

TAMPA BAY, FLA. — July 4, 2026 | By GunSafety4U

Florida's Fourth District Court of Appeal ruled on June 17 that the state cannot bar law-abiding adults ages 18 to 20 from carrying a concealed firearm, striking down a piece of Florida's post-Parkland gun law as unconstitutional. Attorney General James Uthmeier says his office will not appeal and is directing the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) to implement the ruling. For the first time since 2018, an 18-year-old Floridian who otherwise qualifies can lawfully carry a concealed firearm — with no license, no permit, and no mandatory training of any kind.

Infographic showing what changed in Florida's concealed carry law in 2026 for 18 to 20 year olds after the Eubanks ruling

What changed — and what didn't — for Florida's newly eligible 18-to-20-year-old concealed carriers.

What the Court Actually Decided

The case, Eubanks v. State (No. 4D2025-1698), started with a 2024 arrest in Broward County. Police responding to a report of someone pulling a handgun near a vehicle detained 18-year-old Jaylen Eubanks and found an unholstered pistol on his waist. He was charged with carrying a concealed firearm and improper exhibition of a firearm — not open carry. A trial court rejected his argument that Florida's age-21 carry requirement was unconstitutional, and Eubanks pled no contest while reserving his right to appeal that ruling.

By the time the case reached the Fourth DCA, Attorney General James Uthmeier's office had already conceded the law was unconstitutional and declined to defend it. The Broward County State Attorney's Office stepped in with its own amicus brief, arguing that 18-to-20-year-olds were treated as minors at the time of the founding and that the age group is disproportionately involved in firearm misuse. A unanimous three-judge panel — Judge Spencer D. Levine, joined by Chief Judge Jeffrey T. Kuntz and Judge Shannon K. Shaw — rejected that reasoning, holding that excluding a class of law-abiding adults from concealed carry while allowing it for everyone 21 and older would reduce the Second Amendment to a "second-class" right for that age group.

The court's 18-page opinion vacated Eubanks' concealed carry conviction and struck down section 790.06(2)(b), Florida Statutes — the age-21 eligibility requirement built into the state's concealed carry licensing law.

How Florida Got Here

Florida raised the concealed carry age to 21 in 2018 following the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland. That age floor survived even after Florida adopted permitless "constitutional" carry on July 1, 2023 — because the permitless carry statute still required an unlicensed carrier to independently meet every eligibility criterion for a license, age included. Understanding exactly how that interacts with Florida's optional Concealed Weapon or Firearm License is where a lot of Floridians get confused; GunSafety4U has broken down the differences between permitless carry and a Florida CWFL in detail.

The Eubanks decision is the third major crack in Florida's post-Parkland gun framework in roughly a year. Florida's open carry ban was struck down by the First DCA in 2025. In early June 2026, the state conceded in a separate federal lawsuit that its three-day firearm purchase waiting period is unconstitutional. Eubanks now closes the concealed carry piece for young adults specifically.

What Changes — and What Doesn't

Practically speaking: an otherwise-eligible 18-to-20-year-old in Florida can now carry a concealed firearm in public on the same terms as anyone 21 or older — no license, no permit, no application to FDACS. Everything else about Florida's carry law stays exactly the same for this age group:

  • All of the location restrictions under section 790.06(12) — schools, courthouses, polling places, the secured side of airports, the bar area of a restaurant — still apply regardless of age.
  • Federal law is untouched by a state court ruling. An 18-to-20-year-old still cannot walk into a licensed dealer and buy a handgun; federal law keeps that purchase age at 21. Only long guns are purchasable from a dealer at 18.
  • The ruling is not yet technically final — the opinion itself notes it isn't final until any timely rehearing motion is resolved — though Uthmeier's public statement that his office won't seek further review removes most of the uncertainty.

The Angle Most Coverage Is Missing

Every outlet that covered this ruling focused on the constitutional reasoning — Bruen, Rahimi, "the people," historical analogues. None of them flagged the practical gap the ruling actually opens up. An 18-year-old can now legally carry a loaded, concealed handgun in public with zero required instruction: no live-fire qualification, no legal-use-of-force class, no practice drawing from concealment under stress — while still being legally barred from buying that same handgun from a licensed Florida dealer. In practice, the firearm they're carrying was very likely gifted, inherited, or transferred privately, often by a parent or older relative who assumed the training question was somebody else's job.

That combination — full legal authority to carry, no training requirement attached to it, and no direct retail purchase pathway of their own — is precisely the gap that voluntary, hands-on instruction exists to close. It's the same logic that already makes Florida's optional CWFL worth considering even under permitless carry; see GunSafety4U's CWFL vs. CWP vs. permitless concealed carry comparison for how the license still adds value on top of the legal minimum.

What This Means for Tampa Bay Families

This decision applies statewide, and Tampa Bay's college students, young service-industry workers, and recent high school graduates are now part of the group it directly affects. For parents whose 18-to-20-year-old already carries — or is asking to — the state has removed the licensing hurdle without adding any instruction requirement in its place. That decision now sits entirely with the individual and their family, which is exactly where a short, structured course tends to make the biggest difference: confirming safe handling, understanding Florida's self-defense law, and practicing under supervision before ever carrying in public.

Before You Carry: What We Recommend

Legal eligibility and readiness to carry are two different things. Before carrying concealed for the first time — at any age — we recommend a supervised live-fire course that covers safe handling, drawing from concealment, and Florida's specific rules on justified use of force, plus a clear-eyed look at Florida's excluded-carry locations. GunSafety4U's NRA Basic Pistol and concealed carry safety course is built for exactly this — new carriers who want real instruction before their first day carrying, not after an incident. You can see full scheduling and pricing on our concealed carry and CWFL training course catalog.

Bottom Line

Florida just added a new group of legal concealed carriers overnight, without adding a single hour of required training alongside it. The law changed. The responsibility for competence didn't move with it — it landed on individual carriers and their families. For Tampa Bay's newly eligible 18-to-20-year-olds, that's a decision worth making with real instruction behind it, not just a court ruling.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this ruling mean 18-year-olds can now buy a handgun in Florida?

No. The ruling addresses carrying a concealed firearm, not purchasing one. Federal law still requires a person to be 21 to buy a handgun from a licensed dealer, regardless of this decision.

Is the ruling final?

The opinion itself states it isn't final until any timely-filed motion for rehearing is resolved. Attorney General Uthmeier has publicly said his office will not seek further review and will work with FDACS to implement it.

Do 18-to-20-year-olds still have to avoid the same restricted locations as everyone else?

Yes. Every location restriction under section 790.06(12) — schools, courthouses, polling places, secured airport areas, and licensed bar areas among them — still applies to every carrier, regardless of age.

Does this decision also apply to open carry?

No. Florida's open carry ban was addressed separately by the First District Court of Appeal in 2025. The Eubanks ruling is specific to the age requirement for concealed carry.

Is training required before carrying concealed in Florida?

No. Florida's permitless carry law does not require any training course. Florida's optional CWFL has its own separate competency requirement for those who choose to get the license for reciprocity in other states.

Sources:
Eubanks v. State, No. 4D2025-1698 (Fla. 4th DCA, June 17, 2026) — full opinion
Florida Statutes § 790.06 — License to Carry Concealed Weapon or Firearm
Courthouse News Service — "Florida appeals court shoots down concealed carry age restrictions"
AmmoLand News — AG Uthmeier's implementation response