Florida's open carry ban (FS 790.053) was struck down by the First District Court of Appeal in McDaniels v. State on September 10, 2025. The Florida Attorney General issued guidance on September 15, 2025 instructing law enforcement that the ban is no longer enforceable. Eligible adults may now openly carry firearms statewide.
Section 790.053, Florida Statutes, historically prohibited the open carrying of firearms with limited exceptions for hunting, fishing, camping, and target shooting. On September 10, 2025, the Florida First District Court of Appeal in McDaniels v. State held that the open carry ban violates the Second Amendment under the framework set out in N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen, vacated the defendant's conviction, and declared the statute unconstitutional. On September 15, 2025, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier issued a guidance memorandum to Florida law enforcement instructing that the open carry ban is no longer enforceable. As a result, eligible adults who may otherwise lawfully possess a firearm may openly carry on or about their person, statewide, alongside the permitless concealed carry already authorized by FS 790.01 since July 1, 2023. Statutory location restrictions remain in effect: carry is still prohibited in locations enumerated by FS 790.06(12), including courthouses, polling places, school grounds, government meetings, and certain other places. Firearms regulation remains preempted to the state under FS 790.33, so no Florida county or municipality may impose its own open-carry restrictions.
Carrying in locations enumerated by FS 790.06(12) or by ineligible persons remains a misdemeanor or felony depending on circumstances. Private property owners may continue to prohibit firearms on their premises.
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Hialeah, FL
Hialeah follows Miami-Dade Code Β§33-124.1 for commercial-vehicle parking in residential zones: Cat. 1 (taxis/marked vans under 8 ft): max 2 per home; Cat. 2 ...
Hialeah, FL
Hialeah driveways follow county standards: 20 feet minimum for two-way, 14 feet for one-way. Vehicles must not block sidewalks or rights-of-way.
Hialeah, FL
Hialeah allows chain link, concrete block, wood, and aluminum per Section 33-11. All must meet HVHZ wind standards. Concrete block most common in South Florida.
Hialeah, FL
Hialeah requires building permits for retaining walls per the Florida Building Code. Walls over 4 feet in height require engineered plans. All retaining wall...
Hialeah, FL
Dogs in Hialeah must be leashed off private property under Miami-Dade Section 5-20. Unsterilized: $150 fine. Sterilized: $50. Off-leash in designated parks o...
Hialeah, FL
Hialeah enforces the Florida Building Code Residential Section R314 and NFPA 72 for smoke alarms. Alarms are required in every sleeping room, outside sleepin...
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