Federal law imposes no design safety standards on domestically manufactured firearms. In fact, the federal Consumer Product Safety Act exempts firearms from meeting even minimal safety standards, and has effectively created a protected market for “junk guns” that due to poor construction or design may jam, misfire, malfunction, or otherwise fail to alert a person that a firearm is loaded.
California’s state-level design safety standards for handguns have therefore been critical to helping prevent accidental shooting deaths and injuries.1
Since 2001, California’s Unsafe Handgun Act has established baseline design safety and certification standards for handguns and, accordingly, places restrictions on the manufacture, sale, importation, giving or lending of “unsafe handguns” that do not meet these minimum standards.2
This law requires that all newly developed handgun models meet basic reliability and safety standards in order to be certified for sale or manufacture by the state Department of Justice. While this law generally provides minimum safety standards for handguns that may be manufactured in the state, or sold by California’s gun dealers, it generally does not apply to new manufactures of older handgun models, or to handguns sold through private or secondary sales.3
The California Department of Justice (“DOJ”) publishes and maintains a roster listing all handguns that have been certified for sale in California under the Unsafe Handgun Act, after testing by a certified laboratory.4
In order to be certified and included on the DOJ roster, a newly developed handgun model must have an appropriate safety device and must pass:
- A firing test to confirm the gun can be fired multiple times without malfunctioning;5 and
- A drop safety test to confirm the firearm can be dropped without discharging.((Following the handgun firing test described in the Note above, the same certified independent testing laboratory must subject the same three handguns to a series of six drop tests each, with a primed case (no powder or projectile) inserted into the chamber. The handgun model passes this test if each of the three test guns does not fire the primer.6
Subsequently enacted legislation also generally requires that most new semiautomatic pistol models developed after January 2007 also have:7 - A chamber load indicator to signify when the firearm is loaded; 8 and
- A magazine disconnect mechanism to prevent the gun from firing when a detachable magazine is removed.9
Microstamping
Finally, over a decade ago, California lawmakers expanded on the Unsafe Handgun Act by enacting the Crime Gun Identification Act, the nation’s first law mandating that newly developed semiautomatic pistol models incorporate microstamping technology to assist law enforcement in solving gun crimes.10 (For more information on this technology, see the Microstamping & Ballistics in California page).
In 2023, the California legislature passed a law expanding the microstamping requirement. Beginning January 1, 2028, licensed firearms dealers will be prohibited from selling any semiautomatic handgun unless it has been verified as microstamping-enabled, if the California DOJ has determined that microstamping is available. The law also prohibits anyone from modifying a microstamping-enabled handgun with the intent to prevent the production of a microstamp.
Firearm Safety Devices and Gun Safes
California law provides the state Attorney General authority to promolgate regulations setting safety standards for firearm safety devices and gun safes.11
Gun Safes
To meet the Department’s regulations, all gun safes must fully contain the firearm or fireams and provide for their secure storage. Gun safes must then either meet specifications provided by the Department of Justice on the locking system and materials used or be certified as meeting Underwriters Laboratories Residential Security Container rating standards by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory. 12
Firearm Safety Devices
A firearm safety device is defined as a device, other than a gun safe, that locks and is designed to prevent children and unauthorized users from firing a firearm.13 The device may be installed on a firearm, be incorporated into the design of the firearm, or prevent access to the firearm.14 California prohibits anyone, including a licensed dealer, from selling a “firearms safety device” that is not listed on the DOJ-maintained roster of certified devices, or that does not comply with the firearm safety device standards set by DOJ.15 To be included on the DOJ’s roster, devices undergo testing and must meet the standards set forth in Cal. Penal Code § 23655 and Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 11, § 4094.
For more information on firearm safety devices and guns safes in California, visit our California Child Access Prevention and Safe Storage Page.
MEDIA REQUESTS
Our experts can speak to the full spectrum of gun violence prevention issues. Have a question? Email us at media@giffords.org.
Contact- Since the Unsafe Handgun Act’s initial provisions went into effect in 2001, the rate of unintentional shooting deaths in California has fallen significantly, according to CDC Fatal Injury Data. In the five years before the Act went into effect, between 1996–2000, nearly 400 Californians died as a result of unintentional shootings. By 2014–18, the rate of unintentional shooting deaths in California had fallen by two-thirds.[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 32000(a). This requirement does not apply to firearms listed as “curios or relics,” as defined in Section 478.11 of Title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations, or to the sale or purchase of a handgun by certain peace officers and various state and federal agencies, including police departments, the Department of Justice, and military forces, for use in the discharge of their official duties. Cal. Penal Code § 32000(b).
Pistols designed expressly for use in Olympic target shooting events that would normally fall within the definition of “unsafe handgun” under § 31910 are exempt from state handgun testing requirements. Cal. Penal Code § 32105(a)-(b). Furthermore, the state handgun testing requirements do not apply to the sale, loan, or transfer of any semiautomatic pistol that is to be used solely as a prop during the course of a motion picture, television, or video production by an authorized participant in such production while engaged in making that production or event, or by an authorized employee or agent of the entity producing that production or event. Cal. Penal Code § 32110(h).[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code §§ 27545, 32110(a).[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 32015(a). DOJ may retest up to five percent of handgun models listed on the roster annually. Cal. Penal Code § 32020. Three samples of each handgun model chosen must be retested using ammunition recommended by the manufacturer that is commercially available and in new condition. Cal. Penal Code § 32020(b). The Attorney General must remove from the roster any model that fails retesting. Cal. Penal Code § 32020(d). DOJ also maintains a list of handguns removed from the state roster.[↩]
- California’s handgun firing requirement is a test in which the manufacturer provides three unmodified handguns, of the make and model for which certification is sought, to an independent testing laboratory certified by the Attorney General. Cal. Penal Code § 31905. (For detailed DOJ regulations regarding laboratory certification and handgun testing procedures, see Cal. Code Regs. tit. 11, §§ 4047-4075. The laboratory must fire 600 rounds of certain ammunition from each gun, stopping at specified intervals. The ammunition used must be of the type recommended by the handgun manufacturer, or if none is recommended, any standard ammunition of the correct caliber in new condition that is commercially available. Cal. Penal Code § 31905(b)(1 ). A handgun model passes the test if each of the three tested guns: (1) Fires the first 20 rounds without a malfunction that is not due to ammunition that fails to detonate; and (2) Fires the full 600 rounds with no more than six malfunctions that are not due to ammunition that fails to detonate, and without any crack or breakage of an operating part of the handgun that increases the risk of injury to the user. Cal. Penal Code § 31905(c)(2).[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 31900.[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 31910(b).[↩]
- A “chamber load indicator” is a device that plainly indicates that a cartridge is in the firing chamber. Cal. Penal Code § 16380.[↩]
- A “magazine disconnect mechanism” is a mechanism that prevents a semiautomatic pistol that has a detachable magazine from operating to strike the primer of ammunition in the firing chamber when a detachable magazine is not inserted in the semiautomatic pistol. Cal. Penal Code § 16900.[↩]
- Microstamping technology causes the firearm to etch a unique microscopic code identifying the handgun’s make, model, and serial number onto ammunition cartridge cases when the weapon is fired. This technology could enable law enforcement to match cartridges found at crime scenes directly to the gun that fired them, similar to the way an automobile’s license plate may be used to identify a vehicle’s make, model, VIN, and registered owner.[↩]
- See Cal. Penal Code § 23650[↩]
- See Cal. Code Regs. tit. 11, § 4100 providing the standard for an approved gun safe and DOJ’s specifications on the locking system used. The code contains specifics on the locking system, plating, hinges, bolts, and other key features making a gun safe secure from unauthorized access.[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 16540.[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 16540.[↩]
- Cal. Penal Code § 23660(a); see also Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 11, § 4094 outlining the safety requirements for a device to be sold in California[↩]