<P> * Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt opined that the law is unenforceable . </P> <P> Nevada is a "shall issue" state for concealed carry . The county sheriff shall issue a concealed firearms permit to applicants who qualify under state and federal law, who submit an application in accordance with the provisions of section NRS 202.3657 . To apply for a Concealed Firearm Permit, a person must be 21 (18 for military), complete an approved course in firearm safety and demonstrate competence (qualify) with any handgun . Previously, a single permit applied to only those firearms the applicant qualified with . Under revised legislation, a single permit is valid for all handguns the person owns or may thereafter own . Holders of previous permit iterations are grandfathered per current law and are no longer constrained to their qualified firearms, nor qualified firearm action . </P> <P> Note: The change in the law regarding competence with semi-automatic handguns is effective July 1, 2011 through Nevada Assembly Bill AB 282 . This change is retroactive meaning that permits issued prior to July 1, 2011, that have specific semiautomatic firearms listed is the equivalent to having all semiautomatic firearms authorized . </P> <P> States that honor a Nevada permit: Alaska, Arizona, Iowa, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas *, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan *, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah (* Residential permits only). </P>

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