Kentucky House approves bill allowing 18–20-year-olds provisional concealed-carry licenses
Loading...
Summary
After hours of partisan debate over safety, training and constitutional rights, the Kentucky House passed House Bill 3 12 on a roll-call vote, creating a provisional concealed-carry license for 18–20-year-olds that requires background checks and training.
Frankfort — The Kentucky House of Representatives voted to pass House Bill 3 12 on third reading, approving a measure that allows law-abiding 18- to 20-year-olds to obtain a provisional concealed-carry license after a background check, training and demonstration of proficiency.
The sponsor, the lady from Grant, framed the bill as restoring a constitutional right and said the provisional license mirrors the state’s standard concealed-carry requirements. "No group or stakeholder has expressed any opposition to this bill," the lady from Grant said, arguing the legislation would "fix this injustice" by aligning Kentucky with other states that allow younger adults to carry concealed with training.
Opponents countered that the bill would increase risks for children and communities. The gentleman from Fayette 79 said lowering the age "causes more opportunity for those tragic events in people's homes and their communities," citing broader trends in gun deaths. The lady from Fayette 93 warned that when a weapon is concealed "parents can't see it" and said the lack of visibility creates "real risk." Several members also pointed to mental-health concerns and suicide risks among young people as a reason to withhold the change.
Lawmakers debated multiple safety and policy points on the floor. Supporters emphasized that the proposal adds background checks and training that do not exist for open carry, saying those steps increase accountability and safety. The general from Jefferson 33 and other members described personal and community trauma from shootings and said their constituencies opposed the measure.
The House opened a roll-call vote after floor debate. Members offered short explanations for their votes on the record; members in favor cited constitutional protections and the training component, while those opposed cited public-safety data and mental-health risks. The clerk recorded 73 votes in favor and 17 opposed. The chair announced that House Bill 3 12 passed and the sponsor moved to apply the clincher, which was accepted.
The bill’s passage on the House floor concludes this stage of the chamber’s consideration; the transcript does not specify the next legislative step or whether the Senate had previously acted on this version. Members also introduced additional bills and made scheduling announcements before adjourning until Monday, January 26, 2026, at 4 p.m., subject to weather.
Notes on attribution: Speaker labels and attributions are taken exactly from the floor transcript (for example, "lady from Grant" and district-based references) because the transcript uses those identifiers on the record.

