Oklahoma has no regulations prohibiting private persons from selling weapons to one another.
The following individuals are forbidden from acquiring or possessing a handgun in Oklahoma, according to OK Stat 21-1283:
Unless as presented in subdivision B of this division, it is illegal for any individual sentenced of a crime in any court in Oklahoma, a different state, or the US to own any handgun, fake or handcrafted handgun, altered air or toy handgun in his/her custody or under his/her immediate dominance, or in any automobile that the individual is operating or in which the individual is inside as a rider, or at the dwelling where the sentenced individual stays.
Any individual who has formerly been sentenced of a non-brutal crime in any court of Oklahoma, a different state, or the US, and who has gotten full and total clemency from the right dominion and has not been sentenced of any other criminal offense that has not been acquitted, shall have their right to own any handgun or other firearm banned by subdivision A of this division renewed, as well as their right to request for and have a firearm, hidden or unhidden, according to the Oklahoma Self-Defense Act or as in other ways authorized by law, as well as the authority to carry out peace officer, gunsmith, and weapons maintenance tasks.
Any individual serving a term of probation for a crime in any court of Oklahoma, a different state, or the US, or under the authority of any alternative court program, shall not have any revolver, gun, or weapon in his or her custody or under his/her immediate dominance, or at his/her dwelling, or in any rider in the car that the individual operates or rides in as a passenger, which includes any fake or handcrafted handgun, alteration, or modification while the individual is subject to supervision, monitoring, parole or inmate status.
It shall be illegal for any individual formerly adjudged as a law-breaking child or a youthful criminal for the perpetration of a crime that would have been a criminal offense if perpetrated by an older person, to have in his/her custody or under his or her immediate dominance, or to have in any automobile s/he is driving or riding in as a passenger, or at the person's residence, any handgun, fake or handcrafted handgun, altered air or toy gun, revolver, sawed-off gun or weapon or any other hazardous or lethal weapon within ten years after being adjudged; provided, however, that nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to avoid the individual from being placed in a home with a full-time appropriately assigned peace officer who is certified by the Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training (CLEET) according to the terms of division 3311.l
Any individual who is a foreigner in the US unlawfully shall not have any handgun, fake or handcrafted weapon, altered air or toy handgun, gun, weapon, or any other hazardous or lethal weapon in his or her custody or under his or her immediate dominance, or in an automobile, the individual is operating, or at the home where the individual stays; given that, however, that nothing in this subdivision bans the transportation or imprisonment of the individual by the law enforcement officers or federal immigration authorities. Any individual who transgresses the conditions of this subdivision is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of $250.000 if convicted.
No official agency in the state of Oklahoma may codify any laws mandating the documentation of personally possessed weapons, according to OK Stat 21-1289.24(A).
OK Stat 21-1290.4 requires anybody who desires to have a hidden handgun in Oklahoma to first get a Self-Defense Act Permit from the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation.
Applicants for a hidden carry have to be not less than twenty-one years of age.
Step 1: Take a weapons safety and instruction module through a qualified handgun safety teacher, as required by OK Stat 21-1290.12(2).
Step 2 – Pick up an application for a license from the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation or the applicant's local sheriff's department physically or by mail and fill it out.
Step 3 – Include the applicant's two passport-style and size photos.
Step 4- Include a document or evidence of gun safety coaching.
Step 5 – Present the request physically to the applicant's local sheriff's division. Put your autograph on the application only if a sheriff's office agent is present.
Step 6: Present two sets of dactylograms to the sheriff's office.
Step 7: Payout the processing cost of a hundred US dollars.
Step 8 – In between sixty to ninety days of receiving the request from the sheriff, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation will either accept or reject it.
Oklahoma will accept any state's concealed carry license, according to OK Stat 21-1290.26, and for states that do not need licenses, Oklahoma reciprocates according to the laws of the other state.