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Florida Legislature to consider bill that would lower the minimum age to buy a firearm. Here’s what’s in the proposal

TALLAHASEE, Fla. – Florida’s 2026 legislative session kicks off Tuesday, and there are many bills and proposals on the agenda. However, one recurring proposal is the push to lower the age of buying a gun in Florida.

A Florida House bill that would lower the minimum age to buy a firearm from 21 to 18 is moving forward again, setting the stage for another round of debate in a fight that has resurfaced for several years.

The proposal (HB 133), sponsored by Rep. Tyler Sirois (R-Brevard County), has cleared the House multiple times in recent years but has repeatedly stalled in the Senate.

Florida raised the gun-buying age to 21 in 2018 as part of a sweeping school safety bill following the Parkland shooting, which killed 17 students and staff at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

RELATED | Should Florida lower its minimum age to own guns from 21 to 18? Vote in our poll

Rep. Robin Bartleman, D-Broward County, has urged lawmakers to keep that law in place, saying the debate continues to retraumatize families of the Parkland victims.

“For four years, this Legislature continues to open the wound for family members of the Parkland victims and those students,” Bartleman said. “Every year they make the journey to come up here… they send us letters and tell us please do not undo this bill.”

Supporters of lowering the age to 18 argue the current law is inconsistent, pointing out that 18- to 20-year-olds can legally own a long gun if it is given to them, but cannot purchase one themselves from a licensed dealer.

“Right now in Florida, a 19-year-old can legally own a long gun if someone gives it to them, but legally can’t buy one themselves, and this just doesn’t make any sense,” Rep. Webster Barnaby Baker said.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has backed efforts to reduce the age, and Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced earlier this year that his office would not defend the current age limit after a federal appeals court upheld the law.

The National Rifle Association has since asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case. The Supreme Court did uphold that the current Florida Law is constitutional.

The bill made its way through the House subcommittees and is now set to be released on the House calendar this session.


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