Firearms licensing fees to more than double in Northern Ireland

Firearms licensing fees to more than double in Northern Ireland

Naomi Long

Proposals to increase firearms licensing fees in Northern Ireland by more than 150 per cent have gone out to consultation.

The consultation seeks the public’s views on proposals to achieve full cost recovery of firearms licensing fees as well as proposals to add to the calibres of firearms that may be exchanged in a “one-off-one-on” transaction carried out by a registered firearms dealer.

Firearms licensing fees were last increased in 2016.

Naomi Long, the justice minister, said: “For many years, firearms licensing has been heavily subsidised by PSNI mainstream funding and therefore the taxpayer.

“Currently, firearms certificate application fees are only contributing around 40 per cent towards the cost of providing the service and the estimated shortfall for the financial year 2025/26 is almost £2m.

“This subsidy can no longer continue, especially at a time when funding and delivery of public services in NI are under pressure.

“The firearms licensing service must be appropriately funded to enable PSNI to safeguard the public in NI from the misuse of firearms and to support an efficient and professional service to applicants and FAC holders.”

The Department of Justice is proposing to increase all fee levels by 153 per cent and adjusted for inflation from June 2025.

It also proposes to add further calibres of firearms to the current “banded system”, which will help to reduce the number of variation applications made to the PSNI chief constable which are more costly and take longer to process.

Mrs Long said: “I encourage the public to have their say on these matters as it has been almost 10 years since the introduction of the ‘banded system’ and firearms licensing fees were last increased.

“Failure to recover the costs of firearms licensing will continue to put further pressures on an already stretched budget, leaving the PSNI unable to drive forward strategic objectives in other areas of policing and may negatively impact the services provided.

“This is not a sustainable position.”

The consultation opened yesterday and will close on 29 May 2026.

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