Understanding Your Knife Rights in Oregon: a Legal Guide

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Understanding Your Knife Rights in Oregon a Legal Guide

Oregon permits ownership and open carry of most knives without blade length limits, emphasizing intent over type in its permissive framework. However, concealed carry restrictions target specific dangerous weapons like switchblades and daggers, with severe penalties for violations in prohibited places.

Ownership Basics

All knives—folding, fixed-blade, pocket, Bowie, balisongs—are legal to own statewide for adults, absent felony convictions. ORS 166.270 bars felons from “spring or centrifugal” blades (switchblades, automatics, OTFs), but others remain ok. No age minimum beyond general weapons laws (18+ for “dangerous” items); minors face parental oversight.

Open Carry Rules

Open carry (visible sheaths, clips) allows virtually any knife, as no statute caps blade length or type. Courts (Oregon v. Turner) define “open” as readily identifiable—no intent to obscure. Everyday folders and fixed blades suit belts or packs fine.

Concealed Carry Limits

ORS 166.240 prohibits concealed carry of:

  • Spring/centrifugal blades (switchblades, assisted-openers, balisongs, OTFs).
  • Dirks, daggers, ice picks, slungshots, metal knuckles.

Ordinary pocket/folding knives (<15 cm/~6″ blades) are generally ok concealed, unless deemed “dangerous” by context (e.g., paired with criminal acts). Class B misdemeanor: up to 6 months jail, $2,500 fine.

Knife TypeOpen CarryConcealed Carry 
Pocket/Folding (<6″)LegalLegal
Fixed BladeLegalRisky if “dangerous”
Switchblade/AutomaticLegalIllegal
Balisong/ButterflyLegalIllegal
Dirk/DaggerLegalIllegal

Prohibited Locations

ORS 166.370 bans “dangerous weapons” (most knives) in:

  • Public buildings/courthouses (pocket <4″ ok).
  • Schools/universities (all knives).
  • Major airports (terminals).
  • Posted private property.

Class C felony: up to 5 years prison, $125,000 fine. Vehicles exempt if locked/unloaded (knives specifically).

Recent Developments

No 2026 changes; preemption absent, so Portland bans concealed dirks/daggers locally (PCC 14.32). Felon rules tightened post-2025 audits. CHL holders gain no knife perks—same rules apply.

Safe Practices

Measure blades tip-to-base; carry openly in urban areas. Ask permission on private land. For concealed folders, ensure non-threatening. Resources: oregon.public.law (statutes), AKTI.org. Intent drives enforcement—utility tools rarely trouble. Oregon balances freedom with public safety; know your carry to stay legal.

SOURCES:

  • https://www.tosahwi.com/blogs/oregon-knife-laws-2025-ownership-carry-and-restrictions
  • https://www.couteaux-morta.com/en/oregon-knife-laws/

Maria

Maria is a professional content writer at MyHometownPost.com, specializing in Oklahoma local news, U.S. laws and policy updates, and global current events. With a keen eye for detail and commitment to accuracy, she delivers timely, engaging, and informative stories that keep readers well-informed about important developments locally and worldwide.

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