Office of Firearms Safety

The Director’s Office of Firearms Safety, and Firearms Safety Counsel, provide guidance and direction on public safety issues relating to the removal of firearms. The Office of Firearms Safety oversees all Clear and Present Reporting, as well as all programs where protective orders can be sought resulting in the revocation of an individual’s FOID Card. This includes working in conjunction with officials in public safety, health, and educational organizations to develop best practices and increase information sharing. The Office of Firearms Safety monitors all firearm safety programs and is responsible for developing protocols for evaluating risk for individuals whose access to firearms is prohibited by law. The Firearms Safety Counsel serves as the Department’s spokesperson and subject matter expert regarding firearms safety issues.

Firearms Restraining Order

Firearms Restraining Orders allow law enforcement officers and family members or household members to obtain a court order temporarily restricting an individual who is determined to be at risk of harming themselves or others from securing or maintaining access to firearms, ammunition, or firearm parts while respecting the individual’s constitutional rights and providing a judicial procedure for challenging the Order. The FRO may be an Emergency Order which will last 14 days or an order which will last one year.

  1. Law enforcement officer
  2. Spouse of the respondent
  3. Former Spouse of the respondent
  4. Parent
  5. Child or stepchild of the respondent
  6. Any other person related by blood or present marriage to the respondent
  7. A person with whom the respondent has a child in common
  8. A person who shares a common dwelling with the respondent

A FRO Petition may be filed in any county where the individual identified as posing a threat (Respondent) resides or any county where an incident occurred that involved the rRespondent posing an immediate and present danger of causing personal injury to the respondent or another by having in his or her custody or control, or purchasing, possessing, or receiving a firearm, ammunition, or firearm parts that could be assembled to make an operable firearm.

Clear and Present Danger

Clear and Present Danger reporting is required by law enforcement officials, school administrators, and medical professionals when they determine a student or other person poses a Clear and Present Danger to themselves or others.

Clear and Present Danger is defined by statue as a person who: (1) communicates a serious threat of physical violence against a reasonably identifiable victim or poses a clear and imminent risk of serious physical injury to himself, herself, or another person as determined by a physician, clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner; or (2) demonstrates threatening physical or verbal behavior, such as violent, suicidal, or assaultive threats, actions, or other behavior, as determined by a physician, clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, school administrator, or law enforcement official.

The Illinois State Police Law Enforcement Portal shall be used by law enforcement officials and school administrators to report individuals determined to pose a Clear and Present Danger pursuant to the Firearms Owners Identification Card Act (430 ILCS 65/8.1) and Illinois Administrative Code (Title 20 Section 1230.120). The law enforcement official or school administrator shall, within 24 hours of making the determination, notify the Illinois State Police, Office of Firearms Safety via a submission through the ISP Law Enforcement Portal. This reporting duty is separate from any requests for assistance made to a law enforcement agency. For immediate police assistance, school administrators must still contact their local law enforcement agency or call 911.

FOID/CCL Revocations

The FOID Act (430 ILCS 65/9.5) requires within 48 hours of receiving notification of the revocation or suspension of your FOID Card, that you:

  1. Surrender your Firearm Owner's Identification Card to the local law enforcement agency where you reside;
  2. Transfer all firearms in your possession or control; and
  3. Complete a Firearm Disposition Record Firearm Disposition Record Opens in new window .
    Instructions are included on the form; failure to comply with this statute constitutes a Class A misdemeanor.
  4. If your FOID Card was revoked because you no longer reside in Illinois, please destroy your FOID card and ensure you are in compliance with the laws of the state in which you reside.
  5. If you are the sponsor of a minor(s) who has a FOID card, the minor's FOID card has also been revoked and must be immediately surrendered; please have the minor complete a Firearm Disposition Record as well.

The Firearm Concealed Carry Act (430 ILCS 66/70(g)) requires within 48 hours of receiving notification of the revocation or suspension of your FOID Card, that you:

  1. Surrender your CCL to the local law enforcement agency where you reside.
  2. If you have lost, surrendered, or otherwise destroyed your CCL, you must complete an affidavit Opens in new window that you are not in possession of the revoked or suspended CCL.

Firearm Owners Identification Card Review Board

***ATTENTION: Public Act 102-237 amended the Firearm Owners Identification Card (FOID) Act to create the Firearm Owners Identification Card Review Board (FCRB). Effective January 1, 2023, certain appeals must be filed with the FCRB and not with the Illinois State Police Director. The FCRB has been appointed and will begin actioning appeals in the immediate future. No additional appeal materials meant for the FCRB are being accepted by ISP at this time. Please DO NOT mail or email them to ISP. Please contact the FCRB for additional information regarding appeals within the jurisdiction of the FCRB.

Please visit this website for information regarding questions and guidance on which FOID appeals are still within the jurisdiction of the Department or CCL appeals: TypesOfAppeals