Pennsylvania has some of the most permissive knife laws in the United States. Pocket knives are legal to own and carry throughout the state, with no blade length restrictions and no permit requirements. However, criminal intent and location matter significantly under Pennsylvania law.
What Types of Pocket Knives Are Legal?
As of January 3, 2023, Pennsylvania removed all restrictions on automatic knives through Act 119 of 2022 (HB 1929). This means you can legally own, carry, buy, and sell:
Carry Regulations: Open vs. Concealed
Pennsylvania does not distinguish between open and concealed carry of knives. The critical factor is criminal intent, not concealment:
Open Carry: Completely legal for all knife types. No Pennsylvania statute prohibits openly carrying any knife regardless of blade length.
Concealed Carry: Also legal without a permit. Concealment alone is not an offense. Only concealment combined with criminal intent triggers penalties under 18 Pa.C.S. § 907 (Possessing Instruments of Crime).
Key legal principle: The prosecution must prove you possessed the knife “with intent to employ it criminally”. Carrying a pocket knife for work, recreation, or everyday tasks is a lawful purpose.
Where Are Knives Prohibited?
Even with permissive laws, certain locations strictly ban all knives:
Important: Minors cannot be sold “deadly weapons” designed as weapons.
Penalties for Violations
Violating Pennsylvania knife laws can result in serious consequences:
- Misdemeanor of the first degree: Concealed carry with criminal intent (18 Pa.C.S. § 907)
- Misdemeanor: Possession in restricted areas like schools
- Fines and jail time: Varies by offense severity
- Knife seizure: Law enforcement may confiscate the weapon
Important Practical Considerations
No statewide preemption: Philadelphia and other municipalities may impose additional restrictions beyond state law.
Self-defense is not a lawful purpose: You must articulate a valid reason like work or hobby.
Curio exception: Restricted knives may be owned for collecting, theatrical performances, or historical reenactments.
TSA guidelines: No knives allowed in carry-on luggage at airports, regardless of state law.
SOURCES:
- https://www.akti.org/state-knife-laws/pennsylvania/
- https://owossoindependent.com/understanding-the-legal-landscape-of-pocket-knives-in-pennsylvania/












