North Dakota maintains relatively permissive knife laws, allowing ownership and open carry of most pocket knives without restrictions. However, concealed carry of certain types classified as “dangerous weapons” requires a license, reflecting the state’s balance between tool utility and public safety.​
Key Definitions
A “dangerous weapon” under NDCC § 62.1-01-01 includes switchblades, gravity knives, machetes, scimitars, stilettos, swords, daggers, or any knife with a blade five inches (12.7 cm) or longer. Courts interpret this broadly; in State v. Vermilya (1988), a modified straight razor under five inches was deemed a dangerous weapon due to its weapon-like adaptation.
Pocket knives—typically folding blades under five inches—are not inherently restricted unless modified or used threateningly.
“Concealed” means not discernible by ordinary observation, like under clothing or in a pocket without visibility (NDCC § 62.1-04-01). Open carry, such as in a visible sheath or pocket clip showing the handle, avoids issues.
Ownership and Possession
North Dakota bans no knives outright; you can own pocket knives, autos, balisongs (butterfly knives), or fixed blades freely. No age minimum for possession, but minors face school restrictions. Recent preemption law (amending NDCC § 62.1-01-03) blocks cities/counties from stricter rules on manufacture, sale, possession, or carry—ensuring statewide uniformity. Sales face no state limits, though retailers advise buyers on carry rules.
Carry Rules
Open carry of any knife is legal statewide—no permit needed. Concealed carry of non-dangerous knives (e.g., small pocket knife) is generally fine, but “dangerous” ones require a Class 1 or 2 concealed weapon license (age 18+, NDCC § 62.1-04-03). Licenses cover firearms and dangerous weapons; reciprocity exists with many states (NDCC § 62.1-04-03.1). Constitutional carry applies to firearms (21+ since 2017), not knives.
Vehicle carry: Locked trunk ok; glove box or under seat counts as concealed if accessible. Hunting/fishing exceptions allow carry.
Restricted Locations
Knives (as dangerous weapons) are infraction-level prohibited at public gatherings: schools, churches, athletic events, public buildings (NDCC § 62.1-02-05). Also banned in liquor establishments/bingo halls (NDCC § 62.1-02-04). Private property owners can ban them; federal sites follow stricter rules. Some cities had old ordinances (e.g., Fargo on weapons), but preemption overrides excesses.​
Exceptions for law enforcement, military, hunters, repair transport.
Penalties and Enforcement
Violations are Class A misdemeanors: up to 360 days jail, $3,000 fine. Intent to weaponize escalates (e.g., terrorizing with knife, NDCC § 12.1-01-04). Juveniles go to diversion; first offenses often warnings if utility intent shown. Bismarck/Fargo PD prioritize context—work tool vs. threat.​
| Violation Type | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Unlicensed Concealed Dangerous Knife | Class A Misdemeanor |
| School Possession | Infraction to Misdemeanor |
| Intent to Harm | Felony possible ​ |
Recent Developments
2025 preemption bill standardized rules, blocking local bans amid Second Amendment expansions. No blade length changes since 1980s; Knife Rights pushed reforms earlier. Rural ND (hunting culture) sees lax enforcement; urban areas like Grand Forks tighter on complaints. Post-2024, self-defense claims rose with President Trump’s reelection boosting rights rhetoric.
Practical Tips
- Choose <5″ folding pocket knives (e.g., Swiss Army, Leatherman) for EDC.
- Clip visibly for “open” status.
- Get CCW ($60–$100, valid 5 years) for flexibility—covers autos/large blades.
- Check knifeup.com or ndlegis.gov for updates.
- Avoid flourishes; steady pocket carry best.
Real case: 2023 Fargo arrest for concealed 6″ blade sans license—plea to fine only. Outdoorsmen carry freely for filleting walleye.​
Why It Matters
Knives are vital in ND’s farming, oil, hunting economy—tools, not just weapons. Laws protect utility while curbing misuse, aligning with pro-2A stance (permitless handgun carry). Stay informed: consult AG site or attorney. Safe, legal carry builds trust.
SOURCES:
- https://www.akti.org/state-knife-laws/north-dakota/
- https://wearearmed.com/north-dakota-blocks-local-knife-bans-with-preemption-law/












