Iowa maintains relatively permissive knife laws, allowing ownership and open carry of most knives except ballistic types. Recent reforms like HF 756 (2021) emphasize lawful carry unless used in crimes, with statewide preemption preventing local restrictions.
This guide covers key statutes, restrictions, and best practices for compliance as of 2026.
Key Legal Definitions
Iowa Code §702.7 defines a “dangerous weapon” to include daggers, razors, stilettos, switchblade knives, or any knife with a blade over five inches. These trigger restrictions based on context, such as use in crime or carry by prohibited persons.
Ballistic knives—those propelling detachable blades via spring, gas, or elastic—are “offensive weapons” under §724.1, illegal to possess statewide.
Ordinary pocket, hunting, or utility knives under five inches are generally unregulated unless misused.
Ownership Rights
Adults can own nearly all knives, including switchblades, balisongs (butterfly knives), bowies, dirks, and disguised types like belt or cane knives. No blade length limit applies to possession at home or in vehicles for lawful purposes.
Minors face limits: those under 18 cannot carry dangerous weapons without permission, and juveniles risk delinquency charges.
Federal laws may add interstate transport rules, but intrastate ownership is broad.
Carry Rules
Open carry of any knife is legal statewide, with no blade length prohibition. Post-2021 reforms (§724.4, §724.5) removed blanket concealed carry bans, now allowing concealed transport unless in a crime.
However, concealed “dangerous weapons” (e.g., switchblades or blades >5″) remain risky for minors, intoxicated persons (§724.4C), or felons (§724.8B), often treated as aggravated misdemeanors if intent shown.
A valid Iowa Permit to Carry Weapons authorizes concealed carry of dangerous knives.
Restricted Locations
Schools and school grounds are weapons-free zones (§724.4A); any knife possession there is prohibited, with exceptions rare.
Other no-go areas include courtrooms, jails, and airports. Private property owners can ban knives.
Statewide preemption (§724.26) overrides local ordinances, ensuring uniform rules.
Knife Types Comparison
Penalties for Violations
Possessing a ballistic knife is a Class D felony: up to 5 years prison, $750–$7,500 fine (§724.3).
Unlawful concealed carry of dangerous knives (no crime involved): serious misdemeanor (up to 1 year jail, $315–$1,875) for blades 5–8″; aggravated for >8″ ($625–$6,250, up to 2 years). Pre-2021 penalties linger in interpretation.
School violations or use in assault escalate to felonies.
Special Considerations
Intoxicated carry (§724.4C) or felon possession (§724.26) adds charges. Hunting knives are exempt during lawful activities.
Military/police get exceptions (§724.4B). Always measure blades tip-to-hilt; no standard specified.
Recent Changes and Tips
HF 756 (2021) shifted from strict concealed bans to crime-focused enforcement, enhancing rights. No major 2025–2026 updates noted.
Tips: Get a carry permit for peace of mind; avoid restricted areas; document lawful purpose if questioned. Consult Iowa Code or attorney for cases.
SOURCES:
- https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/knife-laws-by-state
- https://www.akti.org/state-knife-laws/iowa/












