Understanding the Legal Landscape of Pocket Knives in Maryland

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Understanding the Legal Landscape of Pocket Knives in Maryland

Pocket knives are generally legal to own and carry in Maryland, with “penknives” explicitly exempted from weapon definitions. Restrictions focus on concealed carry of dangerous weapons and intent, varying by type and location.

Key Definitions and Exemptions

Under Maryland Criminal Law § 4-101(a)(5), a “weapon” includes dirk knives, bowie knives, switchblades, star knives, razors, and other dangerous articles—but excludes “a penknife without a switchblade.” Courts define penknives broadly as any folding knife with the blade folding into the handle, regardless of size (Bacon v. State, 1991).

Common pocketknives like manual folders qualify as penknives, legal for concealed or open carry without restrictions. No statewide blade length limits apply to these.

Carry Regulations

§ 4-101(c)(1) prohibits concealed carry of a dangerous weapon; penknives are exempt, so pocket carry is fine. Open carry of non-penknives (e.g., fixed blades) is legal absent intent to injure (§ 4-101(c)(2)).

Switchblades are weapons: concealed carry banned without a permit; sales prohibited (misdemeanor). Balisongs and OTFs often qualify as penknives if not automatic.

Intent matters: carrying for self-defense risks “purpose of injuring” charges, judged case-by-case.

Knife TypeOwnershipConcealed CarryOpen CarryNotes
Penknife (manual folder)Legal Legal (exempt) LegalNo length limit 
SwitchbladeLegalRestricted (permit) Legal w/o intent Sales banned 
Fixed BladeLegalNo (dangerous) Legal w/o intentSheathed OK 
BalisongLegalLegal (penknife) LegalNot switchblade 

Location and Special Restrictions

No knives on school property (§ 4-102), even legal ones—misdemeanor up to 3 years/$1,000. Minors in certain counties can’t carry dangerous weapons at night outside hunting.

No statewide preemption: Baltimore limits blades to 3 inches in some areas; check locals. Government buildings often ban all blades.

Penalties and Enforcement

Violations are misdemeanors: up to 3 years/$1,000; higher if intent to injure. Felonies arise if used in crimes.

Police discretion applies; harmless pocketknives rarely issue. Authentication via case law protects folders.

SOURCES:

  • https://www.akti.org/state-knife-laws/maryland/
  • https://knifeinformer.com/state-knife-laws/maryland/

Amos Todd

Amos Todd is a professional writer and blogger at RebelExpress.net. He specializes in community news, sports coverage, and feature stories. With a clear and engaging writing style, Amos is dedicated to delivering accurate information and meaningful content that keeps readers informed and connected.

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