Locked and Unloaded: Assessing American Gun Owners' Safety Training and Use of Secure Firearm Storage Mechanisms
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to analyze the prevalence of firearm safety training and secure gun storage practices among American gun owners. We used nationally-representative survey data to estimate the impact of previously untested predictors of secure firearm storage. Findings show that older gun owners, gun owners living in metropolitan statistical areas, and low-SES gun owners are less likely to use secure firearm storage methods. Gun owners who receive formal, informal, or both forms of safety training are more likely to store firearms securely than those who receive no training. Additionally, results indicate that state-level secure gun storage laws have little influence on gun owners’ use of mechanisms to securely store their firearms. Findings suggest that firearm safety training has a demonstrable impact on improving gun owners’ use of secure firearm storage mechanisms.
Repository Citation
Kruis, Nathan E., Choi, Jaeyong, Kinney, Alexander B., et al. 2026. "Locked and Unloaded: Assessing American Gun Owners' Safety Training and Use of Secure Firearm Storage Mechanisms." Crime & Delinquency.
Publisher
Sage Publications
Publication Date
6-20-2026
Publication Title
Crime & Delinquency
Department
Sociology
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/00111287261458254
Keywords
Firearm storage, Firearm safety, Gun owners, Gun safety training, Secure firearm storage, Laws
Language
English
Format
text
