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  2. If you are coming into Canada with a firearm, please fill out a Non-Resident Firearms Declaration form before you arrive at your entry point into Canada to save you time. Do not sign the form; a Canada Border Services Agency ( CBSA) customs officer must witness your signature. The fee is $25.

  3. the Non-Resident Firearm Declaration - Continuation Sheet (RCMP GRC 5590) to declare the firearms you wish to import. Every time you enter Canada you will need to declare your firearms.

  4. Application for a Non-resident Temporary Borrowing Licence for Non-restricted Firearms [PDF - 333 KB] This form must be submitted and approved ahead of time by the Chief Firearms Officer of the province where you intend to borrow the firearm(s). RCMP 5589: Non-Resident Firearms Declaration [PDF - 643 KB]

  5. Information Sheet: Non-Resident Firearm Declaration Continuation Sheet. Prohibited Firearm is: prohibited handgun, that is, with a barrel of 105 mm (4.25 inches) or less, or designed or adapted to discharge a 25 or 32 calibre cartridge. rifle or shotgun that has been changed to make it less than 660 mm (26 inches) in overall length.

  6. Non-residents can usually bring a non-restricted rifle or shotgun into Canada for approved purposes such as hunting, target shooting, wilderness protection or in-transit movement by a reasonably direct route to another point outside Canada. Restricted Firearms. You must. be at least 18 years old.

  7. Use Individual Web Services to register restricted firearms that have never been registered in Canada (for example, new imports) or to re-register firearms that were registered to someone under the former law (prior to December 1, 1998). You must provide: your firearms licence number and other personal identification information.

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