Orientation
Where you can shoot in Missouri
Before you load, know where you're standing. The safest, simplest choice for most people is a Conservation Department (MDC) range — and a lot of land that feels open is actually off-limits. You own every bullet until it stops. That's why 'where' is a safety question — a bullet doesn't stop at your property line. Get the backstop and 'what's beyond my target' right, and most of the danger and most of the legal risk disappear.
1. The short list of where you CAN shoot
A staffed MDC range (the best default), an unstaffed MDC range, rural private land you own or have permission for, the Mark Twain National Forest under federal rules, and private or commercial ranges. The table below is the honest version.
The honest landscape
Where can you legally shoot?
Most people overestimate where target shooting is allowed. Find where you're thinking of going in the left column — and when in doubt, a staffed MDC range is the simple, safe answer.
| Where | Can you shoot? | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| A staffed MDC range | Yes — the best default. Open year-round with range officers, booths, and safety gear. | Hours, fees, and last check-in (30 minutes before close) on the range page. |
| An unstaffed MDC range | Yes — it's a posted public range. No fee and no staff, so you follow the posted rules. | Open about a half-hour before sunrise to a half-hour after sunset. |
| A conservation area, away from a designated range | No — on conservation areas, target shooting is allowed only on a designated range (3 CSR 10-11.150). | Use the area's range, or pick a different legal spot. |
| Rural private land you own or have permission for | Maybe — legal if you do it safely and lawfully (a real backstop, away from roads/buildings/people, not in city limits, county rules OK, never intoxicated). | Your city and county ordinances — check both before you shoot. |
| Inside city limits | Assume no — most cities ban discharge unless you're at a lawful range or the local code clearly allows it. | Your city code. |
| Mark Twain National Forest | Maybe — informal target shooting is allowed in most places under strict federal rules. | The 150-yard / road / water rules, fire restrictions, and the current forest order. |
| A Corps of Engineers lake or project | Usually no — generally prohibited unless it's an authorized range, you have written permission, or it's lawful hunting (36 CFR 327.13). | The specific lake or project office. |
| A Missouri state park | No — state parks don't allow discharging firearms. | You may lawfully carry, but you can't target shoot. |
| NPS land, including Ozark National Scenic Riverways | Usually no — using or discharging a firearm is prohibited unless authorized (possession is a separate rule). | The park's rules. |
| A private or commercial range | Yes — follow that range's rules. | Hours, fees, and what's allowed, from the range. |
2. The much longer list of where you CAN'T
Inside city limits (assume no), Missouri state parks (no discharge), Corps of Engineers land, NPS land like the Ozark Riverways, wildlife refuges, and any conservation area away from its designated range. The where-you-can't page has the details.
Public land ≠ target-shooting land
Public land does not mean target-shooting land. MDC conservation areas, state parks, Corps lakes, NPS land, refuges, and the national forest all have different rules — and the agency that owns or manages the land decides. When in doubt, use a staffed MDC range.
3. The simplest safe path
When in doubt, use a staffed MDC range — staffed, posted, and built for this. The five Outdoor Education Centers and dozens of other ranges are staffed or posted, built for this, and inexpensive. See Conservation Department ranges for what's near you and the current fees.
4. The rules that never change
Wherever you shoot, the four firearm-safety rules apply, plus eye and ear protection every time, a real backstop, no alcohol or drugs, supervision for kids and new shooters, and packing out everything you bring.
5. Carrying is not the same as shooting
Carrying is not the same as shooting. Missouri allows open and concealed carry for most adults, and there are places you can lawfully carry but can't target shoot (a state park, for one). Carrying a firearm and firing at targets are governed by different rules — this hub is about target shooting, while carrying and self-defense are a separate topic with their own law.
Before you shoot
Missouri Porch explains; the law and the landowner decide.
Last checked: 2026-06-18. Firearm law is serious and changes by city and county — and ranges, fees, and fire restrictions change too. Check the current rule for where you're standing, lead with safety, and when in doubt, use a staffed MDC range.
This is a plain-English summary — not legal advice. Firearm law carries serious penalties and varies by city and county. Check your local ordinance and current state law, and when in doubt, use a staffed MDC range. In an emergency, call 911.
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