2025 House Bill 4483

Weapons: concealed; QR code on concealed pistol licenses; provide for.

A bill to amend 1927 PA 372, entitled “An act to regulate and license the selling, purchasing, possessing, and carrying of certain firearms, gas ejecting devices, and electro-muscular disruption devices; to prohibit the buying, selling, or carrying of certain firearms, gas ejecting devices, and electro-muscular disruption devices without a license or other authorization; to provide for the forfeiture of firearms and electro-muscular disruption devices under certain circumstances; to provide for penalties and remedies; to provide immunity from civil liability under certain circumstances; to prescribe the powers and duties of certain state and local agencies; to prohibit certain conduct against individuals who apply for or receive a license to carry a concealed pistol; to make appropriations; to prescribe certain conditions for the appropriations; and to repeal all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act,” by amending section 5c (MCL 28.425c), as amended by 2015 PA 3.

AI Analysis – Experimental

House Bills 4481, 4482 & 4483 require the creation of a website by the Department of Attorney General to list states recognizing Michigan's concealed pistol licenses and their respective rules, promoting informed and lawful firearm carrying across state lines.

Introduced in the House

May 8, 2025

Introduced by Rep. Joseph Aragona (R-60) and 18 co-sponsors

Co-sponsored by Reps. Denise Mentzer (D-61), Jason Woolford (R-50), Tom Kunse (R-100), Jamie Thompson (R-28), Ken Borton (R-105), Pat Outman (R-91), Alicia St. Germaine (R-62), James DeSana (R-29), Gregory Alexander (R-98), Mike Harris (R-52), David Martin (R-68), Cameron Cavitt (R-106), Jaime Greene (R-65), Matt Maddock (R-51), Matt Bierlein (R-97), Timothy Beson (R-96), Jay DeBoyer (R-63) and Mike Hoadley (R-99)

Referred to the Committee on Judiciary

Nov. 5, 2025

Reported without amendment

Nov. 13, 2025

Passed in the House 92 to 9 (details)

Motion to give immediate effect by Rep. Bryan Posthumus (R-90)

The motion prevailed by voice vote