Short answer: no, you don't need an Irish Firearms Certificate as a visiting hunter. You need either a valid licence from your home country plus a temporary import permit issued by An Garda Síochána, or you use your outfitter's rifle and skip the paperwork entirely. The outfitter does the heavy lifting on this — you're not filling in FCA1.
Here's the full picture for the three most common visiting-hunter scenarios.
Scenario 1: EU Hunter Bringing Their Own Rifle
If you're an EU national with a European Firearms Pass (EFP) issued in your home country, you're in the easiest position. Ireland recognises the EFP for the species and calibres listed on it. Your outfitter will still apply for a temporary Visitor Firearms Certificate on your behalf — this is an Irish-side permit required for anyone using a firearm in Ireland, regardless of home country.
The outfitter sends a letter of invitation plus your EFP details to the local Garda Superintendent 4–6 weeks in advance. Cost is usually bundled into the package or charged as a €50–€100 admin fee.
Scenario 2: US or Canadian Hunter Bringing Their Own Rifle
Without an EFP, the process is longer. You'll need to provide:
- Copy of your home-country firearms licence (or, if your state doesn't issue one, a notarised letter explaining ownership status)
- Passport copy
- Full firearm details: make, model, calibre, serial number
- Proof of purpose — your outfitter's letter of invitation and contract
- US Customs Form 4457 (register of personal property taken abroad) so you can bring the rifle back home
Your outfitter files for the Visitor Firearms Certificate on your behalf. Plan on 8–12 weeks lead time — don't wait until a month before departure.
Scenario 3: Use the Outfitter's Rifle
This is by far the most common choice for first-time visiting hunters. Your outfitter supplies a zeroed rifle, moderator (suppressor — legal and standard in Ireland for deer stalking) and appropriate ammunition for the species you're after.
Standard rental is €100–€200 for the trip, plus ammunition at roughly €5–€8 per round. You still need to bring:
- Proof you can legally handle a rifle at home (for EU hunters, your licence; for US hunters, a statement of competence or range certificate — ask your outfitter what they accept)
- Photo ID and passport
No Irish permit, no customs hassle, no risk of your case going missing at Heathrow on a connecting flight.
What About Ammunition?
You can import up to 1 kg of commercial ammunition in your checked bag with proper declaration, but many visiting hunters simply buy Irish ammunition on arrival. Your outfitter will have common calibres (.243, .270, .308, 6.5 Creedmoor, .30-06) ready on the shelf.
Shotguns for Wingshooting
The process is the same — your outfitter arranges a Visitor Firearms Certificate. Most wingshooting outfitters (woodcock, snipe, duck) will supply a shotgun for visitors; this is even more common than for rifles. If you want to bring your own, start paperwork 6–8 weeks out.
What You Don't Need
- You don't need an Irish Firearms Certificate (FCA1 form is for residents)
- You don't need to pass the Irish Garda-approved safety course
- You don't need an NPWS deer licence in your own name — you're hunting under the outfitter's permission
- You don't need a separate suppressor permit — the outfitter's rifle is already moderated
A Note on Honesty
Don't be tempted to bring in a rifle without going through the visitor certificate process, even if you've "done it before in [country X]". Ireland has a small, well-connected hunting and Garda community. Getting caught with an undeclared firearm will end your trip, your relationship with the outfitter, and possibly your future entry to Ireland. The paperwork is a nuisance; the consequences of skipping it aren't.
Your outfitter handles the paperwork
Every outfitter in our directory has done this hundreds of times. Send an enquiry and we'll match you — they'll take it from there.
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