Where to Take the FSC Test in California (2026 Guide)

Find where to take the FSC test in California — licensed dealers, what to bring, the $25 fee, and free practice tests to pass on your first try.

Where to Take the FSC Test in California

Looking for where to take the FSC test? California's Firearm Safety Certificate test is only administered at one place: licensed firearms dealers (FFLs) in California. There's no DMV location, no county office, no online option. You go to a gun store, you take the test there.

That's not as limiting as it sounds — California has thousands of licensed dealers statewide, so finding a location near you usually isn't a problem. But knowing exactly what to expect at a dealer location makes the process go smoothly.

Who Administers the FSC Test?

Every California licensed firearms dealer is a DOJ-certified FSC test administrator. When you walk into a gun store to buy a handgun or semiautomatic centerfire rifle, they administer the FSC test on the spot. You pay the $25 fee, sit down with the written test, finish it, and — if you pass — get your FSC card right there.

You don't need to schedule an appointment in most cases. Walk-in is the standard. That said, if you want to just take the FSC without purchasing a firearm, any licensed dealer can administer the test separately. Call ahead to confirm they offer standalone FSC testing — most do, but some smaller dealers prefer to administer it alongside a purchase.

What to Bring to the FSC Test

California requires proof of identity and age to take the FSC test. Specifically, you need:

  • A valid, unexpired California driver's license or ID card
  • Your $25 fee (most dealers accept cash and cards)

You must be at least 18 to take the FSC test for long guns, or 21 for handguns. There's no study materials allowed during the test — it's closed book. Come ready.

If you don't have a California ID, check the current DOJ requirements — some other government-issued IDs may be acceptable, but California DL/ID is the most straightforward.

How the FSC Test Works

The FSC test is a 30-question multiple-choice exam. You need to answer 23 out of 30 correctly (about 77%) to pass. The questions come from the California DOJ's FSC Study Guide, which covers safe handling, storage, transportation, and California firearm laws.

You have 30 minutes to complete the test. Most people finish faster than that. The dealer will grade it immediately, and if you pass, they print your FSC card on the spot. You walk out with the certificate that day.

If you don't pass, you can retake it — but there are some limitations on same-day retakes, and you'll pay the fee again. Don't go in without reviewing the study guide first.

Finding an FSC Testing Location Near You

To find a dealer near you that administers the FSC test:

  1. Use the California DOJ Dealer Locator on the CA DOJ website
  2. Google "licensed firearms dealer near me" or "FFL dealer [your city]"
  3. Call ahead to confirm FSC testing availability and hours

Major chain stores like Sportsman's Warehouse, Bass Pro Shops, Big 5 Sporting Goods, and Turner's Outdoorsman all administer FSC tests. So do independent gun stores across the state. In most populated areas of California, you'll have multiple options within a short drive.

Hours matter. Not all dealers administer FSC tests during all business hours — some require you to come in during specific testing windows. Calling ahead saves you a wasted trip.

Is the FSC Test Online?

No. The FSC test is not available online. California law requires in-person administration at a licensed dealer. You can't complete it remotely, through a website, or through any other channel. Anyone claiming to offer an online FSC test is not offering a valid California FSC.

What you can do online is prepare using study materials and practice tests. The California DOJ publishes the official FSC Study Guide at no cost on their website. Reading through it before your test is the single most effective thing you can do to prepare.

What Does the FSC Test Cover?

The 30 questions on the FSC test come from the following topic areas:

  • Safe handling and storage — How to safely handle, load, unload, and store firearms. This is the largest content area.
  • Safe transportation — California-specific rules for transporting firearms in vehicles
  • Legal restrictions — Who can possess firearms, prohibited persons, restrictions on specific firearm types
  • Use of force laws — Basic self-defense and justifiable use of force in California

Questions aren't trick questions — they're testing whether you've read the study guide. The state wants to confirm that anyone purchasing a firearm in California has at least been exposed to basic safety and legal requirements.

After You Pass: Using Your FSC

Your FSC card is good for 5 years. When you go to purchase a handgun or semiautomatic centerfire rifle from a California dealer, you'll need to present your valid FSC. Dealers keep records of FSC numbers for transfers.

If you lose your FSC card, you'll need to contact the DOJ for replacement options — or retake the test at a dealer. The FSC number itself is in the DOJ database, but having the physical card is what dealers want to see.

For the complete picture on California FSC requirements, eligibility, and what the certificate covers, the firearm safety certificate guide and the California FSC requirements guide have the full breakdown. If you want to work through practice questions before heading to a dealer, the California FSC practice test covers all the content areas on the real exam. And the FSC exam pass guide walks through exactly what to review before test day.

Practice Before You Go to the Dealer

The FSC test is a one-shot deal — you either pass and get your card that day, or you pay again to retake it. Spending 20 minutes on practice questions before you go is a smart use of time.

Our free FSC practice tests cover the same topic areas as the real exam: safe handling, storage, transportation, California firearm laws, and use of force. Work through a practice set, see which areas you're unsure about, review the DOJ study guide for those sections, then go take the real test.

Most people who study the official FSC Study Guide pass on their first attempt. Don't skip the prep. It's a 30-question test — it's not hard if you've reviewed the material. Start a practice test now and you'll be ready.

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.