Is it legal to Buy a brass knuckles in Sweden?
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Quick answer
Legal position
Current starter summary
In Sweden, brass knuckles are treated as dangerous objects. Official sources clearly say they may not be sold in retail and may not be imported without a special permit, but the sources reviewed do not cleanly state whether every adult buyer commits a separate offence in every purchase scenario.
Conditions
What would need to be true
Retail sale is prohibited, import requires a special permit from Polismyndigheten, and under-21 buyers or recipients are expressly exposed to liability under the police guidance.
Exceptions
Known carve-outs or edge cases
Import permission may be granted where the item is intended for a weapons collection or a similar purpose.
Penalties
Penalty snapshot
Retail-sale and knife-law breaches can lead to fines or imprisonment, and gross knife-law offences can lead to imprisonment from six months to two years.
Enforcement
How this may be enforced
Polismyndigheten enforces the knife-law and import-permit rules, and Tullverket checks border movements.
More rules in Sweden
Use the reset build to keep country pages useful even before every row is fully sourced.
Buy a pepper spray
In Sweden, tear-gas devices, pepper spray and similar products are covered by the Weapons Act, and the police say you need a police permit to have them. Licensing is very restrictive.
Buy a stun gun
In Sweden, hand-held devices intended to stun people or inflict pain with electric current are treated as firearm-equivalents under the Weapons Act. Official customs guidance classifies electric-shock weapons as stun guns, Tasers and similar devices.
Buy a taser
In Sweden, Tasers are treated as electric-shock weapons covered by the Weapons Act. Official customs guidance explicitly lists elchockvapen as including elpistol, taser and similar devices.
Carry a brass knuckles
In Sweden, brass knuckles are dangerous objects. Possession of dangerous objects on a public place, within a school area, or in a vehicle on a public place is prohibited unless the possession is justified.
Compare this activity in other countries
This makes the rule page useful for comparison without creating a second data source.
Australia
Australia does not have one uniform civilian brass-knuckles rule. Victoria Police classifies a knuckle-duster as a prohibited weapon, and Victoria Police approval material says prohibited weapons generally require Chief Commissioner approval or an applicable exemption for purchase, possession, carriage or transport. Australian Border Force treats knuckle-dusters as weapons subject to border controls.
Austria
Austria classifies brass knuckles as prohibited weapons in category A. The official weapons overview says acquisition, possession and carrying of category A weapons are fundamentally prohibited.
Belgium
Belgian Justice lists American brass knuckles as prohibited weapons. Prohibited weapons cannot lawfully be possessed, bought, transported or carried by civilians.
Canada
Brass knuckles are prohibited weapons in Canada and ordinary public purchase is not lawful.
About this row
Canonical dataset status
Official sources
Source URLs attached
Reset rule
Why the page is intentionally light
The new site should show a stable layout, a stable route, and clear source slots before the dataset is scaled up again. That keeps management simple and makes later official-source population safer.