What Fireworks Are Actually Legal in North Carolina?
North Carolina is one of the strictest states in the country on consumer fireworks. The simple rule of thumb our local fire departments use: if it explodes, spins, leaves the ground, or flies through the air, it's illegal here. That's spelled out in the state's fireworks statutes (NC General Statutes Chapter 14, Article 54).
So what can you legally light up in your Elkin backyard? The non-explosive, ground-based stuff:
Legal in NC: wire sparklers, fountains, snakes and glow worms, smoke devices, party poppers, snappers, and string poppers — novelty items that stay put and don't take flight.
Illegal in NC: firecrackers, bottle rockets, Roman candles, ground spinners, mortars, and any aerial or exploding device. Using or possessing these is a Class 2 misdemeanor, with penalties that can reach a $500 fine and jail time. And there's no holiday exception — the same rules apply on the Fourth of July as any other day of the year.
One more detail Surry County parents ask about every June: children under 16 can't legally buy or use fireworks in North Carolina — not even sparklers, which burn hot enough to cause serious burns.
In North Carolina, anything that explodes or leaves the ground is illegal — statewide, every day of the year, even on your own property with permission.
BL
What I Tell My Clients
Sparklers and fountains for the kids in the yard? Have a ball. The moment something's designed to shoot up over Pilot Mountain way, it's not just unsafe — it's a legal and an insurance problem rolled into one. Keep it on the ground and you keep it simple.