01/15/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 01/15/2025 11:42
Everytown's Analysis Shows That 299,000 Lives Could Be Saved Over the Next Decade if Every State Saw the Same Gun Violence Rates as the Nation's Leading Nine States in Gun Safety Policies
ATLANTA, GA - Everytown for Gun Safety today launched the updated "Gun Law Rankings" for 2025, an online tool and website that ranks all 50 states based on the strength of their gun laws and catalogs 50 gun safety laws state by state. The rankings show a clear connection between stronger gun safety laws and lower rates of gun deaths. If every state in the country had the gun death rates of the nine states with the strongest gun safety laws, 299,000 lives could be saved in the next decade. Everytown's analysis found that Georgia continues to rank 46th for the weakness of its gun laws.
While gun-sense legislators in states like California and Massachusetts have worked this past year to pass common-sense gun safety policies such as strengthening secure storage standards in California, and increasing the minimum age to purchase certain firearms and prohibiting untraceable "ghost guns" in Massachusetts, gun lobby-backed legislators in Georgia instead rejected efforts to pass gun safety legislation like a tax credit for secure storage devices and secure storage in automobiles to prevent firearm theft.
"I think Georgia lawmakers should be ashamed of themselves," said LaDeija Kimbrough, a volunteer leader with the Clark Atlanta University Students Demand Action chapter. "I spent days at the Capitol after the mass shooting at Apalachee High School, pleading to lawmakers about how gun safety laws can prevent these tragedies. My pleas were met with blatant inaction. I believe in the power of prayer, but without any meaningful action? More lives will be put in danger."
"Gun laws save lives and states that enact common-sense, bipartisan policies are clearly standing on the side of public safety," said Nick Suplina, Senior Vice President for Law and Policy at Everytown for Gun Safety. "As 2025 gets underway, we're doubling down in the states, defending the gains we've made and charting new paths ahead. We can turn the tide on our nation's gun violence crisis, but only if all leaders step up to meet the moment."
"We have handed state legislators a roadmap for keeping their communities safe from gun violence. Now, these lawmakers have a choice to make: Either listen to the vast majority of Americans calling for gun safety laws or cower to a craven gun lobby hellbent on putting our communities at risk," said Monisha Henley, Senior Vice President for Government Affairs at Everytown for Gun Safety. "The strong correlation between the strength of a state's gun laws and its rate of gun deaths confirms the undeniable fact that refusing to take action is putting our lives in peril."
In an average year, 2,005 people die and 5,029 are wounded by guns in Georgia. Georgia ranks 8th in gun violence rates. With an average cost of gun violence at $2,249 per person each year, gun deaths and injuries cost Georgia $23.9 billion, of which $597.8 million is paid by taxpayers. If Georgia had the gun death rate of our National Leaders-the nine states with the strongest gun safety laws-we could save 16,920 lives in the next decade. More information about gun violence in Georgia is available here.
Highlights from 2025 Gun Law Rankings:
The 2025 Gun Law Rankings is a project of the Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund. Everytown's analysis shows that states with strong gun safety policies, such as background checks on all gun sales and Extreme Risk laws, also known as Red Flag laws, have higher ranks for the strength of their gun laws and see lower rates of gun violence. Meanwhile, states with weaker gun laws, like permitless carry and Shoot First laws, see higher rates of gun violence.
Last week, the ATF released a report reinforcing the serious public safety consequences of firearm transfers made without background checks - one of the 50 policies within Everytown's State Gun Law Rankings. New data within the report indicated "that unregulated private sales (without background checks) facilitate the movement of a significant volume of firearms from the legal marketplace to prohibited persons." The full report can be found here.
Everytown's Gun Law Rankings include: