Wisconsin
Department of Justice
Wisconsin
Fireworks Law
2008
The following
information was provided by
Assistant Attorney General
Dennis R. Krueger to answer
most questions you may have
about the Wisconsin
Fireworks Laws.
The
possession, sale and use of
fireworks in Wisconsin is
strictly regulated by
section. 167.10 of the
Wisconsin statutes. This
advisory summarizes
Wisconsin fireworks law and
answers common questions and
corrects common
misunderstandings about the
law.
Please note that there
were two revisions to
section 167.10 in the 2007
Budget Bill. The first
revision allows for the sale
of fireworks to an
individual or group of
individuals who hold a valid
permit. The second revision
allows for the sale of
fireworks to "a non-resident
person." The statute still
requires that fireworks be
possessed or used in
Wisconsin only by
individuals who hold a valid
permit.
Local ordinances may also
regulate fireworks and may
be stricter than state law,
but cannot be less strict.
This advisory discusses only
state law, so some devices
or materials described as
legal in this advisory may
be prohibited by a local
ordinance.
Legal Without A
Permit
State allows the sale,
possession and use, without
a permit, of sparklers,
stationary cones and
fountains, toy snakes, smoke
bombs, and caps, noisemakers
and confetti poppers with
less than l;4 of a grain of
explosive mixture. Wis.
Stat. § 167.10(1). There is
no age restriction on sale,
possession or use of these
devices and the statute does
not classify them as
fireworks. Local ordinances
may be more restrictive than
state statutes and may
prohibit any of these items
or limit their sale or use.
These are the only kinds
of "fireworks," as that word
is commonly used, that a
person may use or possess
without a permit or that may
be sold to a person who does
not have a permit.
Illegal Without A
Permit
Possessing or using any
other fireworks within the
state, including, for
example, firecrackers, roman
candles, bottle rockets and
mortars, without a valid
permit is illegal. Wis.
Stat. § 167.10(3). A
commonly used rule of thumb
is that a permit is required
if the device explodes or
leaves the ground. The
sale of restricted fireworks
to a Wisconsin resident
without a valid permit is
illegal. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(2). Sales by resident
wholesalers and jobbers to
non-residents without a
permit are allowed, Wis.
Stat. § 167.1 D( 4),
although use and possession
by non-residents in
Wisconsin are not.
Conditions For A
Valid Permit
Nearly all fireworks
permits relied upon by
buyers and users of
fireworks in Wisconsin are
not valid. Most of these
permits fail for more than
one reason. The requirements
for a valid permit are
contained in Wis. Stat. §
167.10(3)(a), (c) and (f)
and are detailed below.
Permits issued or sold
by fireworks vendors are
invalid. A permit may
only be issued by a mayor,
village president or town
chair or a muuicipal
employee or official they
have designated. Wis. Stat.
§ 167.10(3)(a). An official
may not delegate any part of
the permit-issuing
responsibility or authority
to a vendor. A permit given
or sold by a vendor bearing
either a printed, stamped or
pre-signed signature of a
local official in which the
permittee's information is
completed by the vendor or
the buyer has not been
issued by tIle official and
is not valid, even if it
purports to be issued on
behalf of the municipality
and even ifthe fees are
remitted to the
municipality.
A permit is valid only
in the city, village or town
of the official who issued
it. A mayor, village
president or town chair can
only authorize possession or
use of fireworks within
their jurisdiction. Wis.
Stat. § 167.10(3)(a). For
example, a permit issued by
the town chair of one town
cannot and does not
authorize possession or use
of the fireworks in another
town. A person that has a
valid permit from one
municipality may purchase
fireworks in another
municipality and transport
them to the municipality iu
which the person has a
permit. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(3)(b)7.
A permit may require a
bond or insurance. Wis.
Stat. § 167.10(3)(e). An
offioial issuing a perrnit
may require a bond or
insurance policy to
iudemnify the issuing
municipality for any damages
that may result from the
possession or use of the
fireworks.
A permit may be issued
to an individual or group of
individuals. Permits,
other than for crop
protection, may be issued to
a public authority, a fair
association, an amusement
park, a park board, a civic
organization, an individual,
or a group of individuals.
Wis. Stat. § 167.10(3)(c).
Although individuals
may now obtain permits, a
group may also obtain a
permit in the group's name.
A group with a permit may
authorize an individual to
make purchases on its
behalf, but the permit
must be in the name of the
group. A person buying for a
group should have both a
copy of the group's permit
and of the authorization of
the group. A group may not
issue a blanket
authorization to all of its
members to purchase on
behalf of the group. City of
Wisconsin Dells v. Dells
Fireworks, Inc., 197 Wis. 2d
1, 21 539 N.W.2d 916 (Ct.
App. 1995). The authorized
buyer may only buy the kind
of fireworks specified in
the group's permits. The
total quantity purchased by
all authorized buyers on
behalf of the group cannot
exceed the quantity of
fireworks authorized by the
permit. The fireworks
purchased on behalf of the
group may only be possessed
in the municipality which
issued the group's permit,
except while being
transported from the point
of sale to that
municipality. The fireworks
may only be used by the
group on the date and
location specified on the
permit and subject to any
other conditions on the
permit.
A permit must specify
the kind and quantity of
fireworks allowed to be used
or possessed. Wis. Stat.
§ 167.10(3)(£)3. The purpose
of the fireworks statute is
to allow municipalities to
"carefully control the use
and possession of fireworks
within its boundaries."
Dells Fireworks, Inc., 197
Wis. 2d at 21. The kind and
quantity must be specified
with enough detail to
accomplish that. Specifying
kind with broad categories,
such as "consumer fireworks"
does not satisfy this
requirement. Note also that
the term "Class COO
fireworks no longer has any
legal meaning. Any permit
describing the kind of
fireworks allowed only as
"Class C" fireworks is
invalid.
The quantity must be
expressed by the number of
each kind of fireworks, not
by the dollar value ofthe
fireworks. Dollars are a
measure of value, not
quantity.
A permit must specify
the location at which the
fireworks may be possessed
or used. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(3)(f)4. As noted
above, this location must be
within the jurisdiction of
the official who issued the
permit. It'must be a
specific location within
that jurisdiction, rather
than the entire
jurisdiction. The statute
uses "location" in the
singular. A permit that
specifies multiple locations
is not valid.
The permit must
specify the date of the
permitted use. The word
"date" is in the singular in
the statute. A permit that
specifies multiple dates or
a range of dates of
permitted use is not valid.
This, in combination . with
the specification of
location, means that a
separate permit is required
for each date and location
for which use is permitted.
The permit must
specify the date on and
after which the fireworks
can be purchased. This
is also a singular date, not
a range of dates and it may
be different from the date
of permitted use.
A copy of the permit
must be given to a fire or
law enforcement official in
the municipality which
issued the permit at least
two days before the date of
use. Wis. Stat. § 167.1
0(3)(g).
The permit may contain
additional restrictions.
Wis. Stat. § 167.10(3)(£)5.
A municipality may adopt
ordinances imposing special
restrictions, e.g. times or
manner of use, distances
from buildings or
spectators, etc. and a
permit may specify these
additional restrictions.
Permits may not be
issued to minors. Wis.
Stat. § 167.1 0(3)(h). Since
minors may not be issued
fireworks permits there are
no conditions under which it
is legal for a minor to
possess or use any fireworks
except those allowed without
a permit, e.g.' sparklers,
snakes, fountains, etc.
Non-residents must
have a valid permit to
possess or use fireworks
while in Wisconsin. The
law has been changed so that
it is no longer illegal for
a resident wholesaler or
jobber to sell fireworks to
out-of-state residents. Wis.
Stat. § 167.1 0(4). However,
the law requiring that a
permit is required to
possess or use fireworks has
not changed. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(3)(a). Therefore,
while a resident wholesaler
or jobber may lawfully sel1
fireworks to an out-of-state
resident, it remains
unlawful for a non-resident
to possess or use those
fireworks in Wisconsin
without a permit. A
non-resident who lawfully
purchases fireworks under a
permit can possess and use
those fireworks in Wisconsin
pursuant to the terms of the
permit or may transport them
out of state. A non-resident
without a valid Wisconsin
permit may order fireworks
from a resident wholesaler
or jobber for out-of-state
delivery. However, the
fireworks must be shipped to
the buyer by common carrier,
contract carrier or private
motor carrier. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(4).
Penalties
A person who possesses or
uses fireworks without a
valid permit, or who sells
fireworks to a person who
does not have a valid
permit, is subject to a
forfeiture of up to $1,000
per violation. Wis. Stat. §
167.10(9)(b). Each firework
illegally possessed, used or
sold may be a separate
violation.
A parent or guardian who
allows a minor to possess or
use fireworks (not including
those for which no permits
are required) is subject to
a forfeiture of up to $1,000
per violation. Wis. Stat. §
167.1 0(9)( c).
A city, village or town
may obtain an injunction
prohibiting a person from
violating Wis. Stat. §
167.10(8)(a). Violations of
such an injunction are
criminal misdemeanors,
subject to up to 9 months in
jail and a $10,000 fme. Wis.
Stat. § 167.10(9)(a).
Enforcement
The statutes do not give
the Department of Justice
direct authority to enforce
the fireworks law.
Enforcement responsibility
and authority rest with
local law enforcement and
district attorneys, or
municipal prosecutors in the
case of local ordinance
violations.
Wisconsin Fireworks Law,
2008