Key Takeaways
- Tennessee lawmakers approved Senate Bill 1847, expanding legal protections for residents using deadly force against violent intruders.
- The bill justifies deadly force under specific conditions, such as imminent danger of violent felonies like burglary or robbery.
- Representative Capley emphasized that residents should not hesitate to defend themselves in dangerous situations.
- The final version addresses previous concerns by ensuring deadly force aligns with self-defense laws and imminent threats.
- The legislation reaffirms the fundamental right to self-defense within one’s home, effective July 1, 2026.
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
NASHVILLE, TN — Tennessee lawmakers gave final approval to legislation expanding the legal protections for residents who use deadly force to defend against violent intruders inside their homes. The Senate concurred in the House version on April 23, 2026, sending Senate Bill 1847 to the governor.
The House passed the amended bill 62 to 24, with three members present and not voting. The Senate had previously passed the bill 21 to 5 on April 21, then concurred with House Amendment #1 by a 23 to 5 vote later that month.
Senator Hensley carried the legislation in the upper chamber. Representative Capley sponsored the companion measure, House Bill 1802, in the House. The House substituted SB1847 for HB1802 before final passage.
Opening debate on the House floor, Capley framed the bill as a question of whose side lawmakers stand on. “Do we trust law abiding Tennesseans,” he asked colleagues, “or do we side with the criminals that prey upon them?” He argued that under existing law, residents are “expected to wait,” “expected to hesitate,” and “expected to second guess” in the face of a criminal act against them.
The amended legislation applies to a person who is in a place where they lawfully reside and who is not engaged in conduct that would constitute a felony or a Class A misdemeanor. Under those conditions, the bill justifies the use of deadly force in specific circumstances tied to violent felonies.
Specifically, deadly force is justified when the resident reasonably believes such force is immediately necessary to prevent another person’s imminent commission of arson, burglary, robbery, aggravated robbery, or aggravated cruelty to animals. The bill further requires imminent danger to the person or a third person of death, serious bodily injury, or grave sexual abuse.
The amendment also addresses situations where the use of force other than deadly force would expose the resident or a third person to grave sexual abuse. The legislation includes a severability clause and takes effect July 1, 2026.
The original version of the bill faced extended debate before being narrowed by Amendment #1. Several opponents pressed Capley on the threshold for using deadly force. Capley returned repeatedly to the language of the bill itself, telling members the resident “must reasonably believe deadly force is immediately necessary” and that the property cannot be protected by any other means.
Representative Pearson, who told colleagues he holds a lifetime carry permit, voiced concerns rooted in his own training. He said permit classes in Tennessee teach that “you don’t kill people over property” because deadly force should be reserved for situations involving a risk to innocent human life. Capley responded that the amended version mirrors Tennessee’s existing self-defense statute, noting the resident’s life must also be in danger.
Representative Freeman pressed the same point. “So then why do we need this bill?” he asked. Capley answered that the bill is “marrying the self defense statute” to the property protection provisions, closing gaps where lawful residents may not be fully covered under current law.
Representative Martin raised a hypothetical involving an elderly person with dementia who wanders onto private property. Capley pointed back to the statute’s reasonable belief requirement and the high bar for using deadly force, noting that any case would be evaluated on its facts.
For armed citizens, the final version of the bill reinforces a core principle of lawful self-defense. Deadly force remains tied to a reasonable belief that it is immediately necessary to prevent imminent death, serious bodily injury, or grave sexual abuse. The bill strengthens the legal footing of residents who face violent felonies in the place they lawfully call home.
The right to defend yourself and your family inside your own residence is a fundamental civil right rooted in the Second Amendment and centuries of legal tradition. Tennessee’s action affirms that lawful, peaceable citizens facing a violent intruder should not be forced to second-guess their right to protect innocent life in the moments that matter most.
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