---
title: "Warrant Exceptions"
type: Legal Term
source: https://casebriefly.com/legal-terms/warrant-exceptions
---

# Warrant Exceptions

Warrant exceptions are the recognized categories of circumstances under which the government may conduct a constitutionally valid search or seizure without first obtaining a judicial warrant. The major exceptions include consent, search incident to arrest, the automobile exception, plain view, hot pursuit and exigent circumstances, stop and frisk (Terry stops), and inventory searches. Each exception has its own specific requirements and scope limitations developed through Supreme Court case law. The burden of proving that a warrantless search falls within a recognized exception rests on the government, and courts construe these exceptions narrowly to preserve the warrant requirement's protective function.

## Related Terms

- warrant-requirement
- consent-search
- automobile-exception
- hot-pursuit

## Related Cases

- arizona-v-gant

## Example

After arresting a suspect at his front door, officers argued they did not need a warrant to search the home under three separate exceptions -- search incident to arrest, exigent circumstances, and consent -- but the court found none applied because the arrest occurred outside, no emergency existed, and consent was coerced.

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Source: [Warrant Exceptions — CaseBriefly](https://casebriefly.com/legal-terms/warrant-exceptions)
