Gun Travel Gets Green Light: Rest Stops Now Legally Safe
Published Date: 5/6/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The ATF is making it clearer that when you’re traveling with firearms across state lines, normal stops like eating, resting, or fixing your car count as part of your trip and are protected by law. This update also covers moving ammo and gun accessories safely between states. If you’re involved in transporting firearms, you can comment on these changes until August 4, 2026, with no new fees involved.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Interstate travel stops protected
ATF's proposed amendment to 27 CFR 478.38 (published May 6, 2026) says that activities reasonably necessary to interstate travel — such as staying overnight in temporary lodging, stopping for food, fuel, vehicle maintenance, an emergency, medical treatment, transiting between modes of transportation, or moving a firearm at the start or end of a journey — count as part of the person's "transport" and are protected by 18 U.S.C. 926A. The rule is a proposed change and ATF requested comments by August 4, 2026.
Required storage while in transit
The proposed rule specifies storage rules during interstate travel: firearms in a vehicle must be unloaded and not directly accessible from the passenger compartment; if the vehicle lacks a separate compartment, the firearm or ammunition must be in a locked container other than the glove compartment or console. If a journey requires a reasonable break in continuous transit (for example an overnight hotel stay) and vehicle storage is not possible, the person must store the unloaded firearm and ammunition in a locked container so they are not readily accessible for immediate use; the same locked-container requirement applies when switching vehicles or modes.
Ammunition and accessories covered
The proposed regulation explicitly covers the right to transport ammunition and firearm accessories (including but not limited to ammunition regardless of bullet type, scopes, sights, optics, stocks, grips, stabilizing braces, mounts, weapon-mounted lights, magazines, clips, feed strips, holsters, slings, and cleaning kits) as part of the transport entitlement, provided each item is lawful under federal law and lawful at the place where travel began and at the destination. Such accessories must be transported in the manner required by the rule (e.g., unloaded and locked or otherwise in compliance with the applicable paragraph).
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