ATF Backtracks: Fewer Folks Forced into Gun Dealer Status
Published Date: 5/6/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The ATF is proposing to roll back some rules that made it easier to label someone a firearms dealer. This change affects people who buy and sell guns regularly and aims to clear up confusion from past regulations that didn’t work as planned. If you want to share your thoughts, you’ve got until August 4, 2026, to speak up!
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Removes Automatic Dealer Presumptions
ATF proposes to remove the rebuttable fact-pattern presumptions in 27 CFR 478.13(b)–(h) that could have presumed someone was a firearms dealer. The rule specifically deletes presumptions such as repetitive resale within 30 days of purchase or within one year for firearms that are new or the same make and model.
Keeps ‘Predominantly Earn a Profit’ Standard
ATF proposes to retain the statutory standard that the intent underlying a sale must be “predominantly one of obtaining pecuniary gain” and move that definition into 27 CFR 478.11. ATF also proposes a minor wording change clarifying that proof of profit is not required when sales were for criminal purposes or terrorism, and it would remove a sentence not found in the statute about intent existing even if no profit was realized.
Broadens ‘Personal Collection’ Treatment
ATF proposes to rescind the EIB rule's narrow definition of “personal collection” and to retain only the portion that addresses licensee personal collections. This means firearms held for noncommercial personal uses (for example, self-protection, hunting, target shooting, or collecting) would not be limited by the narrow hobby-only definition adopted earlier.
Eases Rules on Former Licensee Inventory
ATF proposes to remove the regulatory definition of “former licensee inventory” and to delete sentences in 27 CFR 478.57 and 478.78 that effectively limited former licensees to selling such inventory only within 30 days after discontinuing business (or to occasional sales to licensees thereafter).
Keeps Auctioneer Estate Sale Exception
ATF proposes to retain the EIB rule’s auctioneer exception that says an auctioneer who only provides auction services on commission to liquidate firearms at an estate-type auction is not an engaged-in-the-business dealer, so long as the auctioneer does not purchase or take possession of firearms for sale or consignment. This preserves longstanding guidance for auctioneers and estate liquidations.
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