ATF Proposes Shared Gun Registry for Married Couples
Published Date: 5/8/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The ATF wants to let married couples register certain firearms together under the National Firearms Act. This means spouses can share ownership without needing extra paperwork when transferring guns between them. If you’re married and deal with these firearms, you can comment on this change by July 7, 2026, and it could save you time and hassle in the future.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
6 provisions identified: 4 benefits, 1 costs, 1 mixed.
Spouses May Jointly Register NFA Guns
ATF proposes to allow married spouses to file a single, joint application to make, transfer or receive, and register National Firearms Act (NFA) firearms. If approved, both spouses would have a joint right to possess the firearm(s), and transferring those firearms between the registered spouses would not count as an additional NFA transfer that requires a transfer application.
Saves Money by Avoiding NFA Trusts
ATF estimates that allowing joint spouse registration would avoid the need to form a legal trust for many couples; ATF estimates per-couple savings could be about $185 per application and projects total undiscounted savings of $14,162,828 over 10 years. ATF used an illustrative per-trust savings calculation (including trust drafting and notarization) in its analysis.
Most NFA Making/Transfer Tax Is $0
The document states that, as of January 1, 2026, Congress reduced the NFA making/transferring tax to $0 for all NFA firearms except machine guns and destructive devices, which remain subject to a $200 tax. This $0 tax applies for making, transferring, and registering non-machine-gun/non-destructive-device NFA firearms.
Trust Applications Take Longer Now
ATF reports current processing times: paper Form 4 trust applications average 59 days vs. 49 days for individual applications (a 10-day difference), and electronic Form 4 trust applications average 11 days vs. 7 days for individual applications (a 4-day difference). Allowing spouse joint registration is presented as a way to avoid the longer trust-processing times.
Marriage Proof and False-Statement Risk
The proposed rule would require spouses filing jointly to provide documents demonstrating a legal marriage—examples include a marriage certificate, affidavits, or joint tax returns—and ATF would subject false attestations of marriage to federal false-statement statutes (e.g., 18 U.S.C. 1001). ATF is also considering how to verify common-law marriages via reliable state documents.
Divorce, Probate, and Prohibited-Spouse Rules
If jointly registered spouses later divorce or separate, a court decree transferring the firearm is treated as a transfer 'by operation of law' and handled via Form 5 as tax-exempt; spouses may also voluntarily transfer to one spouse via Form 4 (for most firearms this is $0 tax). If a jointly registered spouse becomes prohibited from possessing firearms, the prohibited spouse may not possess the firearm though registration need not be changed.
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