Ditch Paper: ATF Allows Digital Firearms Logs
Published Date: 5/8/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The ATF wants to let licensed gun sellers keep their records electronically instead of on paper. This change affects all federal firearms licensees and aims to make record-keeping easier and more modern. Comments on this proposal are open until August 6, 2026, and there’s no immediate cost increase announced.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
10 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 4 costs, 4 mixed.
FFLs May Use Electronic Records
If you are a federal firearms licensee (FFL), this proposal would let you create, maintain, and store all records required by the Gun Control Act and the National Firearms Act electronically instead of only on paper. The option would apply to all required records including acquisition & disposition records and Form 4473.
Technical Standards for Electronic Systems
If you keep records electronically, your system must meet minimum standards: records must be complete, format-print identical to ATF forms, unalterable, searchable by key terms (like name, serial number), sortable, navigable between record types, and generate audit trails that log who changed or accessed data.
Modernization vs. Purchase Costs
ATF says electronic records could reduce printing, storage, and mailing costs and make inspections faster, but a licensee might need to buy or upgrade software or systems to meet the rule's standards. The rule is optional and ATF notes savings may be offset if you purchase a new records system.
Required Data Back-Up Schedule
If you use electronic records you must perform incremental back-ups of changes at least once every 24 hours, a full system back-up at least once per month, and for Forms 4473 specifically follow daily back-up requirements. You must also download each year's complete records to a physical storage medium at year-end and retain that medium for the records retention period in Sec. 478.129.
Remote Storage Must Be Domestic
You may store electronic records remotely, but the server or the host facility must be located within the United States or its territories and must be subject to U.S. legal process. If you store records remotely you must notify ATF of the host facility's name, address, and phone number within 30 calendar days of engaging or transferring service.
Paper Fallback for Short Outages
If your electronic system is unavailable, you may use paper forms and must keep them per ATF rules for outages of ten or fewer calendar days. If the system is down for more than ten calendar days you must contact your local ATF office for instructions; you should also document the disruption and, if reasonably feasible, report software bugs to your vendor.
Inspection Access and Terminal Requirement
You must make electronic records downloadable and printable at your licensed business premises and have at least one computer terminal available for ATF compliance inspections. ATF recommends high-volume dealers provide multiple terminals to avoid interrupting business during inspections.
Rules for Ending Operations
If you end operations and surrender your FFL, you must perform a full system back-up, download and label records by license number and date range, and submit required records to ATF's Out‑of‑Business Records Center within 30 calendar days in an imageable electronic format with search disabled.
Single-Medium Rule per License
If you choose electronic records for a particular FFL license, you must keep all records for that license electronically (except paper produced during short outages). If you hold multiple licenses you may choose different media for each license, but the medium chosen must be consistent for each license.
Scanning and Destroying Old Paper Records
You may scan older paper records into your electronic system and then destroy the originals only after verifying scans are complete and exact images (including supplemental documents). Licensees who scanned records under prior ATF rulings may keep those scanned records.
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