ATF Sharpens Rules: When Permits Skip the Gun Check Line
Published Date: 5/6/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
The ATF is updating rules to make it clearer when a state gun permit can replace a background check during gun sales. This change affects gun buyers and sellers by simplifying some paperwork and making sure the rules match the law exactly. You’ve got until August 4, 2026, to share your thoughts, and no new fees or costs are expected.
Analyzed Economic Effects
6 provisions identified: 5 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
When State Permits Replace NICS
ATF proposes to clarify when a state firearms permit can be used instead of a NICS background check. A permit will qualify only if it: (1) allows possession/acquisition/carry; (2) was issued not more than five years earlier by the state where the transfer occurs; and (3) the state's law requires an official to verify available information showing the transferee is not prohibited from possessing firearms.
Expired Permits Cannot Substitute
The proposed rule adds that qualifying state permits must be both valid and unexpired to serve as an alternative to a NICS check; permits that are expired cannot be used in place of a NICS check under federal law.
When Lifetime Permits Qualify
A nominally 'lifetime' or longer-than-five-year permit can qualify as a NICS alternative if the state's law requires an official to verify or reverify the applicant (including via NICS or equivalent) within the previous five years, the official complied, and the permit-holder provides documentation showing the verification date.
Non-CJAs Can Use Readily Available Records
If an authorized issuing official cannot access NICS (for example, because the issuing agency is not a criminal justice agency), the rule allows that official to rely on all information otherwise readily available to them (excluding information that requires extraordinary effort or expense) to determine whether a permit-holder is prohibited from possessing firearms.
Only Qualifying Subsets Recognized
When a state issues the same type of permit via multiple procedures, ATF will recognize only the subset of permits issued under procedures that meet the federal requirements; qualifying permits should be distinguishable or labeled so licensees can tell which permits are NICS-exempt.
No New Costs; Small Entities Not Hurt
ATF states the proposed rule is clarifying and deregulatory, expects no new fees or costs, certifies no significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, and does not change the burden of the existing Form 4473 information collection.
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Key Dates
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