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  3. NFA Tax Stamp Hits Zero

NFA Tax Stamp Hits Zero

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    NFA Tax Stamp Hits Zero

    The $200 NFA tax stamp dropped to zero on January 1, 2026. Suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, and AOWs now transfer tax-free, eliminating the financial barrier that kept many gun owners from NFA items.

    President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill on July 4, 2025, with the NFA transfer tax reduction buried deep in the legislation. The ATF shut down eForms on December 26 to update their systems, then reopened on New Year's Day to a flood of applications.

    Why it matters: The $200 barrier is gone, but every other NFA requirement remains. You still need ATF approval, fingerprints, photos, and registration—the only thing that changed is your credit card statement.

    • By the numbers: The scale of Day 1 demand was staggering.

    • 150,000 applications hit the system

    • 2,500 is the typical daily volume

    • 5,900% spike in applications

    • $0 tax stamp for suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, AOWs

    The bureaucratic process remains unchanged. Background checks are still required, wait times will likely stretch for months given the application surge, and state laws still have the final say on what's legal in your jurisdiction.

    "Budget for the suppressor, not the stamp."

    Machine guns and destructive devices still carry the $200 tax—those categories weren't included in the legislation. The registry for machine guns also remains closed to new entries, so pre-1986 samples still command premium prices regardless of tax policy.

    The bottom line: Free stamps don't mean fast approvals. Expect longer wait times as ATF works through the massive backlog created by eliminating the financial barrier.

    Go deeper:

    • American Rifleman
    • Capitol Armory

    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Steve Duskett


    Join the Discussion

    With the tax stamp finally free, are you planning to submit any Form 1s or Form 4s you've been sitting on, or are you holding off until the application backlog clears?

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