Firearm Serialization Requirements
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Firearm Serialization Requirements
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult with qualified legal counsel for specific situations.
Why it matters: Serial numbers aren't just random stamps on your gun—they're the breadcrumbs that let ATF trace firearms from factory to your gun safe, and understanding the rules keeps you on the right side of federal law.
Since 1968, every gun rolling off a manufacturer's line needs a unique serial number etched somewhere on the frame or receiver. It's been that way since the Gun Control Act passed, and for decades, life was simple.
Then came August 2022. ATF dropped new rules that basically said "those 80% lowers and ghost gun kits you've been buying? Yeah, those count as firearms now." Suddenly, a lot of previously unregulated chunks of aluminum required serial numbers, background checks, and all the federal paperwork that comes with them.
The legal reality: The 2022 rule redefined what counts as a firearm using the "readily convertible" standard—if you can reasonably turn that kit into a working gun with basic tools and the included instructions, it's now considered a firearm under federal law.
Here's what changed overnight:
- Manufacturers must now serialize certain unfinished frames and kits
- FFLs have seven days to serialize any privately made firearms they acquire
- Background checks are required for components that were previously unregulated
- "80% receivers" often fall under the new requirements if sold as part of a kit
What this means for you: If you're building guns at home for personal use, you're generally still in the clear under federal law—the feds haven't killed home gunsmithing yet. But buying the parts to build that gun? That's where things got complicated.
The "readily convertible" test looks at the whole package. If the seller includes jigs, drill bits, instructions, and everything else you need to complete a working firearm, that kit now gets treated like any other gun purchase. You'll need a background check, and the frame needs a serial number before it leaves the manufacturer.
Between the lines: This wasn't really about stopping criminals—it was about closing what ATF saw as a regulatory gap. For years, you could buy everything needed to build an AR-15 except the serialized lower receiver, then buy that "80%" lower without any paperwork. ATF decided that was too much of a loophole.
State Laws Add Another Layer
Federal law sets the floor, not the ceiling. Some states pile on additional requirements:
- Maryland requires serial numbers on ALL firearms before sale or transfer
- California has its own ghost gun registration requirements
- New York banned unfinished receivers entirely
Check your state's rules before you start any project. What's federally legal might still get you crossways with state authorities.
The Personal Use Exemption Still Exists
The bottom line: You can still legally build firearms for yourself without serializing them under federal law, but you can't build them to sell unless you've got the proper manufacturing license.
This exemption has deep roots—Americans have been making their own guns since before there was a United States. The feds haven't killed that tradition, but they've made it harder to source parts without paperwork.
Key points about the personal use exemption:
- No serial number required for personal builds under federal law
- Cannot build with intent to sell without proper licensing
- Must follow all other laws regarding what you can legally own
- Transfer rules still apply if you later decide to sell
Common Myths That Need Burying
I hear a lot of confused talk at gun shows about these rules. Let me set the record straight:
- "All ghost guns are banned" — Wrong. Building for personal use remains legal federally
- "You can never sell a homemade gun" — Wrong. You can transfer through proper channels in most states
- "The rule banned 80% receivers" — Wrong. It regulated certain kits and components
- "Serial numbers stop crime" — They're investigative tools, not magic crime preventers
Practical Advice from the Trenches
If you've got unserialized firearms you built before August 2022, you're probably fine under federal law. But check your state—some have implemented their own registration deadlines.
Planning a new build? The landscape changed. That 80% lower kit you used to buy online without paperwork now likely requires a trip to your local FFL for a background check. The parts aren't banned, but the process got more complicated.
What this means for you: When in doubt, talk to your local gun store. Good FFLs stay current on these rules because their livelihood depends on compliance. They can tell you what requires paperwork and what doesn't in your specific situation.
The legal landscape keeps shifting, and staying informed beats finding out you're non-compliant after the fact. This isn't about being paranoid—it's about being smart.
See Also
Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club Editorial Team
Join the Discussion
For those of you who've built or are thinking about building your own, how are you navigating the new serialization requirements—is it changing your plans at all?
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