Brand Info
GunBroker
Online Retailer
| Overview | |
|---|---|
Founded | 1999 |
Headquarters | Atlanta, GA |
| Tagline | GunBroker.com is the world's largest online auction and marketplace for firearms, ammunition, and shooting accessories. Founded in 1999, the platform facilitates legal gun sales between licensed dealers and private sellers across the United States. All transactions must comply with federal and state firearms laws, with guns shipped to licensed FFLs for transfer. |
Products | |
| Key Products | How It Actually Works, What You'll Find, The Reality of Service, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| www.gunbroker.com | |
GunBroker
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
GunBroker is the eBay of firearms -- if eBay required background checks and shipped everything to licensed dealers. Founded in 1999 out of Kennesaw, Georgia, it's become the largest online gun marketplace in the country by connecting sellers with buyers while staying on the right side of federal law.
The platform doesn't sell guns directly. Instead, it hosts over 100,000 active listings from FFLs, collectors, and private sellers. Every firearm transaction still has to go through your local dealer for the background check -- GunBroker just makes it possible to browse the entire national inventory from your couch.
Key milestones in GunBroker's growth and market dominance
How It Actually Worksedit
GunBroker runs like an auction house mixed with classified ads -- most listings are 7-day auctions, but some sellers offer Buy It Now prices if you don't want to wait around bidding.
| Feature | Reality Check |
|---|---|
| Auction format | 7-day countdown with opening bids; some have reserve prices (hidden minimum) |
| Buy It Now | Skip the auction, pay the asking price, done |
| Seller ratings | Check these religiously -- anything under 98% is sketchy |
| Payment | Credit cards through GunBroker are safest; avoid wire transfers |
| FFL shipping | Every firearm goes to your local dealer -- no exceptions |
| Transfer fees | Budget $25-75 on top of whatever you pay the seller |
The Auction Process
| Step | Process | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Account Setup | Create profile, verify identity | 10 minutes |
| 2. Find Local FFL | Research transfer fees, policies | 30 minutes |
| 3. Browse & Bid | Search, research seller, place bid | Variable |
| 4. Win & Pay | Complete payment within 3 days | 24-72 hours |
| 5. Coordinate Transfer | Provide FFL info to seller | 1-2 days |
| 6. Shipping | Seller ships to your FFL | 3-7 days |
| 7. Pickup | Background check, pay transfer fee | 30 minutes |
Step-by-Step Buying
You create an account, find a local FFL who accepts transfers, then start browsing. When you find something you want, either bid on it or hit Buy It Now if that's an option.
Win the auction, pay the seller, give them your FFL's contact info. The seller ships the gun to your dealer -- not to you. You get an email when it arrives, head to your FFL, fill out the 4473, pass the background check, pay the transfer fee, and walk out with your gun. Leave feedback for the seller so the next guy knows what to expect.
Complete GunBroker purchase process from bid to possession
Common Mistakes
- Auction fever -- set your max bid before you start and stick to it
- Hidden costs -- that $500 rifle costs $600 after shipping and transfer fees
- Bad seller research -- always check feedback and transaction history
- State law ignorance -- some stuff can't ship to your state, period
- Wire transfer scams -- stick to credit cards or GunBroker's payment system
The FFL transfer isn't optional or negotiable. Federal law requires it, and your dealer will charge you for the service. Call ahead to confirm their fee and process -- some shops are picky about what they'll accept.
The FFL transfer isn't optional or negotiable. Federal law requires it, and your dealer will charge you for the service.
What You'll Findedit
GunBroker's inventory is essentially every gun legally available in America, all in one searchable database.
Inventory Categories
| Category | What's There | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| New handguns | Current production Glocks, Sigs, S&Ws | Price shopping; finding specific configurations |
| New rifles | Every AR variant, bolt guns, levers | Stuff your local shop doesn't stock |
| Collectibles | M1 Garands, Lugers, Colt SAAs | Only place to find certain historical pieces |
| Military surplus | Everything from Mosins to modern police trade-ins | Widest surplus selection anywhere |
| Custom builds | One-off 1911s, precision rifles, project guns | Unique pieces you won't see elsewhere |
| Ammunition | Common and obsolete calibers | Finding ammo for oddball guns |
| Parts/accessories | Discontinued magazines, rare optics | Parts for guns out of production |
Pricing Reality
Don't expect bargain prices on everything. The real value is selection -- if it exists and it's legal, someone's probably selling it on GunBroker.
You'll find genuine deals on estate sales, dealer overstock, and poorly-photographed listings that don't attract attention. But you'll also see panic pricing during shortages and collector premiums on anything rare.
Finding the Deals
The ammunition section has become essential for finding oddball calibers that local shops don't carry. Same goes for discontinued parts -- if you need a magazine for a gun that went out of production in 1987, GunBroker's probably your only shot.
The Reality of Serviceedit
GunBroker runs the platform, but they don't control individual sellers. Think of them as the landlord of a giant flea market -- they provide the space and basic rules, but you're dealing directly with whoever's behind the table.
Platform Reliability
| Service Aspect | What to Expect |
|---|---|
| Site reliability | Solid uptime; slows down during panic buying |
| Customer service | Email-based, 24-48 hours, varies by complexity |
| Dispute resolution | Hit or miss depending on documentation |
| Fraud prevention | Basic account verification and monitoring |
| Mobile experience | Works, but desktop is better for serious browsing |
Protection & Returns
| Issue Type | Resolution Time | Success Rate | Your Best Move |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-payment disputes | 7-14 days | High | Document everything |
| Item not as described | 14-30 days | Moderate | Photos and detailed complaint |
| Shipping problems | 5-10 days | High | Track packages religiously |
| Account issues | 24-48 hours | High | Email support directly |
| Fraud claims | 30+ days | Low | Credit card chargeback |
The feedback system is your main protection against bad sellers. A guy with 2,000 positive feedbacks probably knows what he's doing. Someone with 12 ratings and a few complaints? Maybe look elsewhere.
Returns depend entirely on the individual seller's policy. GunBroker doesn't standardize this stuff -- one seller might accept returns, another might not. Read the listing carefully before bidding.
When to Use GunBroker
When GunBroker makes sense:
- You know exactly what you want but can't find it locally
- You're collecting specific variants or historical pieces
- You want to compare prices across hundreds of sellers
- You need discontinued parts or uncommon ammunition
When to shop elsewhere:
- You're new to guns and want hands-on guidance
- You need the gun today (auctions take time, shipping takes more time)
- You want guaranteed returns and standardized customer service
- You'd rather handle the gun before buying
The BGC Takeedit
GunBroker revolutionized gun buying by creating a national marketplace, but it's not magic -- it's a tool that works well if you understand what you're getting into.
The selection is unmatched. Period. If you're looking for a specific variant of something, a discontinued model, or just want to see what's available across the entire country, nothing else comes close.
I've found guns on there that I hadn't seen for sale anywhere else in years. But the experience varies wildly depending on the seller. You might get white-glove service from a high-volume dealer, or you might get a crusty collector who takes three weeks to ship and doesn't answer emails.
The feedback system helps, but it's not foolproof. The pricing is all over the map. Sometimes you'll find genuine deals -- estate sales where someone doesn't know what they have, or dealers clearing out slow-moving inventory.
Other times you'll see guys asking stupid money for common guns because they think everything's collectible. Do your homework on both the gun and the seller before bidding. Know what the gun sells for elsewhere, factor in all the fees, and check the seller's feedback carefully.
Treat it like buying a used car from someone you've never met -- because that's basically what you're doing.
For collectors and people looking for specific items, GunBroker is invaluable. For casual buyers who just want a basic gun and some face-to-face guidance, your local shop is probably a better bet.
References:
- GunBroker official site: gunbroker.com
- BBB business profile and customer reviews
- Reddit r/guns: GunBroker experience threads
- ATF guidelines on online firearms transfers
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