Contact John Ross, email me for his contact infotexasvwnut said:coyle311 -
Tell me about NFA regulations in MO. I was kinda thinking about looking into a job in Kansas City, but found Kansas was not an NFA state. It seems Missouri does allow NFA, but is it only C&R? How are the CLEOs about signing in Missouri?
Is a C&R FFL really that easy and fast ? I thought ATF was making it really difficult for kitchen table FFLs - zoning requirements, security system, etc. Is the C&R different ?MuzzleFlash said:On a form 4. Any of you guys without an FFL who are thinking yea, but $400 in taxes to get it here, wake up!!
You should get your C&R FFL for an investment of $30 and 30 minutes to fill out the form.
Hell, buy the gun and have him hold the transfer for a few weeks while you wait for your FFL to arrive in the mail. And you save $200 on transfer taxes!
buzzer said:Is a C&R FFL really that easy and fast ? I thought ATF was making it really difficult for kitchen table FFLs - zoning requirements, security system, etc. Is the C&R different ?
Actually, if the seller is a dealer and the buyer is unlicensed, the gun goes dealer to dealer tax free on a F3 and then dealer to buyer on a $200 F4. With the same seller but the buyer is a C&R, the buyer avoids the first tax free transfer and avoids any transfer fee the in-state SOT would charge. The C&R buyer really saves when the out-of-state seller is a non-SOT. Then he avoids the front-page F4 + $200 tax to get it to his in-state SOT. He also avoids the SOT's transfer fee. The gun comes to him directly on a two sided tax paid F4.ptrthgr8 said:...The only time a C&R license will help with with an NFA purchase is when you're buying a C&R rated NFA weapon from a dealer out of state. Without the license, you'd have to pay the $200 transfer tax from the out of state dealer to your in-state dealer, then you'd have to pay another $200 transfer tax from your in-state dealer to you. With the C&R license in such a case, you simply pay the $200 transfer tax from the out of state dealer, he packages the weapon, and the C&R rated NFA weapon will arrive at your door....
MuzzleFlash said:Actually, if the seller is a dealer and the buyer is unlicensed, the gun goes dealer to dealer tax free on a F3 and then dealer to buyer on a $200 F4. With the same seller but the buyer is a C&R, the buyer avoids the first tax free transfer and avoids any transfer fee the in-state SOT would charge. The C&R buyer really saves when the out-of-state seller is a non-SOT. Then he avoids the front-page F4 + $200 tax to get it to his in-state SOT. He also avoids the SOT's transfer fee. The gun comes to him directly on a two sided tax paid F4.