Legion Precision // Industry News

ATF Moves to Cut NFA Paperwork: Fewer Fingerprints, No More Passport Photos

A proposed federal rule would drop the second fingerprint card, scrap the passport-style photo, and remove fingerprinting entirely for trust applicants. Here is what it does, what it does not do, and where to file a comment before the window closes.

// Proposed Rule

This is a proposed rule published July 6, 2026 — not current law. It carries a 90-day public comment period. Nothing changes on your Form 1 or Form 4 until a final rule is issued.

2 → 1Fingerprint Cards
90Day Comment Window
<1%Prints Used by FBI
// 01 What the Rule Actually Changes

On July 6, 2026, the ATF published a proposed rule titled "Fingerprint and Photograph Requirements for Firearms Applications." It targets the paperwork side of buying or making an NFA item — suppressors, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, and machine guns. It does not touch the tax, the registry, or the wait itself. Here is the breakdown.

Right now, an individual filing a Form 1 or Form 4 has to submit two fingerprint cards. The proposal cuts that to one. Most people already file electronic prints through the eForms system, so for them this is a small win. The bigger change is for trusts.

If you buy through an NFA trust, the "responsible persons" on that trust currently each have to submit prints. Under the proposal, that requirement goes away entirely for trust responsible persons. The ATF's own reasoning: the National Firearms Act text requires prints from individual applicants, not from trusts or legal entities — so the 2016-era requirement on trusts was never mandated by statute in the first place.

The 2" x 2" passport-style photo is out. In its place, applicants would submit a clear copy or scan of a government-issued photo ID — a driver's license works. No more trip to the drugstore photo counter. This applies to both individual and trust applicants.

// 02 Old Way vs. Proposed Way
RequirementCurrent RuleUnder the Proposal
Fingerprint cards (individual)Two cardsOne card
Fingerprints (trust responsible persons)Required from eachNot required
Identity photo2" x 2" passport photoCopy of government photo ID
Applies to formsForm 1, Form 4, Form 5Form 1, Form 4, Form 5
// Note

The ATF can still request prints or a photo in limited cases — for example, if the FBI flags a background-check issue that needs to be resolved. The default burden is what changes, not the agency's ability to ask.

// 03 What It Does NOT Do

This is a paperwork rule, not deregulation. NFA items are still registered, still tracked, and still go through the same approval channel. If you were hoping suppressors would come off the NFA list, that is a separate legislative fight, not this rule.

The ATF says fingerprint cards have been useful to the FBI in fewer than 1% of these applications, so removing them is not expected to speed up approvals in a big way. The rule trims steps on your end; it does not promise a faster stamp.

A standard LPWS2011 pistol is a Title I firearm — no NFA form, no fingerprints, no stamp. It ships to your FFL on a normal 4473. This rule only matters if you also own or plan to buy NFA items like a suppressor or SBR. We are covering it because a lot of serious 2011 shooters run cans, and this is worth knowing.

// 04 How to File a Comment

Because this is a proposed rule, the public can weigh in during the 90-day window. Comments become part of the official record the ATF has to consider before finalizing.

// Where to Comment

File through the federal portal at regulations.gov and reference the rule by its docket — ATF-2026-0397 (RIN 1140-AA63). The full text is on the Federal Register, and the ATF's own summary of its reform package is on the ATF Reduce Burden page.

// Build While the Paperwork Gets Lighter

No Stamp. No Wait. Just Build.

Your LPWS2011 doesn't need a Form 4. Start with the Island Barrel Build Kit or grab a complete Islandboy build ready to ship to your FFL.