What the Assault Firearms Ban Means for Gun Owners, Buyers, and FFLs — Everything You Need to Know
Published April 30, 2026 · Prepared by Legion Precision Weapon Systems · All claims sourced & linked
Section 1
The July 1, 2026 deadline is completely separate from Virginia's ghost gun / frames & receivers ban (HB40/SB323), which has its own later deadlines of January 1, 2027 and July 1, 2027. The July 1, 2026 date involves two different laws:
1. SB749/HB217 — Assault Firearms & Magazine Sales Ban (buy before July 1 or lose your chance)
2. SB727/HB1524 — Public Carry & Transport Ban on covered firearms
On April 13–23, 2026, Governor Abigail Spanberger signed a sweeping package of firearms legislation. [Source: Governor's Press Release] The laws that take effect July 1, 2026 represent the most significant change to what Virginia residents can legally buy, sell, transfer, and carry. For your customers: if they want to purchase a covered firearm or magazine, they must complete that purchase before July 1, 2026. [Source: GunCarrier] [Source: USCCA]
Section 2
SB749/HB217 bans the import, sale, manufacture, purchase, and transfer of defined "assault firearms" and magazines capable of holding more than 15 rounds. [GunCarrier] [LegalClarity] [Bill Text]
It does NOT require existing owners to surrender or register firearms they already lawfully own before July 1, 2026. [Governor's Release] However, it sharply limits what you can do with those firearms going forward.
The bill went through a back-and-forth: Spanberger proposed amendments on April 14, the General Assembly passed an amended version on April 22, and the final signed version is now law. [NRA-ILA April 22] [Guns.com]
The U.S. Department of Justice sent a formal warning letter threatening federal litigation over this law. [AmmoLand] [Fox News] No lawsuit has been filed and no court has issued an injunction. Until that changes, July 1, 2026 is a hard deadline.
Virginia uses a features-based test — NOT a named model list. [LegalClarity] [VirginiaGunBan.com] A firearm is classified based on its action type combined with specific physical features. The scope is very broad.
| Firearm Type | Covered Features / Criteria | Status After July 1 |
|---|---|---|
| Semi-auto centerfire RIFLE | Accepts detachable magazine + any 1 of: collapsible/folding stock, pistol grip, forward grip, flash suppressor, grenade/flare launcher, or threaded barrel | BANNED — No sale/transfer |
| Semi-auto centerfire PISTOL | Capable of accepting a magazine holding more than 15 rounds | BANNED — No sale/transfer |
| Semi-auto SHOTGUN | Folding/telescoping stock, thumbhole stock, pistol grip, accepts detachable magazine, OR fixed magazine >15 rounds | BANNED (hunting exemptions apply) |
| Magazines >15 rounds | Any detachable magazine with capacity over 15 rounds | SALE BANNED — Possession of pre-July 1 mags grandfathered |
| Bolt / Lever / Pump action | Manually operated — exempt by action type | NOT AFFECTED |
| Antique firearms | Exempt by statute | NOT AFFECTED |
Many of the most popular carry and duty pistols in America are covered by this ban. Any pistol designed to accept a magazine over 15 rounds falls under the definition — this includes full-size Glock models (17, 19X, 34, etc.), the Sig Sauer P320, most standard Smith & Wesson M&P variants, Beretta 92/M9 variants, Springfield XD/XDM, and many others. [GunCarrier] [VirginiaGunBan.com]
Firearms and magazines lawfully owned before July 1, 2026 are grandfathered for POSSESSION ONLY. [Governor's Release] This is a critical distinction — grandfathered does NOT mean you can do whatever you want with the firearm.
Even gifting a grandfathered firearm within Virginia is prohibited after July 1, 2026. There is no exception for family members. Estate transfers after death require separate legal consultation. [GunCarrier] [Governor's Release]
Section 3
Signed April 23, 2026 and effective July 1, 2026, [NRA-ILA] [AmmoLand] SB727/HB1524 makes it illegal to carry or transport a covered assault firearm on or about your person in any:
There is NO exemption for Virginia Concealed Handgun Permit holders. [NRA-ILA] [Guns.com] A valid CHP does not protect you from this law. If your firearm meets the assault firearm definition, carrying it in public after July 1, 2026 is a criminal offense regardless of your permit status.
The only noted exemption in the carry ban is for persons engaged in lawful hunting — but critically, this does NOT protect transport to or from the hunting grounds. [AmmoLand] There is no exemption for range use, transport to a gunsmith, or personal defense carry.
Section 4
Class 1 Misdemeanor — up to 12 months in jail and a $2,500 fine per violation.
Additional consequence: A conviction prohibits the offender from purchasing, possessing, or transporting any firearm — not just assault firearms — for three years from the date of conviction. [VirginiaGunBan.com]
Criminal misdemeanor for carrying covered firearms in prohibited public locations after July 1, 2026. [NRA-ILA]
Section 5
Section 6
Virginia residents who want to legally acquire a covered firearm or standard-capacity magazine have 62 days as of April 30, 2026. After July 1, the transfer is illegal regardless of when the firearm was manufactured. [GunCarrier] [USCCA]
Customers who currently carry an affected firearm — even with a valid CHP — must reassess their carry setup before July 1, 2026. [NRA-ILA]
Section 7
As of April 30, 2026, these laws are signed and scheduled to take effect. There are active legal efforts underway:
No court has issued an injunction against any of these laws as of April 30, 2026. Do not delay purchases or compliance planning based on hoped-for court outcomes. Plan as if July 1 is a hard deadline — because legally, it is.
Section 8
Every claim in this article is backed by one of the following sources. Click any link to read the original.