Don't sell it as an "SBR upper" . . . sell it as a "pistol upper". And, as noted, state that "NFA rules apply".Any special rules I need to know about when selling an SBR upper?
I posted the question because I spoke with the BATFE about this and was told to "sell in accordance with state laws". Do I have to list as pistol upper?Don't sell it as an "SBR upper" . . . sell it as a "pistol upper". And, as noted, state that "NFA rules apply".
Sell it as you wish—it’s not a firearm, or even a serialized component. It’s an upper. But by calling it a pistol upper you run less risk of chasing away “low information buyers” than you would by referring to it as an SBR upper.I posted the question because I spoke with the BATFE about this and was told to "sell in accordance with state laws". Do I have to list as pistol upper?
Speaking with BATFE is non productive in most cases!I posted the question because I spoke with the BATFE about this and was told to "sell in accordance with state laws". Do I have to list as pistol upper?
What is an “SBR upper”?
Obviously the sarcasm wasn’t apparent enough... there is no such thing as an “sbr upper”, nothing one does to or how one uses any upper makes it an “sbr upper”.Not really a thing...but for the sake of this thread, it’s a barreled upper, and the barrel length is less than 16”.
Needs an SBR tax stamp if you plan on assembling it into a rifle. .
But it could be used on a pistol without issue.
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