Virginia’s Proposed ‘Assault Weapons Ban’

We now have what may be the final language for SB749, the ban on modern sporting rifles (or so-called ‘Assault Weapons‘ using the made-up term from the bill).

If signed in its current form, after July 1, 2026 it will impact the ability of law-abiding Virginians to acquire the most commonly owned firearms in America in direct violation of the 2nd Amendment as laid out in Bruen.

Without a specific exemption for NFA items, it also impacts the ability of Virginians to acquire certain NFA items such as machineguns and Short-Barreled Rifles and Shotguns.

For a detailed analysis of whether a given firearm is considered an ‘assault weapon’ under SB749, I have prepared a detailed flowchart.

As for what will and will not be allowed, I have an infographic below that lays out the broad strokes.

I will keep this post updated if there are changes or when the bill is signed.

In the meantime, it appears that documentation of pre-ban ownership will become much more important when this goes into effect.  I can help with this.

You should consider acquiring any NFA items such as SBRs that will be impacted now as well as moving your non-NFA items into a trust to accomplish this. My trusts are a flat fee of $100 and come with lifetime free changes and updates.

This entry was posted in 2A, AR-15, Assault Firearms, Bruen Decision, Criminal Law, FFL Issues, Gifting Firearms, Inheriting Firearms, Interstate Firearm Transfers, Magazine Capacity, Manufacturing, NFA Trusts, Private Sales, Purchasing Firearms, Second Amendment, State Constitutional Provisions, Virginia Law, Virginia Politics. Bookmark the permalink.