Here are the criterais for rifles:
"B. Criteria for Rifles
As stated above, there are two ATF studies on sporting purposes as that term is applied to rifles; the first published in 1989 and the second in 1998. The 1998 study modified the criteria announced in the 1989 study, and we will focus on the more recent criteria. In the 1998 study, titled “Department of the Treasury Study on the Sporting Suitability of Modified Semiautomatic Assault Rifles,” ATF specified the following criteria for determining whether a semiautomatic rifle is a nonsporting rifle:
(1) the rifle is a semiautomatic version of a machine gun;
(2) the rifle is chambered to accept a centerfire cartridge case having a length of 2.25 inches or less; and (3) the rifle has one or more of the following military features:
•Ability to accept a detachable magazine with a capacity of more than 10 rounds
•Folding or telescoping stock
•Separate pistol grip
•Ability to accept a bayonet
•Flash suppressor
•Bipod
•Grenade launcher
•Nightsights"
I guess if yours doesn't have a bayonet lug or a flash suppressor it's good for export.
The pistol grip alone disqualifies almost everything from the OIC list.
I agree. No doubt many of the above criteria may have been the ciriteria that Canadian classifiers used to put firearms on the OIC list in the first place. For example, "the ability to accept a detachable magazine with a capacity of more than 10 rounds" is going to exclude many of the firearms on the OIC list from import in the US. As you say, "separate pistol grip" is going to practically exclude "almost everything from the OIC list".
I'd be interested to know which firearms among the 1500+ that were re-classified as prohibited on the OIC list would be acceptable for import into the US. I'll bet the list would be pretty short.
While I'm typing, is it the firearm's model (and that model's original configuration) that is the deciding factor when it comes to importing into the US, or is it the "as imported" configuration of the individual firearm? For example, purely hypothetically speaking, if a VZ58 had its flash suppressor, bayonet mount and separate pistol grip removed (with the latter replaced with, say, a stock that had an integrated grip), would it be eligible for import into the US? (Of course the mag well would have to also be changed to only allow magazines of less than 11 rounds, which is probably impossible, right? In other words, bloody hopeless for import.)
Yes, it does (unfortunately). Thanks.Most firearms can come back into the US, AR and or variants of the AR-10 or AR-15 are not admissible into the US unless we originally mitigated the export.
Hope this helps.
Has anyone used IRG's service to import back to the US? Any feedback on experience would be appreciated (by PM is fine).
Has anyone used IRG's service to import back to the US? Any feedback on experience would be appreciated (by PM is fine).
I exported 3 of my AR15's after the election in 2019. Ones that I had originally purchased from IRG. Cost, if I remember correctly was about $225USD per firearm and shipping. I gave them to a friend of mine in Arkansas for safe keeping. Timeline was about 3months from when I started the process until they were at my friends house, but that was pre Covid, so who knows how long it would take now.
Sorry to bring this thread back up from the dead, but is this service still going to be available? Have two PSA AR-15's I bought from you guys that I'd rather send back than have destroyed if Trudeau and drunk Bill decides on mandatory confiscation. Thanks.
Sorry to bring this thread back up from the dead, but is this service still going to be available? Have two PSA AR-15's I bought from you guys that I'd rather send back than have destroyed if Trudeau and drunk Bill decides on mandatory confiscation. Thanks.
Any chance we could keep our guns and export our dumbass PM?
You could put that guy in storage for years and he wouldn't even realize.
Anyone try selling through IRG and Gunbroker? What was your experience?




























