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3/17/2008 7:27:51 PM EDT
In the process of getting my first suppressor and I have question about what the dealer is charging me.  I am going through my local dealer to get a suppressor from a dealer out of state.  On my bill I see there is a $200 transfer fee.  Is that a fee he has to pay for the dealer to dealer transfer or is that the $200 I would pay on my form 4.  I'm not quite sure where that $200 is coming from.  Just curious on how this all works, in regards to who gets paid what.
3/17/2008 7:30:31 PM EDT
[#1]
sounds like that is the local dealers transfer fee...and its VERY high...about 2x what it should be.


for out of state transfers, you pay something to the local dealer for their time.  The feds get their $200 tax on top of that.
3/17/2008 8:03:58 PM EDT
[#2]
height=8
Quoted:
In the process of getting my first suppressor and I have question about what the dealer is charging me.  I am going through my local dealer to get a suppressor from a dealer out of state.  On my bill I see there is a $200 transfer fee.  Is that a fee he has to pay for the dealer to dealer transfer or is that the $200 I would pay on my form 4.  I'm not quite sure where that $200 is coming from.  Just curious on how this all works, in regards to who gets paid what.


I assume he's also doing your form 4 for you?  What else does your bill say?  If he's charging you $200 twice, plus the cost of the can, you're getting screwed.
3/17/2008 8:54:34 PM EDT
[#3]
Evo9  $795
Tax  $55
Transfer  $200

That's what's on my bill.

I assumed the $200 was his transfer fee and also thought it was a little high.  And yes, he is doing my Form 4.  I need to ask him, but I was just curious how it usually works so I know what to expect.
3/17/2008 9:28:11 PM EDT
[#4]
Ask him if the $200 listed is for the "Form 4 Tax Stamp". If he says no, find a new local dealer. You're getting assraped. I've never paid more than $50 for an NFA transfer. Furthermore, If you buy a suppressor through a stocking dealer, the dealer's profit is built into the cost of the can and no dealer transfer fee is charged.

So if you can find a stocking dealer for the can you want, choose that dealer as it's likely he will have a low or no dealer transfer fee. If not, buy the can from a stocking dealer somewhere and have it shipped on form 3 to your dealer - then you just pay his transfer fee usually ($50-$100)
3/17/2008 9:35:24 PM EDT
[#5]
why is he charging tax if you purchased it from an out of state dealer?
3/18/2008 8:02:09 AM EDT
[#6]

Quoted:
why is he charging tax if you purchased it from an out of state dealer?


Many states do this. Technically, it's a "Use Tax" rather than a direct sales tax, but the effect is the the same. Anything you buy out of state that requires an in-state procedure to register, title, transfer, etc, will usually incur a Use Tax at the same rate as the Sales Tax. These type of taxes were enacted to recoup the loss in tax revenue by buying cars and other high-dollar items from sources outside your state of residence. They cannot claim a sales tax is due since you really didn't buy it there, but they can tax you on the need to register or transfer it through a state-regulated mechanism like the DMV or firearms dealer.

However, depending on where you live, the NFA transfer regs might even have a more direct applicability for Sales Tax since the C3 is technically transferring the weapon to you. For tax purposes, your local dealer the "seller" since the Form 4 would list him as the Transferor  This is completely different than if he was handling a simple interstate transfer of a handgun whereas the seller is NOT the dealer himself but someone out-of-state.

Completely differs from state to state though.
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