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07 sot ideallyWhat kind of FFL are you going for? 01 or 07? 07 will be more expensive as you get a SOT.
A SOT is $500/year.What kind of FFL are you going for? 01 or 07? 07 will be more expensive as you get a SOT.
Probably not a great time to get into the business unless you're planning for the long haul. At least things won't be impossible to buy. The biggest cost is real estate over basically everything else.About how much money does it take to start up a retail FFL location in New Hampshire
Are they even really profitable as obviously most people use private sale or online now a days for the savings
Great point. With at least 4 years of Trump, there won't be any panic buying.Probably not a great time to get into the business unless you're planning for the long haul. At least things won't be impossible to buy. The biggest cost is real estate over basically everything else.
This totally. And with today's vast array of online retailers.....making money is tough.Probably not a great time to get into the business unless you're planning for the long haul. At least things won't be impossible to buy. The biggest cost is real estate over basically everything else.
Great point. With at least 4 years of Trump, there won't be any panic buying.
This totally. And with today's vast array of online retailers.....making money is tough.
I think you have to do it with real estate you own, or a rental property you own and are renting to others, like say a strip mall, so they pay your rent for you.
Paying high volume rent unless your in a real good turnover area is a profit killer.
You make more money on ammo and accessories than you will on out of the box guns as there is low markup on them unless you buy volume.....
If you have a high volume of trades where people are willing to let you take in for 50% value or less...or like Don said, volume buying large estates at 25% value, .and you can turn them over. Its not a bad deal....but that can be a lot of location and luck.
You can make some bucks gunsmithing on top of it all.
In my area, dealers are sucking wind. My FFL just lowered their transfer fee to 15 bucks to get asses in the door.
I agree. For sure Im in a money area, and the newbs get boned hard here......not by my shop but by a few others, especially the local one with the indoor range that prices shit way above retail and gives people 30% value at sell time. That place is for rich NY cityiots of which there are plenty of them here....especially now.Some of that is demographics. If you're not in a gun money area revenue is tough. If you're in a region where everyone is a skinflint that makes it tougher.
There are huge swaths of "free america" where the gun shops are pretty terrible partially because of the buyers being terrible and it turns into this sort of horrible feedback loop. I have friends in FL and they don't gush about the gun shops there. One of my buddies has a dude he buys a large burrito for to get his transfer done, guy barely has a "Store front".
Plus $2000 (I think) for ITAR unless you are purely for research and not any selling. I don't think that not doing any international sales precludes an 07 from the ITAR requirement, however, it does not appear to be rigorously enforced if the 07 is not exporting.A SOT is $500/year.
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The small time dealers I've known who made good money were constantly hustling online when there weren't customers in the store. They bought estates, listed them on GB. So they were busy updating ads and shipping stuff out. Used guns are where the money is. You will make $50 to $100 on a new Glock or Rem 700. That doesn't put food on the table, or even pay the rent.
Plus $2000 (I think) for ITAR unless you are purely for research and not any selling. I don't think that not doing any international sales precludes an 07 from the ITAR requirement, however, it does not appear to be rigorously enforced if the 07 is not exporting.
As a small business, the owner will almost certainly be personally liable. Suppliers and landlords are unlikely to accept "my assets are shielded by an LLC so I do not have to pay if the business fails".Re real estate, if he rents , little cash outlay is required.
Also if you’re serious you need to look into a credit card system. Cash only is fine but. Is you start selling on a bigger scale you’ll need on. Not even close to cheap settting it up and using it.
Setting it up is near-zero cost with the lower end suppliers like Stripe and Square. If you want high volume rates where you actually see vigs that differ by card type (rather than just being dinged the max as if everyone had a premium card), industry, card presentnss, etc. it becomes more complex and expensive to set up. And yes, bigger vendors do pay a bigger percentage for a customer using Visa Signature or Infinite than Vist Traditional for example.Also if you’re serious you need to look into a credit card system. Cash only is fine but. Is you start selling on a bigger scale you’ll need on. Not even close to cheap settting it up and using it.
Like I said, not rigorously enforced.Nobody pays for ITAR. I thought this horse went to the glue factory a long time ago, but apparently it's still a "thing".![]()
Correct. No one pays ITAR. Its a self reporting, self regulating set of regulations that unless you do something REALLY wrong, they will never knock on your door.Nobody pays for ITAR. I thought this horse went to the glue factory a long time ago, but apparently it's still a "thing".![]()
This answer is not inaccurate for a non-gun business, but is way off base relative to gun businesses.Setting it up is near-zero cost with the lower end suppliers like Stripe and Square. If you want high volume rates where you actually see vigs that differ by card type (rather than just being dinged the max as if everyone had a premium card), industry, card presentnss, etc. it becomes more complex and expensive to set up. And yes, bigger vendors do pay a bigger percentage for a customer using Visa Signature or Infinite than Vist Traditional for example.
Low end yoou pay a CC charge on everything. Move up the food chain a bit and you will pay a vastly lower amount for a card persent w/PIN debit transaction that for a charge transaction - which is why many vendors ask for the PIN even though they can process a debit card as a charge transaction without the PIN.
I use eproessing.net with Clearent on the backend for one of my projects; stripe for some others. Authorize.net is another alternative, and I have built interfaces to that as well.If they support a gunbroker gateway, then they are good about guns. I use BNG which is actually Clearent on the backend (both listed). Lots of others are known good.
Modern are like square and stripe. They charge the same amount everytime you swipe, lets say 3%. A debit card might cost 0.5% on traditional but costs 3% on modern. Amex Black might cost 4.5% on traditional but costs 3% on modern.
It is going to be VERY dependent on mix, card types, customer types, etc. Gun businesses we don't have to worry about charge backs. We have their ID and signature and charge backs fail pretty spectacularly. So that helps the math. We are also low volume high ASP. That also effects the math. I think anything under $50K/month is no brainer to modern. $50K-$100K/month is either. $100K+/month is traditional.I use eproessing.net with Clearent on the backend for one of my projects; stripe for some others. Authorize.net is another alternative, and I have built interfaces to that as well.
Clearent has an obnixious cancellation fee policy.
You get a LOT more control with the traditional processors - Do you want to use CVV2? Do you want full address verification, no address verification, or zip code verification only? Do you want to place a hold on a charge (hotel / gasoline pump style) prior to submitting the actual charge? What time of day do you want the daily batch processing done? Do you want to be able to cancel charges that have been submitted but the settlement time has not been reached (and avoid any credit card fee since it was not a "refund" transaction)? Do you want to benefit from a lower fee when someone uses a non-premium card instead of paying a fee sufficient to cover the most expensive type of card? Most or all of these are unavailable on the "modern" systems. The APIs to traditional systems provide much more control than the "make it simple" modern systems.
As to modern being good for "low volume/high dollar" - what would your $$ cutoff be?
I had to do a Stripe scramble because they cut off a shooting competition. When I dug, the issue was not the fact that it was a shooting competition but that prizes were promised to the winners. In Stripe's view was that violated the no gambling clause.
This is huge, especially for large dollar purchases, which is why I prefer traditional for larger scale applications, like websites that can do tens of thousands of $$ per day in transactions.
It is also one less headache for the business owner dealing with a multitude of other issues.Anyone starting a gun shop worrying about startup costs should go modern.
Great point. The FFL holder is not laying out money up front like if they purchased. But they do incur as a liability the full value of the lease.As a small business, the owner will almost certainly be personally liable. Suppliers and landlords are unlikely to accept "my assets are shielded by an LLC so I do not have to pay if the business fails".
In practice, residential leases are rarely enforced and collected in the renter leaves early. I don't think this is the case with a commercial lease. Consider the full amount for the committed term spent the day you sign - if the business fails you may still hae to pay rent for the duration.
I believe that ITAR isn't even formally required anymore. I'm about 75% sure this rule change happened.Correct. No one pays ITAR. Its a self reporting, self regulating set of regulations that unless you do something REALLY wrong, they will never knock on your door.
One of the big advantage of a 07/02 is making of post samples. Even if this rule went into effect, they would trigger ITAR in the strictest sense.I believe that ITAR isn't even formally required anymore. I'm about 75% sure this rule change happened.
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ITAR UPDATE – Proposed Rule Change May Help FFLs
Federal Firearms Licensees (FFLs) are required to jump through various hoops to be able to sell guns as a business.From zoning laws, to insurance to National Firearms Act (NFA) payments, and to detailed record keeping, license holders need to be in compliance or risk losing their ability to...www.thefirearmblog.com
I can attest to this. Forget them.Clearent has an obnixious cancellation fee policy.