Key Takeaways
- House Republicans rejected the proposed ATF budget increase and suggested a $285 million cut instead.
- The FY 2027 budget request sought $1.652 billion for ATF, but the House bill sets funding at $1.3 billion.
- The bill includes riders that limit ATF’s operations and ties funding to processing times for National Firearms Act applications.
- A smaller ATF budget and restrictive riders represent a significant win for gun owners, as they push back against agency expansion.
- The bill still requires approval from the full House and Senate, and gun owners should voice their opinions to Congress as negotiations continue.
Estimated reading time: 4 minutes
WASHINGTON, DC — House Republicans have rejected the proposed Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives budget increase included in the FY 2027 President’s Budget request and instead countered with a $285 million reduction, according to bill text and statements from Gun Owners of America.
The President’s Budget request had sought $1.652 billion in Salaries and Expenses funding for the ATF, with 4,827 total positions and 4,749 full-time equivalents. The request included $33.4 million in technical and base adjustments and $33.6 million in program enhancements.
The House appropriations bill, dated April 24, 2026, sets ATF Salaries and Expenses funding at $1.3 billion. That figure represents a significant rollback from the agency’s recent enacted levels and a direct rejection of the larger figure the administration requested.
🚨BREAKING🚨
House Republicans just REJECTED President Trump’s proposed ATF budget INCREASE & countered with a $285 million budget DECREASE.
There are also many pro-gun riders, including a prohibition on NFA enforcement against $0 suppressors & short barreled firearms. https://t.co/B0cGehLLRY pic.twitter.com/8nxL7rvGMV
— Gun Owners of America (@GunOwners) April 29, 2026
Pro-Gun Riders Included in the Bill
Beyond the funding cut, the House bill carries several policy riders that constrain how the ATF can operate. The legislation prohibits the use of any appropriated funds to investigate or act upon applications for relief from federal firearms disabilities under 18 U.S.C. 925(c) for individuals, while allowing such funds to be used for corporate applications.
The bill also bars the use of any funds, from this or any other Act, to transfer the functions, missions, or activities of the ATF to other agencies or departments.
A key processing benchmark is built into the funding structure as well. Under the bill, no more than 40 percent of the funds made available under the Salaries and Expenses heading may be obligated unless National Firearms Act application processing times stay within 120 days for paper applications and 60 days for electronic applications. That provision creates direct financial pressure on the agency to clear NFA backlogs that have frustrated lawful suppressor and short-barreled firearm owners for years.
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Context From Recent Years of ATF Funding
The ATF’s enacted appropriations have hovered in a high range in recent years, with figures including $1,484 million, $1,531 million, $1,625 million, and $1,672 million across the FY 2022 through FY 2026 window. Gun Owners of America has stated that Congress has cut a total of $162 million from the ATF’s budget since FY 2024.
The proposed $1.3 billion figure in the FY 2027 House bill would mark a substantial step further down from those levels and would represent the lowest enacted ATF funding in several budget cycles if it becomes law.
Why This Matters for Gun Owners
The Second Amendment is a fundamental civil right, and the federal agency tasked with regulating firearms has been a consistent point of friction for law-abiding gun owners for decades. Funding levels are policy. A smaller ATF budget, paired with riders that limit the agency’s reach and force action on NFA processing times, is a meaningful win for gun owners who have watched the agency expand its rulemaking footprint in recent years.
The 40 percent obligation cap tied to NFA timelines is particularly notable. Suppressor and short-barreled rifle owners have endured wait times that have stretched for many months at various points. Tying agency spending authority to faster processing turns a long-running complaint into a budgetary lever, and that is a structural change that benefits anyone who lawfully participates in the NFA system.
The prohibition on transferring ATF functions to other agencies also closes off one path that had been floated as a workaround for restructuring federal firearms regulation. By locking the agency’s mission in place while reducing its funding and constraining its priorities, the House is signaling a clear preference for a smaller, more constrained ATF rather than an expanded one.
What Happens Next
The bill is part of the FY 2027 Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies appropriations process and still has to clear the full House and move through the Senate before reaching the President’s desk. Funding levels and riders frequently change as negotiations progress between the chambers.
Gun owners who want to see this version preserved would do well to make their views known to their members of Congress as the bill advances.
