
Illinois Democrats are pushing legislation that would require all handgun ammunition in the state to be serialized and tracked in a government registry, drawing fierce opposition from gun rights organizations.
The National Association for Gun Rights raised the alarm on social media, warning that House Bill 4414 “relies on the debunked concept of microstamping to mandate serialization of all ammunition manufactured, owned, sold, or even lent within the state. People caught with ‘unserialized ammo’ face misdemeanors and seizure.”
Illinois Democrats are pushing to serialize all ammunition and build a registry designed to track and monitor gun owners.
HB 4414 relies on the debunked concept of microstamping to mandate serialization of all ammunition manufactured, owned, sold, or even lent within the state.… pic.twitter.com/SwV8vJkYK4
— National Association for Gun Rights (@gunrights) March 18, 2026
Introduced by Chicago area State Representative Anne Stava Murray, HB 4414 would require that beginning January 1, 2027, all handgun ammunition manufactured, imported, sold, given, lent, or possessed in Illinois must carry unique serialized identifiers. Retailers selling the ammunition would need to register as vendors and report transaction details, including buyer identification and the ammunition’s unique identifiers, to the Illinois State Police, which would maintain a centralized registry. The bill also imposes a fee of up to five cents per round to fund the program’s infrastructure.
Penalties would take effect immediately upon implementation. Possessing unserialized ammunition in a public place would become a Class C misdemeanor, while manufacturing, importing, or selling unserialized ammunition would become a Class A misdemeanor. As of March 12, 2026, the bill was assigned to the House Judiciary Criminal Committee.
The legislation relies on microstamping, a technology that uses laser-engraved microscopic codes on firing pins to imprint identifiers onto spent cartridge cases. Gun rights groups, including the NRA ILA, argue the technology is fundamentally unreliable in real-world conditions. Studies have found that microstamp markings were decipherable on just over half of expended cartridge cases, and markings showed noticeable degradation after only 1,000 rounds fired. The National Research Council of the National Academies previously determined that “substantial further research would be necessary” before microstamping could be considered viable.
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In a follow-up post, the National Association for Gun Rights outlined practical objections to the system, even if the underlying technology functioned as advertised.
“It would not be difficult to collect spent casings from a public range and undermine any tracing system, or even use them to frame someone else. The markings themselves can also be altered or removed,” the organization wrote.
The group continued by highlighting the compliance burden the bill would impose on manufacturers and individual gun owners.
“The real-world impact would be severe. It would place a massive financial burden on ammunition manufacturers, and there is no realistic way for individuals to comply. No one is going to sort through crates of ammunition they already own to serialize each round, and no company is going to offer that service at scale without astronomical costs,” the National Association for Gun Rights stated.
The organization concluded by framing the bill as an attack on lawful gun ownership rather than a genuine crime-fighting measure.
“At the end of the day, this is about criminalizing thousands of people and eroding gun ownership in the state, full stop.”
Critics such as Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers’ Institute (SAAMI) note that anyone could collect spent casings from a public shooting range and scatter them at a crime scene to mislead investigators or even frame a law abiding gun owner. The ammunition registry proposal follows Illinois’s existing requirement that gun owners register so-called “assault weapons” under the Protect Illinois Communities Act.
Second Amendment advocates argue that legislation built on faulty technology and sustained by a government registry has no legitimate public safety justification. For gun rights groups, HB 4414 is another attempt to make legal firearm ownership so burdensome in Illinois that residents simply give up the right entirely.
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About José Niño
José Niño is a freelance writer based in Charlotte, North Carolina. You can contact him via Facebook and X/Twitter. Subscribe to his Substack newsletter by visiting “Jose Nino Unfiltered” on Substack.com.

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