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20 Form 4473 Mistakes FFL Dealers Make

The errors that show up in ATF Reports of Violations — section by section, with exactly how to avoid each one. This isn’t a theoretical list. These are the violations that get dealers written up.

4473 Pro  ·  Written by an active FFL dealer  ·  Updated March 2026

Form 4473 violations are the most common finding in ATF compliance inspections — by a wide margin. Most of these errors are not the result of dealers trying to cut corners. They are the result of busy counter environments, inadequate training, and the absence of a systematic review process. Every error on this list is preventable. Every error on this list has appeared in real ATF Reports of Violations.

Technical vs. Substantive Violations: Errors marked Substantive go to the core of the transfer process and carry heavier enforcement weight. Errors marked Technical are procedural but still citable. Both types appear in Reports of Violations and both contribute to patterns that ATF documents formally.

Section A — Buyer Information Errors
1
Incomplete or Missing ID Documentation Technical

The buyer’s government-issued photo ID information must be recorded in Section A: the type of ID, the ID number, the state or issuing authority, and the expiration date. Dealers frequently record the ID type and number but omit the expiration date or the issuing authority.

FixRecord all four ID fields for every transfer: type, number, issuing authority, and expiration date. Build it into your counter process so no employee completes a transfer without all four fields present.
2
Buyer’s Address Not Current Technical

The address recorded in Section A must be the buyer’s current residence address — not a P.O. Box, not a business address, not an address that differs from what their ID shows without supporting documentation. When a buyer’s ID shows an outdated address, dealers sometimes record the ID address without asking for a current address document, or leave the address field incomplete.

FixIf the buyer’s ID address appears outdated or they mention they’ve moved, require a secondary document showing their current address before completing the transfer. Attach a copy to the 4473.
3
Missing County of Residence Technical

Form 4473 requires the buyer’s county of residence. This field is consistently overlooked because it is not on government-issued IDs — the dealer must ask the buyer to provide it. Many dealers either skip it entirely or don’t realize it’s required.

FixTrain every employee to ask for the buyer’s county of residence as a standard part of the intake process. It is a small field with a high oversight rate. Building it into the verbal checklist eliminates the problem.
Section B — Buyer Eligibility Errors
4
Leaving a Question in Section B Blank Substantive

Every question in Section B must be answered — yes or no. No question may be left blank. This is the most serious of the common errors because it goes to the core purpose of the form: documenting the buyer’s certification of eligibility. A single blank eligibility question means the buyer did not certify their eligibility on that question, which means the transfer should not have been completed.

FixReview Section B before accepting a completed form from any buyer. Every question must have a clear yes or no. Do not accept a form with any blank in Section B under any circumstances.
5
Ambiguous Answers in Section B Substantive

Some buyers answer Section B questions with question marks, “N/A,” “maybe,” or other non-yes/no responses. These ambiguous answers are treated as incomplete answers — which means the transfer should not proceed. Dealers who accept ambiguous answers and complete the transfer anyway are committing a substantive violation.

FixOnly yes or no is an acceptable answer to any Section B question. If a buyer writes anything other than yes or no, ask them to clarify and correct the answer before proceeding. If they cannot answer definitively, stop the transaction.
6
Buyer Answers “Yes” to a Disqualifying Question and Transfer Proceeds Substantive

A buyer who answers “yes” to a prohibited person question in Section B has self-identified as prohibited. Completing the transfer anyway — or missing the “yes” answer during intake — is a serious substantive violation. This happens more often than dealers expect, particularly when buyers misunderstand questions or answer carelessly.

FixReview every “yes” answer in Section B before proceeding. Any “yes” to a prohibited person question stops the transaction. Train employees to flag these answers immediately rather than proceeding and assuming it was a mistake.
Section C — Buyer Certification Errors
7
Missing Buyer Signature in Section C Substantive

The buyer’s signature in Section C is not optional. It certifies that the buyer read the form, understood the questions, and that their answers are true and correct. A missing signature means the buyer never actually certified anything — the form is incomplete and the transfer should not have occurred.

FixThe buyer must sign before you hand over the firearm. Check for the signature before completing the transfer. This error cannot be corrected after the buyer leaves — the signature must be contemporaneous with the certification.
8
Section C Signed on the Wrong Date Technical

The date in Section C must be the date of transfer — when the buyer actually takes possession of the firearm. It is not the date the form was started, not the date of the NICS check, and not the date of purchase if those dates differ from the transfer date. On layaways, delayed transfers, and NFA transfers, this distinction is particularly important.

FixThe buyer dates and signs Section C on the day they pick up the firearm, not before. For transactions where there is a gap between purchase and transfer, ensure the date reflects actual transfer day.
Section D — NICS Background Check Errors
9
Missing NICS Transaction Number Substantive

The NICS Transaction Number (NTN) must be recorded in Section D. This is the documentation that a background check was actually conducted. A missing NTN means there is no documented evidence that a NICS check occurred — which, from ATF’s perspective, is functionally equivalent to no NICS check having been conducted.

FixRecord the NTN immediately when it is received. Do not rely on memory to add it later. If you use electronic NICS, ensure your process captures and records the NTN on the physical form before the form is filed.
10
Transfer Completed Before NICS Proceed is Received Substantive

Completing a transfer while NICS shows “delayed” — before either a proceed response or the expiration of the three-business-day default proceed period — is a substantive violation. This happens when dealers transfer on the wrong day during a delay, miscalculate the three-business-day period, or confuse calendar days with business days.

FixDocument the delay date, calculate three business days correctly (excluding weekends and federal holidays), and do not transfer until either a proceed is received or the correct period has elapsed. When in doubt, wait.
11
NICS Delay Not Properly Documented Technical

When NICS returns a delay, the delay response, the date and time received, and the NTN must all be documented in Section D. Dealers frequently record the eventual proceed result but fail to document the initial delay, creating an incomplete record of the background check process.

FixDocument every step of a delayed check: the initial delay with NTN and date/time, then the eventual proceed (or the default proceed date and calculation) before transfer. The record should show the complete background check timeline.
12
Transfer Date Missing or Incorrect in Section D Technical

The transfer date in Section D must reflect when the firearm was actually transferred to the buyer. This date must not precede the NICS proceed date. Dealers sometimes record the wrong date, leave the field blank, or record the sale date when the actual transfer date was different.

FixRecord the actual transfer date on the day of transfer. Verify it follows the NICS proceed date before completing the transfer. This is a cross-reference check that takes 10 seconds and prevents a common violation.
Section E — Transferor Certification Errors
13
Missing Transferor Signature or Date Technical

The dealer or employee who conducted the transfer must sign and date Section E. Missing signatures and missing or incorrect dates in Section E are among the most commonly cited violations across all ATF inspection reports. This error is entirely on the dealer side — the buyer has nothing to do with Section E.

FixThe employee who completes the transfer signs Section E before the form is filed. Build this as the final step in your transfer process — form does not go in the file without the transferor signature and date present.
14
Firearm Description Doesn’t Match the Bound Book Technical

The firearm description in Section E — make, model, caliber, type, serial number — must match the bound book disposal entry exactly. When they don’t match, ATF cites it as a violation on both the Form 4473 and the bound book. Transposed serial numbers, model abbreviations that differ between the two documents, and caliber descriptions that vary are all citable.

FixEnter the firearm description in both documents from the firearm itself — not from memory. Compare the Section E description and the bound book entry against the physical firearm before filing. They must be identical.
15
Wrong Firearm Type Recorded Technical

The firearm type field in Section E requires the correct ATF classification: pistol, revolver, rifle, shotgun, or receiver/frame. Errors here include recording “handgun” instead of “pistol,” recording the type incorrectly for AR-platform pistols, or leaving the field blank on complicated items like pistol-caliber carbines.

FixUse ATF’s defined categories for firearm type. Train employees on the specific classification for common inventory items where ambiguity exists, particularly AR-platform pistols, pistol-caliber carbines, and items with NFA classifications.
Correction and Documentation Errors
16
Using Correction Fluid on a Form 4473 Technical

White-out, correction tape, or any substance that obliterates an original entry on a Form 4473 is prohibited. The form is a federal document and original entries must remain legible. ATF specifically looks for obliterated entries during inspections because they suggest the form may have been altered after the fact.

FixLine through the incorrect entry with a single line so the original remains legible, write the correction nearby, and initial and date the change. Never obliterate any entry on a Form 4473 under any circumstances.
17
Destroying or Discarding Voided Forms Technical

A Form 4473 that was started but not completed — due to a NICS denial, a buyer who changed their mind, or an uncorrectable error — must be voided and retained for the standard 20-year period. Destroying voided forms, or simply throwing them away because the transfer didn’t happen, is a compliance violation.

FixWrite “VOID” across the face of any incomplete 4473, note the reason and date, and file it with your regular 4473 records. Voided forms are not garbage — they are federal documents with a 20-year retention requirement.
18
Using an Outdated Form Version Technical

ATF revises Form 4473 periodically. Using an outdated version after a new version has been issued is a compliance violation. The current version is ATF Form 4473 (5300.9) Revised August 2023. Dealers who have been using the same stack of forms for years may unknowingly be using superseded versions.

FixCheck your form supply periodically against the current ATF-published version. When ATF issues a revised form, transition to the new version promptly. Do not use old stock after the new version is required.
Process and Training Errors
19
Missing Multiple Handgun Sale Report (Form 3310.4) Substantive

When a buyer purchases two or more handguns from the same FFL within five consecutive business days, ATF Form 3310.4 must be filed with ATF and the relevant state agency within one business day of the qualifying transaction. High-volume dealers frequently miss 3310.4 triggers, particularly when the qualifying sales occur across different employees or different days.

FixBuild a cross-reference check into your disposal process that flags when the same buyer has purchased a handgun within the preceding five business days. This check must happen at the time of the second sale, not after. The five-day window uses business days, not calendar days.
20
No Systematic Review Process for Completed Forms Technical

This is not a single error — it is the condition that allows all 19 errors above to accumulate undetected. A dealer with no systematic process for reviewing completed Form 4473s before they are filed will consistently miss errors that a 30-second post-transaction check would catch. By the time ATF finds those errors, they are already documented in a formal Report of Violations.

FixImplement a review step in your transfer process: before a completed 4473 goes in the file, someone checks the key fields. At scale, use a dedicated 4473 auditing tool. The cost of systematic review is trivially small compared to the cost of the violations it prevents.

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