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A&D Records & Compliance

A&D Bound Book Mistakes That Cost FFLs Their License

March 14, 2026  ·  8 min read  ·  By 4473 Pro

ATF inspectors don't just check your Form 4473s. Your Acquisition and Disposition record — the bound book — gets just as much scrutiny, and in many cases more. A&D violations are cited in the majority of FFL inspections, and unlike a single bad 4473, a pattern of A&D errors signals systemic recordkeeping failure. That's the kind of finding that escalates from a warning to a revocation hearing.

The frustrating part is that most A&D mistakes aren't from bad intent — they're from misunderstanding the rules, sloppy habits, or never being shown the right way in the first place. This post covers the specific violations ATF inspectors actually cite, why they matter, and how to make sure your bound book is clean before the next knock on your door.

What the A&D Record Actually Requires

Federal regulations (27 CFR 478.124 and 478.125) require every licensed dealer to record all firearms acquisitions and dispositions. The bound book must be maintained at your licensed premises and available for ATF inspection at any time during business hours.

Every entry must contain specific information. Missing or incomplete fields aren't a technicality — they are violations.

Acquisition Entry Must Include Disposition Entry Must Include
Manufacturer and/or importer Date of disposition
Model Name and address of transferee (or FFL number if dealer)
Serial number Form 4473 transaction number (if applicable)
Type (pistol, revolver, rifle, shotgun, etc.) For FFL-to-FFL: license number of receiving FFL
Caliber or gauge
Date of acquisition
Name and address of transferor (or FFL number)

The 7 A&D Mistakes ATF Inspectors Cite Most Often

1. Late Acquisition Entries

Firearms must be entered into the A&D record no later than the close of business on the day of acquisition. This is one of the most common violations — a shipment arrives in the morning, gets priced and put in the case, and nobody records it in the book until the end of the week, or at all.

Inspector red flag: A firearm in your case or inventory with no corresponding A&D entry. This looks like an unrecorded acquisition — exactly what ATF is watching for.

The fix is simple: establish a hard rule that no firearm goes into the display case or storage until it is in the bound book. Same-day entry, every time.

2. Late Disposition Entries

Disposition entries must be recorded no later than 7 days after the transfer. For most over-the-counter sales this means same day, but the 7-day window exists for layaway completions and similar situations. The problem is when dealers let dispositions pile up — especially at high-volume stores — and fall weeks or months behind.

An ATF inspector who finds 50 recent 4473s with no corresponding disposition entries has serious cause for concern. Do not let this happen.

3. Incomplete Acquisition Information

Missing fields are violations regardless of why they're missing. The most commonly omitted information includes:

4. Personal Collection to Business Inventory — Done Wrong

This one trips up a lot of dealer-owners. When you transfer a personally owned firearm into your business inventory for sale, it must be properly recorded as an acquisition with the date it entered inventory. The acquisition source is you — your name and address as the transferor.

Critical detail: You cannot simply start selling a personal firearm without recording the acquisition. The moment it enters business inventory — even if you bought it years ago for personal use — it must be logged that day.

The reverse is also true. Taking a firearm out of business inventory for personal use requires a disposition entry. Many dealer-owners treat their inventory as interchangeable with their personal collection. ATF does not.

5. Pre-Licensure Firearms Not Properly Recorded

When you first receive your FFL, any firearms you personally owned that you intend to sell through the business must be entered into your A&D book as an opening inventory. Dealers often skip this entirely or do it incorrectly.

ATF guidance specifies that you should record your personal firearms brought into business inventory with the acquisition date being the date you received your license (or the date you bring them into inventory), with your own name and address as the source. A common mistake is recording no acquisition at all and simply selling these guns — creating dispositions with no matching acquisitions, which is a significant discrepancy.

6. Consignment and Pawn — Wrong Entry Type

Firearms received on consignment or pawn must be entered into the A&D record as acquisitions when received, even if you don't own them. This surprises many dealers.

When a firearm comes in on consignment, it gets an acquisition entry. When it goes out — whether it sells or is returned to the owner — it gets a disposition entry. A returned pawn or consignment item going back to its owner still requires a 4473 if more than a year has passed since it was logged in, and the disposition must reflect where it went. Many dealers skip the return disposition entirely, leaving firearms in their A&D with no corresponding exit.

7. Illegible or Altered Entries

The A&D record must be legible and entries cannot be obliterated. If you make an error in a paper bound book, the correct procedure is to draw a single line through the incorrect information, write the correction above or beside it, and initial and date the correction. White-out, complete erasure, or scratching out entries is a violation.

Electronic bound books must maintain an audit trail that shows original entries and any modifications. If you're using software for your A&D records, verify it has proper audit logging before your next inspection.

The Firearms That Go Missing

One of the most serious findings in any ATF inspection is an "unaccounted for" firearm — a gun that was acquired but has no disposition record and cannot be located in your inventory. Even one missing firearm with no explanation is a serious violation. Multiple missing firearms can trigger immediate escalation and revocation proceedings.

Conduct a physical inventory count against your A&D book at least quarterly. Every acquisition must either be in your physical possession or have a disposition entry explaining where it went. There is no gray area here.

Theft and loss: If a firearm is stolen or lost, you must report it to ATF using Form 3310.11 within 48 hours of discovering the loss. This creates a paper trail that explains the missing disposition. Not filing 3310.11 and simply having a firearm disappear from inventory is a far more serious problem than the theft itself.

Electronic vs. Paper Bound Books

ATF allows electronic A&D records under specific conditions. The system must be capable of producing a hard copy printout on demand, must maintain an audit trail, and must be backed up. If your electronic system crashes and you cannot produce records, the fact that you had a digital system is not a defense.

Paper bound books have one major advantage: simplicity. There is no software to fail, no backup to forget, and the format ATF inspectors expect is well established. Many high-volume FFLs use both — software for day-to-day operations and a paper backup or regular printed export as a secondary record.

What Happens When ATF Finds A&D Violations

The severity of the response depends on the nature and extent of the violations. A single late entry on an otherwise clean record is very different from systemic incomplete records across hundreds of acquisitions.

Finding Type Likely Response
Isolated late entries, no missing firearms Warning letter, documented in inspection report
Pattern of incomplete entries Notice to comply, possible follow-up inspection
Multiple missing firearms, unresolved discrepancies Revocation proceedings, possible criminal referral
Altered or falsified records Immediate escalation, likely criminal referral

Before the Inspector Arrives

You will not always get advance notice of an ATF compliance inspection. Some are announced, many are not. The only way to be ready is to maintain your records correctly every day — not to scramble to catch up when you see the badge.

A practical pre-inspection checklist for your A&D book:

Your A&D bound book is a federal record. Treat it accordingly.

Know Your Records Are Clean Before ATF Does

4473 Pro helps FFL dealers maintain compliance across Form 4473 audits, A&D recordkeeping, and inspection readiness — so you're never caught off guard.

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JM
Written by
John McConnell
FFL Dealer & Owner · Clarksville Guns & Archery · Clarksville, TN

John has operated his Federal Firearms License for almost two decades, been through multiple ATF compliance inspections, and built 4473 Pro to solve the compliance gap no other software was addressing. Every article on this site is written from direct experience running an active gun store.