Help center · Buying guide
How to buy a firearm safely
Private firearm purchases are completely legal in most states between same-state residents. They’re also the place where most firearms-classifieds scams happen. This guide walks through how to do it right.
01
Find a listing
Browse listings filtered to your state. Use the category, manufacturer, and caliber filters in the sidebar. Sort by newest to catch fresh inventory; sort by price for budget hunts. Save a search to get a daily email when new matches appear.
02
Vet the seller
On any listing detail page, you’ll see badges:
- ✓ Phone verified — required for posting
- ✓ In-state IP match — listing posted from this state
- ✓ Account age — older accounts are lower-risk
- ⚠ Out-of-state IP — proceed with caution
- ⚠ New account — fewer than 7 days old
- ⚠ Photos match prior listing — possible repost or stolen photos
03
Message through the platform
Use the "Contact seller" form. It relays your message via our messaging system — your email and phone stay private. Sellers’ contact info also stays private until you agree to meet.
Hard rule: if a seller pushes you off-platform to text or WhatsApp before you’ve agreed on terms, that’s a scam pattern. Stay on-platform until you’ve confirmed price and meet-up.
04
Agree on price + meet-up
Common patterns:
- Price: cash on the spot, no haggling after meeting
- Location: a public place — coffee shop parking lot, gun-shop lot, FFL transfer counter
- Time: daytime, your schedule, never theirs only
- Inspection: bring a flashlight, dummy snap caps, function-check the action
05
At the meet-up
- Both of you should be 21+ for handguns, 18+ for long guns (varies by state)
- Both should be the same-state residents — verify state ID
- Inspect the firearm cleared (action open, mag out)
- Function-check trigger reset, mag insertion, slide release
- Pay only after you’ve inspected and accepted
- Cash only, count both ways
- If your state requires a bill of sale, both parties sign and date
06
If your state requires FFL routing
In CA, NY, NJ, MA, IL, CT, MD, DC, HI, WA, and PA-handguns: the transfer must go through a licensed FFL. Both parties bring the firearm to the dealer, who runs the NICS check on the buyer and processes the paperwork. Typical fee: $25–$75. The platform shows a list of FFL dealers in your state.
Red flags — never proceed if
- ⚠Seller asks you to ship — we don't ship; that's a scam pattern
- ⚠Seller asks for payment via Zelle / Cash App / Venmo / gift cards
- ⚠Seller refuses to meet in a public place
- ⚠Seller refuses to show photo ID at the meet-up
- ⚠Seller pushes you to a different platform (WhatsApp, Telegram, email)
- ⚠Listing photos look like product-shop stock images, not phone-camera shots
- ⚠Price is suspiciously below market — typical scam bait is 30–50% below
- ⚠Seller says they're 'overseas' or 'deployed' and a friend will deliver
- ⚠Out-of-state IP badge plus a new account — combined risk is high