Safety & Anti-Scam Guide

Most online firearms classifieds get scammed in the same handful of ways. Here’s the playbook for avoiding every common pattern. Read this once; it will save you from 99% of bad actors.

The five hard rules

  1. In-state, in person, cash. Do not ship firearms to private buyers. Do not accept cashier’s checks, money orders, Zelle, Venmo, PayPal F&F, or wires from people you haven’t met. Cash at the handoff. If the buyer is out of state, the transfer must route through an FFL in the buyer’s state — by federal law.
  2. Meet at a public, neutral, well-lit location. Many police departments have official "internet exchange" parking lots with cameras — use them. A range parking lot is also fine.
  3. Photo of state ID before the meet. Both parties exchange a photo of state ID showing same-state residency before showing up. If the other party balks, walk away. You aren’t obligated to do business with someone who won’t prove they’re a legal in-state resident.
  4. Bring someone with you. Always. Tell them where you’re going and when you’ll be back. Share your live location.
  5. Trust the badges, not the words. "Phone verified," "in-state IP," and "account age 90+ days" are algorithmic checks no scammer can fake easily. Words in a listing or message are cheap.

Scam patterns we see weekly

Federal & state law cheat sheet

If you suspect a scam

  1. Don’t engage further. Don’t share more information.
  2. Use the Report link on the listing page. Our system quarantines reported listings within minutes.
  3. If you sent money, report to your bank, the FBI’s IC3 (ic3.gov), and your state attorney general within 24 hours.
  4. If a firearm was stolen or sold to a prohibited person, call your local ATF field office immediately.

This guide is educational and does not constitute legal advice. Firearms law varies by state, county, and city. Before each transfer, verify the law in your state — links from each listing’s legal-notice block.