SHIPPING RESTRICTIONS
www.tisasarmsusa.com
Effective Date: January 01, 2026
IMPORTANT: Certain firearms parts, components, and accessories are subject to restrictions under federal, state, and local law. It is your responsibility to ensure that the Products you order may be lawfully purchased, possessed, and used in your jurisdiction. We reserve the right to cancel any order, or any portion of an order, that we reasonably believe would violate applicable law if fulfilled. If we cancel your order for this reason, we will issue a full refund to your original method of payment.
Magazine Capacity Restrictions
The following states and jurisdictions restrict the sale or possession of magazines exceeding specified capacity limits. We will not ship magazines exceeding the applicable limit to these jurisdictions. We stock restricted-capacity magazines for sale to customers in these states.
California: 10 rounds maximum.
Colorado: 15 rounds maximum.
Connecticut: 10 rounds maximum.
Delaware: 17 rounds maximum.
Hawaii: 10 rounds maximum (handgun magazines only; no capacity restriction on rifle magazines).
Illinois: 10 rounds maximum (rifles); 15 rounds maximum (handguns) under the Protect Illinois Communities Act (PICA). The statute is subject to ongoing federal litigation but remains enforceable statewide.
Maryland: 10 rounds maximum.
Massachusetts: 10 rounds maximum (pre-ban exemption may apply to certain items).
New Jersey: 10 rounds maximum.
New York: 10 rounds maximum.
Oregon: Measure 114 (10 rounds) is not currently being enforced pending review by the Oregon Supreme Court. Until final resolution, we will not ship magazines exceeding 10 rounds to Oregon addresses.
Rhode Island: 10 rounds maximum, under the Large Capacity Feeding Device Ban (HB 6614, enacted 2022). No grandfather clause applies.
Vermont: 10 rounds maximum (long guns); 15 rounds maximum (handgun magazines).
Virginia: 15 rounds maximum, effective July 1, 2026 (SB 749/HB 217). Magazines lawfully possessed in Virginia before July 1, 2026 are grandfathered. We will begin enforcing the 15-round shipping restriction for Virginia destinations on July 1, 2026.
Washington: 10 rounds maximum.
District of Columbia: The 10-round limit was struck down by the DC Court of Appeals in Benson v. United States on March 5, 2026, and is currently unenforceable. This is an evolving matter. Rehearing or further appeal could reinstate the restriction, and we will monitor and update this policy accordingly.
These limits are current as of the effective date of this document and are subject to change as laws are amended. Several of these restrictions are subject to ongoing litigation that may affect enforceability. We make reasonable efforts to maintain current information but cannot guarantee that this list reflects real-time legislative changes. It is your responsibility to verify the laws applicable in your jurisdiction.
Additional State-Specific Restrictions
Certain states restrict the sale of specific parts or accessories, including but not limited to pistol grips, flash hiders, threaded barrels, folding or telescoping stocks, barrel shrouds, and forward pistol grips, when configured for or intended for use with certain categories of firearms. States with assault weapon feature restrictions include California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York. We will not knowingly ship restricted accessories to states where they are prohibited.
The sale and possession of certain trigger modification devices, and certain frame and receiver items, are governed by federal law as well as state law. Because this area has changed substantially in the past twenty-four months, the following summary is provided for customer reference.
Federal Law Developments Affecting Firearms Parts and Accessories
Frame and receiver rule. The Supreme Court upheld the ATF frame and receiver rule in Bondi v. VanDerStok, 604 U.S. ___ (March 26, 2025), holding that partially complete frames, receivers, and weapon parts kits can qualify as “firearms” under the Gun Control Act when the intended purpose is clear. We do not sell serialized firearms, frames, receivers, or any item meeting the “readily convertible” threshold that would require serialization and FFL transfer under the rule.
Pistol brace rule. ATF Rule 2021R-08F was vacated by multiple federal courts, and the DOJ dismissed its appeal in Mock v. Bondi in July 2025. Pistol braces have returned to their pre-2023 legal status at the federal level. The underlying NFA statutory definitions still apply. A braced pistol that meets the statutory definition of a short-barreled rifle may still be an NFA item regardless of the rule’s vacatur.
Forced reset triggers. Following a May 2025 settlement between the DOJ, Rare Breed Triggers, and NAGR, forced reset triggers are not being enforced against as machine guns under federal law. State law is materially different. Approximately sixteen states independently ban forced reset triggers, including California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, and Washington, and the District of Columbia. We will not ship forced reset triggers to these jurisdictions. It is your responsibility to verify the legality of any trigger product in your state and locality before ordering.
Bump stocks. Bump stocks are federally legal following Garland v. Cargill, 602 U.S. 406 (June 14, 2024), which held that bump stocks do not fall within the statutory definition of “machinegun.” A significant number of states independently ban bump stocks, and we will not ship these items to jurisdictions that prohibit them.
NFA tax stamp elimination. Effective January 1, 2026, the $200 NFA tax was eliminated for suppressors, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, and any other weapons, pursuant to H.R. 1. Registration requirements under the NFA remain unchanged. Elimination of the tax stamp does not convert any NFA item into a non-regulated item, and we do not sell NFA-regulated items through this Website.
Solvent traps. Per ATF guidance issued November 2023, items marketed as solvent traps may be classified as silencers under the NFA based on objective design features regardless of the label applied by the seller. We do not sell solvent traps.
FFL requirement. No federal firearms license is required to sell non-serialized parts, accessories, or standard magazines, and no federal minimum age exists for the purchase of these items. State age minimums may differ and are reflected in our Age Verification Policy.
We will not ship any product classified as a machine gun or machine gun conversion device under federal law. We will not knowingly ship any product to a jurisdiction in which its possession or sale is prohibited.
Orders to Restricted Jurisdictions
Our checkout system will flag orders for restricted items shipping to restricted jurisdictions. However, no automated system can account for every local ordinance. If you place an order for an item that is restricted in your jurisdiction, we reserve the right to cancel the order and issue a full refund. We are not liable for your failure to comply with the laws of your jurisdiction.
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