Georgia generally defers to federal regulation of National Firearms Act (NFA) items. Suppressors, short-barreled rifles (SBRs), short-barreled shotguns...
Reviewed by Will Luker, Founder of CCW Hub. USCCA Training Counselor, USCCA Certified Instructor, NRA Certified Instructor, Law Enforcement.
Georgia generally defers to federal regulation of National Firearms Act (NFA) items. Suppressors, short-barreled rifles (SBRs), short-barreled shotguns (SBSs), machine guns, destructive devices, and "any other weapons" (AOWs) are legal to own and possess in Georgia, but only when the owner has cleared the federal registration process under 26 U.S.C. Chapter 53. The state does not run its own NFA registry, does not charge a separate state tax, and does not require any state permit on top of the federal Form 4 or Form 1.
The mechanism is straightforward. O.C.G.A. § 16-11-122 flatly prohibits possession of sawed-off shotguns, sawed-off rifles, machine guns, dangerous weapons, and silencers. O.C.G.A. § 16-11-124 then carves out NFA-registered items: the prohibition does not apply to weapons possessed "in accordance with the dictates of the National Firearms Act." If your suppressor, SBR, SBS, machine gun, destructive device, or AOW is registered to you (or to a trust or entity you control) under federal law and the transfer was approved by ATF, you are not committing a Georgia crime by possessing it. If the federal paperwork is missing or lapses, every day of possession is a Georgia felony.
Two additional Georgia-specific notes matter. First, the Georgia statutory definition of "machine gun" in O.C.G.A. § 16-11-121 is unusual: it covers any weapon that shoots or is designed to shoot automatically more than six shots without manual reloading by a single function of the trigger. Federal law is stricter and controls regardless. Second, O.C.G.A. § 16-11-160 adds a separate sentence enhancement when an NFA item is used during the commission of certain crimes. The mere lawful possession of a registered NFA item is fine. Using one in a felony is not.
O.C.G.A. § 16-11-122 is the operative prohibition. It is captioned "Possession of sawed-off shotgun or rifle, machine gun, silencer, or dangerous weapon prohibited" and reaches:
A bare violation is a felony. The definitional terms above are set out at O.C.G.A. § 16-11-121, which provides the Georgia-specific definitions. Georgia's "machine gun" definition (more than six shots per trigger pull) is broader than the federal definition (more than one shot per trigger pull) in 26 U.S.C. § 5845(b). Because federal law sets the floor for any item registered under the NFA, the federal definition governs in practice.
O.C.G.A. § 16-11-124 lists the exemptions from § 16-11-122. The one that matters for ordinary NFA ownership is the carve-out for items lawfully made, transferred, or possessed in accordance with federal law. Practitioner sources collected in the topic archive (Silencer Shop, midsouthgunlawyer, NRA-ILA) read § 16-11-124 to exempt any NFA item "registered in accordance with the dictates of the National Firearms Act." That tracks the structure used by every other federally-deferring state. The Georgia code does not contain a separate state registration, fingerprinting, or photograph requirement.
In practical terms, "registered in accordance with the NFA" means:
You should keep a copy of your approved tax stamp with the item whenever it is being transported or used. There is no Georgia statute mandating this, but in a traffic stop, fishing-license check, or hunting-camp encounter, an officer who sees a suppressor or short barrel has reasonable grounds to ask whether it is registered. Producing the stamp resolves the question on the spot.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration. Suppressors are the most common NFA item bought by Georgia residents. The process runs through a Special Occupational Tax (SOT) dealer, who submits your Form 4 with fingerprints and a photograph to ATF. After approval, you pick up the suppressor.
Georgia treats hunting with a suppressor as legal for both game and non-game animals statewide. The Department of Natural Resources hunting regulations do not prohibit suppressor use. Practitioner sources in the archive trace this back to legislation signed by Gov. Nathan Deal effective July 1, 2014, that explicitly authorized suppressor-equipped firearms in the field.
Tax treatment in 2026: Effective January 1, 2026, P.L. 119-21 (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025) reduced the federal NFA making and transfer tax from $200 to $0 for silencers, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, and any-other-weapons (AOWs). Machine guns and destructive devices were explicitly excluded and retain the $200 tax. Suppressors remain NFA-regulated; the registration, fingerprinting, photograph, and ATF approval process still applies. Georgia law does not change with the federal tax treatment; the § 16-11-124 exemption keys to registration under the NFA, not to the dollar amount of the tax owed.
Pending state legislation: HB 1324 (2026 session) would remove "firearm suppressors" from Georgia's § 16-11-121 dangerous-weapons list and eliminate the parallel state-level prohibition. As of early 2026 the bill had advanced in both chambers but had not become law. The federal NFA exemption in § 16-11-124 covers suppressor owners regardless, so a Georgian with an approved Form 4 is legal whether HB 1324 passes or not.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration. An SBR is a rifle with a barrel less than 16 inches or an overall length less than 26 inches. Georgia calls this a "sawed-off rifle" at § 16-11-122, but the federal definition at 26 U.S.C. § 5845(a)(3)/(4) controls for registration purposes. The pathway is the same as for suppressors: ATF Form 4 for a transfer, ATF Form 1 for an individual-built SBR (for example, a pistol-to-SBR conversion using a stocked lower receiver).
Pistol-brace configurations: when ATF reclassifies a braced pistol as an SBR, the affected configuration falls under § 16-11-122 in Georgia. Owners who do not have a Form 1 approval on file for the SBR configuration are committing both a federal and Georgia offense. Check the current federal status with ATF or a Georgia-licensed firearms attorney before assuming a braced configuration is lawful.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration. An SBS is a shotgun with a barrel less than 18 inches or an overall length less than 26 inches. Same statutory mechanics as SBRs: § 16-11-122 prohibits "sawed-off shotguns," § 16-11-124 exempts NFA-registered items, and the federal Form 4 (transfer) or Form 1 (manufacture) is the registration document.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration, but subject to the federal Hughes Amendment. Machine guns are dual-regulated. The Georgia rule at § 16-11-122 prohibits machine gun possession. The federal rule at 18 U.S.C. § 922(o) prohibits civilian possession of any machine gun manufactured after May 19, 1986. The combined effect:
The same § 16-11-124 federal-registration exemption applies. Treat a federally registered pre-1986 machine gun like any other NFA item in Georgia: keep the stamp, do not let the federal registration lapse, and do not transfer it outside ATF channels.
Georgia's own machine-gun definition at § 16-11-121 (more than six shots per single trigger function) is broader than the federal definition. Practitioner sources flag this footnote but agree federal law strictly governs anything that fires more than one shot per trigger pull.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration. Destructive devices include grenades, large-bore firearms (greater than half-inch caliber, excluding most shotguns), and certain explosives. The federal definition is in 26 U.S.C. § 5845(f). Georgia's "dangerous weapon" list at § 16-11-121 covers most of the same ground (rocket launcher, bazooka, recoilless rifle, mortar, hand grenade) and § 16-11-122 prohibits possession.
The federal-registration exemption in § 16-11-124 reaches destructive devices the same way it reaches suppressors. The $200 federal transfer tax still applies to destructive devices and machine guns - both categories were explicitly excluded from the P.L. 119-21 (eff. Jan 1, 2026) $0 NFA tax change.
Legal in Georgia with federal NFA registration. AOWs are the catchall federal category in 26 U.S.C. § 5845(e). They include pen guns, cane guns, smoothbore pistols, certain disguised firearms, and "wallet holsters" that retain a pistol's trigger guard. The federal transfer tax for an AOW is $5, not $200, which is why some collectors specifically pursue them.
Georgia has no separate AOW category. The federal registration is the operative document, and § 16-11-124 supplies the state-law exemption from § 16-11-122 where the AOW would otherwise fall within "silencer" or "dangerous weapon."
The process is identical to every other federally-deferring state:
Georgia has no state-specific add-on. There is no probate-court NFA filing, no Georgia State Patrol registration, and no extra training or instructor requirement.
Lawful NFA ownership does not override Georgia's other firearm restrictions:
Standard semi-automatic rifles (AR-15, AK-pattern), standard pistols, standard shotguns with barrels 18 inches or longer, and standard rifles with barrels 16 inches or longer are not NFA items. Georgia has no "assault weapon" ban that reclassifies them. The Georgia Constitution at Art. I, § I, Para. VIII expressly authorizes the General Assembly to "prescribe the manner in which arms may be borne," but the General Assembly has not exercised that power to restrict ordinary semi-automatic rifles.
Body armor is not NFA. Georgia has no state body-armor possession ban for non-prohibited adults (federal 18 U.S.C. § 931 bars violent-felony convicts from possessing body armor).
NFA-specific reporting rules sit at the federal level and apply equally in Georgia:
NFA law moves on two tracks. The federal track changes whenever Congress modifies 26 U.S.C. Chapter 53 or ATF issues a rule (the 2026 suppressor tax change and pistol-brace reclassifications are recent examples). The Georgia track changes when the General Assembly amends § 16-11-121, § 16-11-122, or § 16-11-124. As of this draft, HB 1324 (suppressor deregulation) is pending. Before buying, building, or transporting an NFA item, confirm:
When the law is in flux, an approved tax stamp on file and a current copy of the federal registration in your range bag remain the surest defense.
<!-- federal-context-block:added-2026-05-20 -->Bump stocks - Garland v. Cargill (2024). In Garland v. Cargill, 602 U.S. ___ (2024), the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the federal regulation classifying bump stocks as machineguns under the National Firearms Act. As a matter of FEDERAL law, bump stocks are no longer NFA-regulated. State law may still independently restrict bump stocks; consult your state's RESTRICTIONS section for any state-level bump-stock prohibition.
P.L. 119-21 NFA tax (2026). Effective January 1, 2026, P.L. 119-21 (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025) reduced the federal NFA making and transfer tax to $0 for silencers, SBRs, SBSs, and AOWs. Machine guns and destructive devices retain the $200 tax. The federal registration requirements (Form 1 / Form 4, fingerprints, photographs, CLEO notice) remain unchanged.
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