New UK Gun Laws Threaten Local Firearms Dealers, Trade Warns
- Last updated: 05/09/2025
Members of Britain’s gun trade are warning that they may not survive the new firearms licensing rules that came into force on 5 August. Jason Harris, who owns Trulock & Harris Gunsmiths in Suffolk, fears the reforms will destroy the impulse purchases that keep independent dealers alive.
“Until now, if a buyer came into my shop and a shotgun caught their eye, they could buy it, provided they held a valid shotgun licence,” Mr Harris explains. “Customers like that are the lifeblood of stores like mine, but under the new licensing system, all that will change.”
The problem is twofold: existing shooters are abandoning the sport, while potential newcomers are being deterred by daunting new requirements. For gun shops, this potential drop in footfall represents a catastrophe.
New applicants face a number of enhanced checks and requirements, including:
The reforms respond to the 2021 Plymouth shooting, though inquests revealed the tragedy resulted from police failures to apply existing laws.
Mr Harris, who has worked in the trade for over 40 years, calls the legislation a “knee-jerk reaction” that threatens his family business. “I had hoped that my daughter would follow me into the gunsmith trade, but now I fear for the craft’s future as a whole,” he says.
While the shooting industry agrees domestic abusers should not have firearms, there are concerns about implementation. Paul Green, Technical Director of the Gun Trade Association, warns enhanced domestic abuse checks could backfire.
“Despite being well-intentioned, this measure risks misuse with malicious and vexatious claims,” Mr Green says. “The past has repeatedly shown that police will automatically confiscate guns whilst these malicious claims are investigated, which in nearly all cases takes many months. For the registered firearms dealer, the impact can be disastrous, with the loss of income and ultimately the loss of their business.”
Mr Green does welcome some changes, particularly restricting police forces from routinely using Section 7 permits to manage backlogs. With rural gun shops already struggling, the reforms threaten to hollow out the retail infrastructure on which British shooters have relied for generations.