DOJ Plans to Cut Gun Dealer Inspectors – Effective Immediately
Keith Lusher 07.09.25

The Department of Justice has announced plans to dramatically reduce oversight of federally licensed firearms dealers, cutting two-thirds of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives inspectors who monitor gun stores across the country.
According to budget documents recently circulated, the DOJ intends to eliminate 541 of the 811 Industry Operations Investigators currently responsible for ensuring Federal Firearms Licensees comply with gun laws. These investigators monitor dealers to prevent straw purchases, illegal trafficking, and sales to prohibited persons.
The cuts are part of the Trump administration’s broader effort to reduce the ATF’s $1.6 billion budget by nearly one-third. Officials estimate the workforce reduction will decrease the agency’s capacity to regulate firearms and explosives industries by approximately 40 percent when the new fiscal year begins in November.
The inspector positions being eliminated will save taxpayers an estimated $82 million specifically from reduced regulatory inspections. Additional cuts to 470 other ATF positions through attrition will save another $354 million, bringing total savings to $468 million according to the 2026 budget proposal.
Currently, only a small percentage of the roughly 100,000 dealers, collectors, and manufacturers under ATF oversight receive inspections in any given year.
Gun rights advocates have welcomed the news, particularly after the Biden administration’s “zero-tolerance” policy forced hundreds of FFLs out of business for minor paperwork violations. Representative Eric Burlison of Missouri praised the cuts, telling The Washington Examiner that much of the ATF’s work involves “making everyone who wants to own a firearm make our lives miserable” rather than focusing on genuine public safety.
However, gun control organizations strongly criticized the proposal. John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, called the cuts “devastating” and argued they would “undermine ATF’s ability to keep communities safe from gun violence.” He characterized the budget as “a win for unscrupulous gun dealers and a terrible setback for ATF’s state and local law enforcement partners,” according to The New York Times.
The inspector cuts come alongside other significant changes to federal gun policy. The administration has already rolled back Biden-era regulations on homemade firearms and is considering additional regulatory reversals. Attorney General Pam Bondi has directed the ATF to review and reconsider both the pistol brace ban and background check requirements for private gun sales.
Perhaps most significantly, the budget proposal also includes plans to merge the ATF with the Drug Enforcement Administration. This consolidation has drawn criticism from gun rights groups like Gun Owners of America, which warned that merging would create a larger, more powerful agency rather than truly reducing federal oversight.
The ATF has experienced considerable turbulence under the new administration. President Trump initially appointed FBI Director Kash Patel as interim ATF director before naming Daniel Driscoll, who also serves as Secretary of the Army, to lead the agency.
Agency staff members, speaking anonymously due to fear of retaliation, expressed shock at the scope of the planned cuts. They warned that the reductions could effectively end the ATF’s role as a serious firearms regulator if not reversed by the White House or Congress.
The Justice Department declined to provide additional comment on the workforce reduction plans.