Freedom Gun Trust
Own a Gun? Careful: You Might Need a Gun Trust
Because of recent events, it is more important than ever to follow the complex and evolving gun laws.
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Freedom Gun Trust Benefits:
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Hold NFA Class 3 Firearms (Title II)
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Hold Class I ordinary rifles, pistols, revolvers and shotguns. (Title I)
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Avoids probate and allows multi-generational use of the firearms-beyond the life of the Grantor.
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Protects your right to privacy.
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All forms needed for keeping your Trustees and Beneficiaries up-to-date and legal.
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Minor children can be named as beneficiaries.
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Covers the possibility of incapacitation.
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Designates co-trustees, successor trustees, and death beneficiaries.
IMPORTANT: Our Freedom Gun Trust creates a standalone estate plan exclusively for your NFA and non-NFA firearms (your firearms bypass your Will or Revocable Living Trust and avoid probate).
Included NFA Document Package
NFA Gun Trust Agreement - Full National Firearms Act Gun Trust Agreement.
Multi State Notary Acknowledgments - Required Notary Documents for the ATF.
Gun Trust Articles I-VII - These articles appoint the  beneficiaries, assign new weapons to the Trust, sell or transfer any weapons held in the Trust, etc.
Gun Trust Assignment Forms - Upon the establishment of the trust, this form will transfer the firearm into the Trust.
ATF Application Checklist - A comprehensive guide if you own Title II firearms on submitting them to the ATF.
Trustee Appointment Form - To be used by the Grantor to appoint new Trustees.
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The information contained on this page is intended to help small entities comply with the beneficial ownership information reporting rule promulgated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN). * This page is explanatory only and does not supplement or modify any obligations imposed by statute or regulation. Additionally, this page does not supersede more recent guidance documents issued by FinCEN. For additional information, consult The Reporting Rule, which implements Section 6403 of the Corporate Transparency Act. The rule describes who must file a BOI report, what information they must provide, and when they must file the reports. The Reporting Rule is found at 1010.380 in title 31 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).
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