IS a forced reset trigger Legal In the USA?
A Detailed Educational Analysis (Updated 2026),.

Forced Reset Triggers (FRTs) are a category of firearm trigger mechanisms whose legality has been shaped by statutory language, agency interpretation, federal court review, and state legislation.

Because these devices sit at the intersection of mechanical design and regulatory definition, their legal treatment has been unusually complex.

This article provides a technical and legal explanation of:

This document is educational only and does not constitute legal advice.

FRT Functionality

Mechanical Operation of a Forced Reset Trigger

A Forced Reset Trigger is a mechanically assisted semi-automatic trigger system. Its defining feature is that the trigger is actively reset forward by mechanical force during the firearm’s operating cycle.

Key Mechanical Steps

  1. The shooter pulls the trigger

  2. The hammer releases and strikes the firing pin

  3. The firearm discharges one round

  4. The bolt carrier group cycles rearward

  5. During rearward travel, a reset mechanism pushes the trigger forward

  6. The trigger is returned to the ready position before the bolt closes

  7. The shooter must apply pressure again for the next shot

Critically:

  • Each shot corresponds to a hammer release

  • The trigger does reset between shots

  • No continuous firing occurs without repeated trigger engagement

This mechanical distinction is central to all legal analysis.

Technical Overview

Cutaway diagram of a forced reset trigger showing the trigger reset forward and the hammer retained, ready for the next separate trigger pull
Cutaway view of an AR-15 lower receiver showing trigger pull and hammer release during the initial firing step of a forced reset trigger
Internal view of an AR-15 lower receiver showing bolt carrier interaction and mechanical forward reset of the trigger in a forced reset trigger system
ATF CLassification

ATF Interpretation and Classification
(2021–2022)

Beginning in 2021, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) issued classification letters asserting that certain forced reset triggers constituted machine guns.

What ATF was asserting, in plain terms

The ATF’s reasoning focused on trigger function, not firing speed. Specifically, the agency argued that some FRT designs allowed repeated firing while a shooter maintained continuous rearward pressure, and that this behavior could constitute multiple shots resulting from a single “function” of the trigger.

Based on this interpretation:

  • ATF initiated enforcement actions

  • Devices were seized or collected through recall and surrender processes

  • Manufacturers were directed to halt production and distribution

Original Open Letter from ATF 
ATF Link: https://www.atf.gov/frt-open-letter (now removed)

Read Open Letter Here

supreme court

Judicial Review and Federal Court Constraints

Administrative Law Context

Under U.S. administrative law, federal agencies such as the ATF are permitted to interpret and enforce statutes within the scope delegated by Congress. However, that authority is not unlimited. Courts retain the power to review agency interpretations and invalidate them when they exceed legal boundaries.

In general, courts may reject an agency’s interpretation if it:

Supreme Court Context: Garland v. Cargill (2024)

In Garland v. Cargill (2024), the U.S. Supreme Court considered whether a bump stock qualifies as a “machine gun” under 26 U.S.C. § 5845(b). Although the case involved bump stocks rather than forced reset triggers, the Court’s analysis focused on the same statutory phrase: “single function of the trigger.”

Core Holdings

The Supreme Court held that:

  • A machine gun requires more than one shot per single trigger function

  • Devices that require repeated trigger functions do not meet the statutory definition

    Even if those functions occur rapidly

    Even if mechanical assistance is involved

  • Firing speed alone is not legally determinative

  • Functional similarity to automatic fire is insufficient

  • Federal agencies may not expand statutory definitions beyond what Congress enacted

Interpretive Principles Emphasized by the Court

The Court made clear that:

  • Statutory interpretation must begin and end with the text

  • Congress chose precise mechanical language

  • Courts may not substitute policy concerns for statutory meaning

  • Agencies must operate within the limits of congressional authorization

Relevance to Forced Reset Triggers (FRTs)

Although the case did not involve FRTs, its reasoning directly informs how courts evaluate trigger-based devices:

  • A trigger function is a discrete mechanical event

  • Continuous pressure is not the same as a single trigger function

  • Rate-enhancing mechanisms must still be evaluated by trigger function, not outcome

  • Agency interpretations must align with the statute’s plain meaning

Practical Impact

After Garland v. Cargill:

  • Courts reviewing ATF classifications must apply textual analysis

  • Statutory definitions cannot be broadened through enforcement alone

  • New regulatory outcomes require new legislation, not reinterpretation

The decision serves as a clear judicial boundary, reinforcing:

  • Congress’s role in defining criminal prohibitions

  • The courts’ role in ensuring those definitions are applied as written

doj settlement

DOJ Settlement and Federal
Enforcement Status (2025)

In 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice entered into a settlement resolving litigation with Rare Breed Triggers.

Key settlement outcomes:

  • Federal enforcement actions against specific FRT designs were halted
  • Previously seized triggers were returned
  • DOJ agreed not to pursue machine gun classification for covered designs

Important limitations:

  • The settlement applied to specific products
  • It did not amend the NFA or GCA
  • It did not bind states
  • It did not establish blanket legality

     

DOJ official press release:
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/department-justice-announces-settlement-litigation-between-federal-government-and-rare-breed

2026 Legality

Federal Legal Status as of 2026

As of 2026:

  • No federal statute expressly bans forced reset triggers
  • Federal enforcement against certain designs is suspended
  • Classification remains contingent on mechanical design and future rulings

However:

  • The ATF has not formally rescinded its interpretation
  • Future enforcement remains legally possible
  • New legislation or rulemaking could alter status

This creates a conditional federal posture, not permanent authorization.

State laws

The Primary Legal Determinant

Under U.S. federalism:

  • States may impose firearm restrictions exceeding federal law
  • Federal settlements do not override state statutes

     

Many states prohibit devices classified as:

  • Multiburst trigger activators
  • Rapid-fire trigger mechanisms
  • Trigger devices that increase firing rate

California

California explicitly bans forced reset triggers as illegal multiburst trigger activators.

California DOJ statement

Illinois

Illinois reaffirmed state prohibition and coordinated with ATF to prevent redistribution.

Illinois Attorney General release

Multi-State Opposition

Sixteen states filed litigation opposing federal non-enforcement.

AP News coverage

split decision

Why Federal and State Outcomes Diverge

Federal courts interpret federal statutes.
State legislatures write independent state criminal codes.

Therefore:

  • A device may be federally non-enforced yet state-illegal
  • Compliance requires jurisdiction-specific analysis
  • Crossing state lines with prohibited devices creates criminal exposure
conclusion

Informative Summary