FL · Florida🔫 Firearm Bill of SaleBorderless

Florida Firearm Bill of Sale — Borderless

Ultra-clean layout with no border lines. Relies on whitespace and typographic hierarchy for structure.

Free to download Fillable PDF fields Florida-compliant No account required

Required fields in this template

1

Seller full name, address & ID number

2

Buyer full name, address & ID number

3

Firearm make, model, and caliber/gauge

4

Serial number (legally required)

5

Type of firearm (handgun / rifle / shotgun / other)

6

Condition (new / used / as-is)

7

Sale price

8

Date of sale

9

Seller signature & date

10

Buyer signature & date

11

Buyer eligibility statement (not a prohibited person)

Florida legal requirements

Florida does not require notarization. Signatures from both parties are sufficient.

Requirements vary significantly by state. Always verify the buyer's eligibility before transfer. Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922) prohibits transfer to prohibited persons regardless of state law.

What is a Firearm Bill of Sale?

A firearm bill of sale is a private-party transfer document that records the sale of a handgun, rifle, shotgun, or other legal firearm between two individuals. It captures the firearm's make, model, caliber, and serial number alongside buyer and seller identifications — creating a written record that protects both parties and demonstrates the legal transfer of possession.

When do you need one?

  • Private-party sale of any firearm between two eligible individuals
  • Gifting a legal firearm to an eligible family member
  • Estate or trust transfer of firearms to authorized heirs
  • Sale of a vintage or collectible firearm where provenance matters
  • Any state where private transfers require documentation (check local laws)

About the Borderless style

The Borderless template eliminates all border lines and grid artifacts, relying entirely on whitespace, typographic hierarchy, and subtle color cues to create structure. It is the most minimalist design in the collection — each section is defined purely by spacing and bold section titles.

Best for

Digital-native users who prefer clean, app-like interfaces, or any transaction where the document will be completed and signed entirely on screen.

Why this layout?

Without border lines, the template maintains perfect visual consistency across screens, browsers, and PDF viewers — no rendering artifacts, no misaligned borders, just clean content.

Legal risks of skipping a bill of sale

A firearm bill of sale without proper documentation exposes both buyer and seller to significant liability.

!

Transfer to a prohibited person

Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922(d)) makes it a felony to transfer a firearm to someone you know or have reasonable cause to believe is prohibited — including convicted felons, domestic abusers, or persons involuntarily committed. A signed bill of sale with buyer eligibility statement creates a record of due diligence.

!

Seller liability for post-sale use

Without documentation of the sale, a firearm traced back to the original registered owner can implicate the seller in crimes committed with the weapon after the sale. A bill of sale establishing the date and transfer of possession is critical protection.

!

Missing serial number = federal crime

Every legal firearm has a serial number. Knowingly buying or selling a firearm with an obliterated or missing serial number is a federal felony. Always record and verify the serial number in the bill of sale.

How to fill the Borderless template

  1. 1

    Follow the typographic hierarchy — bold titles mark each new section

  2. 2

    Enter SELLER information in the first block, BUYER in the second

  3. 3

    Describe the property using the full width of the open field

  4. 4

    Enter payment details in the CONSIDERATION area

  5. 5

    Sign and date at the bottom — the white space clearly indicates where

Tips for Florida firearm bill of sale transactions

Verify the buyer is at least 18 for long guns and 21 for handguns (federal minimums)

Record the complete serial number — verify it against the physical firearm before signing

Consider requesting a copy of the buyer's government-issued ID and retaining it

Check Florida FDLE (Florida Department of Law Enforcement) for any voluntary background check options

Never transfer a firearm if you have reason to believe the buyer is a prohibited person

Frequently asked questions — Florida Firearm Bill of Sale

Does Florida require a background check for private firearm sales?

No. Florida does not require a background check for private-party firearm transfers between individuals (not dealers). However, the seller remains responsible for not knowingly transferring to a prohibited person under federal law.

Is a firearm bill of sale legally required in Florida?

Florida does not mandate a bill of sale for private firearm transfers, but it is strongly recommended. It establishes the date of transfer, price, and both parties' identifications — protecting the seller from future liability.

Do I need to notify anyone when I sell a gun privately in Florida?

Florida currently has no mandatory reporting requirement for private firearm sales. However, this area of law is evolving — always check current Florida Statutes Chapter 790 before completing a transfer.

Can I sell a firearm with a suppressor (silencer) privately?

Suppressors are regulated by the National Firearms Act (NFA). Their transfer — even privately — requires ATF Form 4 approval and a $200 tax stamp. A bill of sale alone is not sufficient for NFA items.

Free · No account required

Ready to fill your Florida firearm bill of sale?

Open the Borderless template in our editor — complete it in minutes, download or print instantly.

Edit PDF Online — Free

Never sign without understanding every clause.

BrieflyGo reviews your contracts in plain English — instantly.

Try for free →