HR-8694-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by John Larson (D-CT)
What it does
This bill would amend federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922) to make it unlawful for any person to offer a Buy Now, Pay Later (BNPL) loan — defined as a short-term loan for personal use repayable in four or fewer installments with no down payment — to finance the purchase of a "semiautomatic assault weapon." It would also prohibit licensed firearms dealers, manufacturers, and importers from knowingly accepting funds obtained through such loans. Violations would carry a civil penalty of $100,000 per offense, assessed by the Attorney General after notice and a hearing. The bill also adds detailed statutory definitions for "semiautomatic assault weapon" and related terms to title 18.
Who benefits
Advocates for reducing gun violence, who argue restricting financing may reduce impulsive or financially constrained purchases of the covered firearms. Communities that have experienced mass shootings involving the defined weapon types. Competing firearms retailers who do not offer BNPL financing and would face a more level playing field. Traditional lenders and credit card companies whose financing products are not covered by the bill's narrow BNPL definition.
Who is hurt
Adults who rely on BNPL financing to purchase firearms covered by the bill's definition, including lower-income buyers who may lack access to traditional credit. BNPL financial technology companies (e.g., Affirm, Klarna, Afterpay) that currently offer or could offer firearms financing. Firearms dealers, manufacturers, and importers whose sales of covered weapons may decline. Gun owners and prospective buyers who use semiautomatic rifles, pistols, or shotguns with the defined features for hunting, sport shooting, or home defense. Retailers in rural areas where these firearm types are commonly used for agricultural or property protection purposes.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that BNPL loans lower the financial barrier to acquiring high-capacity, feature-equipped semiautomatic firearms, enabling purchases that buyers could not otherwise immediately afford — potentially increasing impulsive acquisitions of weapons used in mass shootings. They contend that Congress already restricts certain financing arrangements in other consumer contexts and that this bill applies a targeted, narrowly scoped restriction to a specific payment mechanism rather than banning the firearms themselves. They further argue the $100,000 civil penalty structure creates meaningful deterrence for lenders and dealers without criminalizing individual buyers.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that restricting a specific payment method does not meaningfully prevent determined buyers from acquiring covered firearms through cash, credit cards, traditional installment loans, or private transfers — all of which remain unaffected. They contend the bill's definition of "semiautomatic assault weapon," which includes common features like pistol grips and detachable magazines found on widely owned firearms, is overbroad and may burden constitutionally protected purchases. Under the Bruen (2022) text-history-tradition framework, they argue that financing restrictions tied to firearm features lack a historical analogue and could face Second Amendment challenges alongside the underlying feature-based definitions.
Constitutional context
The bill's definition of "semiautomatic assault weapon" relies on feature-based criteria similar to those challenged under the Second Amendment's text-history-tradition test established in New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen (2022) and refined in United States v. Rahimi (2024). Whether Congress may restrict a specific financing mechanism for a category of firearms — without banning the firearms themselves — is an unresolved question under the Bruen framework, as courts must assess whether such a restriction burdens conduct protected by the Second Amendment and whether a historical tradition of analogous regulation exists.
Checks and balances
The Attorney General (executive branch) gains enforcement authority to assess civil penalties; judicial review is available to penalized parties after the required notice-and-hearing process, and courts would independently assess constitutional challenges under the post-Bruen framework.
Historical precedent
The federal assault weapons ban (1994–2004) used similar feature-based definitions to restrict manufacture and sale of covered firearms, but did not regulate financing mechanisms; it expired in 2004 and was not renewed.