First-time gun owners totaled at least 5.4M in 2021, groups says

FAN Editor

At least 5.4 million people were estimated to have bought guns for the first time in 2021, with nearly 30% of all guns sold last year going to new firearms owners, according to a recent trade group survey. 

Stocks in this Article

SWBI SMITH & WESSON BRANDS

$16.18

-0.52 (-3.11%)

RGR STURM RUGER & CO. INC.

$65.33

-2.08 (-3.09%)

VSTO VISTA OUTDOOR INC.

$37.75

-1.16 (-2.98%)

The National Shooting Sports Foundation’s (NSSF) 2021 figures show a decrease of about 3 million from the staggering numbers of 2020, when an estimated 8.4 million people bought guns for the first time. The firearm industry trade group found that 27% of the new gun buyers were between ages 31 and 40, while 22.2% were age 30 or under. 

A revolver sits on display in the Sturm, Ruger & Co., Inc. booth on the exhibition floor of the 144th National Rifle Association (NRA) Annual Meetings and Exhibits at the Music City Center in Nashville, Tennessee, April 11, 2015. T (Getty Images / Getty Images)

TIM COOK ‘STALKER’: APPLE FILES FOR RESTRAINING ORDER AGAINST VIRGINIA WOMAN ACCUSED OF HARASSING CEO

The third-highest group was those between ages 41 and 50, who made up 21.7% of first-time gun owners, The NSSF found. 

Almost 47% of the first-time buyers asked about firearms training, while 43% enlisted in training programs, the group found. And more than 33% of the first-time gun owners were women. 

In this Aug. 21, 2021, image taken from video, firearms instructor Wayne Thomas shows Valerie Rupert the proper hand position on a fire arm at the Recoil Firearms store in Taylor, Michigan.  (Associated Press / AP Newsroom)

The group based its estimates on its own retailer surveys combined with adjusted statistics from the FBI‘s National Instant Criminal Background Check System.

GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE   

“The surveys revealed that new gun owners are continuing to embrace their Second Amendment rights and nearly half of them are seeking out professional training,” said NSSF CEO and president Joe Bartozzi in a prepared statement. “These trends show that not only is there still a strong interest in gun ownership but also that these new gun owners are interested in learning more about the safe and responsible handling, use and storage of firearms.”

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Jon Hilsenrath: Jerome Powell's press conference triggered market volatility for 2022

Wall Street Journal senior writer Jon Hilsenrath joins ‘The Claman Countdown’ with reaction to the news conference.  Wall Street Journal senior writer Jon Hilsenrath joined “The Claman Countdown” Wednesday with reaction to the economic “uncertainty” in Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s news conference.  FED SIGNALS INTEREST RATE HIKE COULD COME ‘SOON’ […]

You May Like