A March 16, 2026, court filing in State of Texas et al. v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (U.S. District Court, Victoria Division) shows that even though the 2023 ATF pistol brace rule (2021R-08F) was fully vacated nationwide in mid-2025, the agency isn’t fully stepping back.
Key takeaways:
- 📄 ATF argues the case is now moot and should be dismissed—the rule no longer exists after universal vacatur, so there’s nothing left to challenge under the Administrative Procedure Act.
- ⚠️ But the agency explicitly warns it will continue case-by-case enforcement under the underlying statutes (National Firearms Act and Gun Control Act).
- 🔍 If a braced pistol is designed or intended to be shouldered and meets the statutory SBR definition (barrel under 16 inches or overall length under 26 inches), it remains an NFA-regulated item—requiring registration (some fees potentially waived per recent changes) or risking prosecution.
- 💬 Direct from the filing: ATF continues to enforce NFA/GCA rules against some braced pistols “consistent with how [we] have always explained” it works post-vacatur.
Bottom line: The specific 2023 rule—with its factoring criteria and points system—is dead, and most braced pistols (used as intended: forearm-braced or one-handed) revert to pre-2023 legal status without NFA paperwork. However, obvious shouldered configurations could still trigger scrutiny or charges. No widespread crackdown has emerged under the new administration’s less aggressive posture, but the door to enforcement stays open.
This is a big win against blanket reclassification, yet a reminder that statutory definitions endure, administrative winds can shift, and gun laws remain complicated. If you own a braced setup, review it against current NFA criteria and consider consulting a firearms attorney or following updates from groups like GOA, FPC, or NRA-ILA. The brace fight isn’t truly over.
Check out this post from the USCCA for all the details.







