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Logging Dispositions (Selling Firearms)
A disposition is a bound book entry that records a firearm leaving your inventory. The most common disposition is a regular sale to a customer, but dispositions also cover transfers to other FFLs, NFA transfers, theft/loss reporting, and destroyed firearms. D...
Viewing Your Bound Book (A&D Records)
Your electronic bound book is your single most important compliance record. It contains every acquisition (firearm in) and every disposition (firearm out) that has passed through your shop. This is what an ATF Inspector will ask to see first. Where to View Co...
4473 Form Tracking
Every time you sell a firearm to a non-licensee (a regular customer, not another FFL dealer), the buyer must complete ATF Form 4473 — the Firearms Transaction Record. CloudFFL tracks the 4473 lifecycle and stores key compliance data on the sales order. The 44...
Bound Book Entries from POS Sales
Every time you sell a firearm at the point of sale, federal law requires that the sale is recorded as a disposition in your bound book. FastBound is your electronic bound book, and CloudFFL's POS compliance buttons keep everything in sync automatically. How I...
POS Compliance Checklist (End of Day)
Before you close out the register and lock up for the night, run through this checklist. It ensures every firearm sale made at the POS is properly documented and your shop stays compliant with ATF regulations. 1. Match Every POS Firearm Sale to a FastBound Di...
Receiving Firearms from a Purchase Order
The most common way firearms enter your inventory is through a Purchase Order (PO). When you receive firearms from a distributor or manufacturer, CloudFFL automatically creates the required FastBound acquisition entries so your bound book stays in sync with yo...
Dealer Transfer In (FFL to FFL)
Sometimes you receive firearms from another FFL dealer rather than through a standard purchase order. This happens when a fellow dealer transfers inventory to you, or when you receive a consignment. CloudFFL handles this through the Transfer In workflow. When...
Customer Trade-Ins
When a customer brings in a firearm they want to trade toward a purchase, you need to record it as an acquisition in your bound book and create a trade credit for the customer. CloudFFL handles this through a multi-step workflow. How Trade-Ins Work in CloudFF...
Walk-In Direct Buys
A direct buy is when someone walks into your shop and wants to sell you a firearm outright for cash. Unlike a trade-in, the seller is not looking to apply credit toward another purchase — they just want to be paid. CloudFFL's Direct Buy workflow handles the ac...
Understanding Trade Credits
Trade credits are store credit balances that customers build up by trading in firearms. When a customer trades in a gun, you agree on a dollar value, and that amount is added to the customer's trade credit balance. They can then use that credit toward future p...
Applying Trade Credits to Sales
When a customer with a trade credit balance makes a purchase, you can apply their credit as a discount on the sales order. This is done through the Trade Discount Wizard, which handles the math and creates the proper records automatically. Step-by-Step: Apply...
NFA Transfers (Forms 3, 4, 5)
NFA stands for the National Firearms Act. It covers a special category of regulated items: suppressors (silencers), short-barreled rifles (SBRs), short-barreled shotguns (SBSs), machine guns, and destructive devices. Transferring NFA items requires different p...
Reporting Theft or Loss
If a firearm in your inventory is lost, stolen, or destroyed, federal law requires you to report it promptly. CloudFFL allows you to record the loss in your bound book through special disposition types, but you also have obligations to notify the ATF and local...
Stock Reconciliation (Odoo vs FastBound)
Your shop has two systems tracking firearms: Odoo (your business inventory) and FastBound (your electronic bound book). These two systems must agree. If Odoo says you have a firearm in stock but FastBound does not (or vice versa), you have a problem that needs...
Serial Number Audits
A serial number audit is a physical inventory count of your firearms. You go to each firearm in your shop, scan or read its serial number, and the system compares what you scanned against what your records say you should have. This is the most thorough way to ...
Product & Inventory Reports
CloudFFL's product inventory report gives you a high-level view of your compliance inventory, aggregated by your chosen grouping. While the Stock Comparison and Serial Audit focus on individual serial numbers, the Product Inventory report answers bigger-pictur...
What is an FFL Vendor?
When you buy firearms from a distributor or another dealer, that seller is your FFL vendor — a business that holds a Federal Firearms License and is authorized to transfer firearms to you as a licensee. Examples include Lipsey's, RSR Group, Davidson's, Sports ...
Adding a New FFL Vendor (Step by Step)
Adding a new FFL vendor to CloudFFL takes just a few steps. The FFL Lookup feature connects directly to FastBound, which looks up the dealer in the ATF database and automatically fills in their address, license name, and contact information — you only need to ...