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October 12, 2022

We’re in the middle of what the New York Times has called the “great gun-buying boom that shows no sign of letting up.” And while the Democrat party spends its time demonizing firearms and those who choose to own them, millions of law-abiding Americans are leveraging their constitutional rights to protect and defend themselves.

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This is perhaps no clearer than in the shift in sales from long guns, like rifles, to handguns that are designed for personal protection.

But with a surge in gun sales of this proportion, we have to ask: Why? In other words, what specifically is driving such an increase?

U.S. Gun Sales: Behind the Numbers

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In July 2022, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) processed 2.4 million background check requests for the purchase of firearms. That was the third highest July on record — marking five straight months of historically high gun sales in the United States (and nearly five years of increasing annual totals).

In 2020 and 2021, there were a combined 40 million guns sold. For perspective, there were less than 40 million combined guns sold in the five-year stretch between 2000 and 2004. And the number of guns sold in 2021 is more than twice the number sold in 2001. From 2021 to 2022, gun sales in the U.S. have risen by 155 percent.

No state sold more guns in 2021 than Texas, where there was a total of 1.6 million firearms sold. Florida and Pennsylvania followed behind. But in terms of per-capita gun sales, Wyoming ranks first (0.19 guns sold per adult 21 years or older).

Ironically enough, the District of Columbia saw the largest increase in gun purchases from 2020 to 2021 at 37 percent. Hawaii (29 percent), Iowa (25 percent), and New Jersey (25 percent) followed closely behind.

Four Reasons for the Surge in U.S. Gun Sales

While gun sales have historically increased decade by decade, the surge we’ve seen over the past two to three years is unprecedented.