Review Post

National Association for Gun Rights – NAGR

National Association for Gun Rights Overall Rating: [3.0 / 5.0]

NAGR shows real legislative bite but trips over aggressive fundraising that frustrates many gun owners. Join only if you value its “no compromise” style.


Review Summary

National Association for Gun Rights Summary

The National Association for Gun Rights (NAGR) is a 501(c)(4) advocacy group founded in 2000 by Dudley Brown and headquartered in Colorado. The group claims 4.5 million grassroots members and positions itself as a harder line alternative to the NRA, focusing on federal and state lobbying, direct mail campaigns, and lawsuits.


Evaluation Criteria

Evaluation Criteria

Quality & Reliability

NAGR’s record shows clear wins. In May 2025 the group forced DOJ/ATF to drop three Forced Reset Trigger lawsuits, compelling the agencies to return seized devices. Another recent push saw NAGR lobby for the SHUSH Act and blast the Senate parliamentarian when a silencer provision was stripped from budget legislation.
Critics say NAGR inflates achievements and duplicates suits already filed by others. Reddit users note “over exaggerate on their accomplishments a lot.”

Examples

  • 16 May 2025: DOJ settles FRT cases, devices returned.
  • 27 Jun 2025: NAGR labels silencer ruling “total garbage.”
  • 2015: Present at Kansas SB 45 signing for permitless carry. 

Customer Experience

Joining is simple through an online portal; welcome kits (decal, card, optional cap) usually arrive within three weeks and include timely email alerts.
The downside is relentless fundraising. A GreatNonprofits reviewer wrote, “I have unsubscribed six times now and it just never ends.” Mailers with “Firearms Disqualification Notice” envelopes anger some gun owners for scare tactics.

Member touch points

  • Auto email alerts on every federal bill.
  • 24/7 phone line yet limited live pick up outside office hours.
  • Up to five physical mail pieces per month in election years.

Value for Money

A $35 annual fee buys political action rather than classes or range insurance, so value depends on advocacy interest. Comparable groups: GOA ($25), FPC ($30). NAGR’s FRT settlement cost roughly $700 K in legal fees, less than a single major Supreme Court brief, suggesting efficient spend.

Yet some donors feel their dollars chase repetitive email blasts instead of courtroom outcomes.

Industry Reputation

NAGR positions itself as the “no compromise” foil to NRA, but that stance divides the gun community.  Forums often pair “NAGR” with “spam” while others credit it for pressuring hesitant lawmakers. 


Reviewer Notes

Reviewer Notes

As it stands with the current reconciliation process, NAGA seems to be the only advocacy group calling for full implementation of the SHORT and HPA acts while others are punting and calling the $0 tax a win.


User Feedback

User Feedback Highlights

  • “NAGR is excellent at tracking attacks on our 2nd Amendment and informing members.” – GreatNonprofits
  • The only one fighting for FRTs.” – Reddit
  • “DO NOT subscribe… it never ends.”  – GreatNonprofits

We actively gather feedback from the broader firearms community to ensure our reviews reflect a range of real-world experiences.


Final Verdict

National Association for Gun Rights Final Verdict

NAGR delivers hard charging legislative wins but surrounds them with heavy handed fundraising. Join if you want pure lobbying muscle and can stomach constant asks; casual supporters may prefer quieter alternatives.



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