United Kingdom Within the United Kingdom, it is legal to own a bolt-action .50 BMG rifle with a section 1
Firearms Certificate. Applications requesting firearms in this caliber are assessed by the same criteria as smaller calibers, with the applicant having to prove they have a valid reason for owning such a weapon.
United States The specified maximum diameter of an unfired .50 BMG bullet is ; while this appears to be over the .50 inch (12.7 mm) maximum allowed for non-sporting Title I firearms under the U.S.
National Firearms Act, the barrel of a .50 BMG rifle is only .50 inch (12.7 mm) across the
rifling lands and slightly larger in the grooves. The oversized bullet is formed to the bore size upon firing, forming a tight seal and engaging the rifling. Despite political controversy over the cartridge's great power (it is the most powerful commonly available cartridge not considered a
destructive device under the National Firearms Act), it remains popular among long-range shooters for its accuracy and
external ballistics. While the .50 BMG round can deliver accurate shot placement (if
match grade ammunition is used) at ranges over , smaller-caliber rifles produce better scores and tighter groups in competitions. A 1999
Justice Department Office of Special Investigations briefing on .50 caliber rifle crime identified several instances of the .50 BMG being involved in criminal activities. None of the cited cases has confirmed domestic violent criminal use of a .50 BMG firearm, and a majority of the domestic cases were possession charges. In the United States,
Washington, D.C. disallows registration of .50 BMG rifles, thus rendering civilian possession unlawful.
California prohibits the private purchase of a rifle capable of firing the .50 BMG through the
.50 Caliber BMG Regulation Act of 2004.
Connecticut specifically bans the
Barrett 82A1 .50 BMG rifle. However, .50 BMG rifles registered before the enacted bans remain lawful to possess in California and Connecticut. In
Illinois, it is legal to possess a .50 caliber rifle only if it was acquired by January 10, 2023, and it was registered with the state police by January 1, 2024.
Maryland imposes additional regulations on the sale and transfer of .50 BMG rifles and other weapons classed as "regulated firearms", and limits purchases of any firearm within this class to one per month, but does not impose registration requirements or any form of categorical ban. Writing for the
Marine Corps Gazette, Major Hays Parks states: "No treaty language exists (either generally or specifically) to support a limitation on [the use of .50 BMG] against personnel, and its widespread, longstanding use in this role suggests that such antipersonnel employment is the customary practice of nations." Parks theorizes that the misconception originated in historical doctrine discouraging the use of the M8C
spotting rifle—an integral .50-caliber aiming aid for the
M40 recoilless rifle—in the antipersonnel role. This limitation was entirely tactical and intended to hide the vulnerable M40 and its crew from the enemy until the main
anti-tank gun was ready to fire; however, Parks concludes that some U.S. troops assumed the existence of a legal limitation on the use of .50-caliber projectiles more generally. ==Partial list of .50 BMG firearms==