Firearms manufacturers Ruger and Rideout Arsenal are heading south, continuing a trend of firearms companies leaving Democrat-run states.
On June 10, Virginia-based Rideout Arsenal, a firearms designer and manufacturer, announced it would invest $22 million to build a new manufacturing facility in Thomasville, Georgia. The investment would create 120 new jobs over the next several years, the company said.
Also this year, Sturm, Ruger & Co. relocated their head office from Fairfield, Connecticut, to Mayodan, North Carolina.
“This relocation was not something we originally planned to pursue,” Rideout founders, Travis and Kelsey Rideout, said in a statement.
“The reality is that recent anti-gun legislation in Virginia created a significant uncertainty for our company and ultimately forced us to look for a state where we could continue operating, investing, and growing with confidence.”
These moves follow a trend in which firearms manufacturers like Remington, Winchester, Stag Arms, Magpul, Troy Industries, Smith & Wesson, Dark Storm, and others have relocated over the past decade from left-leaning states like New York, Massachusetts, Illinois, and Colorado to conservative states like Florida, Texas, Georgia, and Tennessee.
“Firearm businesses are migrating to other states primarily because states like Virginia, Connecticut, Colorado, Massachusetts, and others are becoming increasingly hostile to Second Amendment rights and the ability for these companies to produce firearms in their states,” Mark Oliva, public affairs director for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, told The Epoch Times.
“While Virginia was the latest example with Rideout Arsenal moving to Georgia, the move of Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc., to move their headquarters and expand production to Tennessee underscores the importance of firearm businesses finding greener pastures.”
With Democrats in control of the legislature and the governorship, Virginia recently passed an array of new gun control laws, effective July 1, including among other things a ban on the sale of various semi-automatic firearms, and certain large-capacity magazines, unserialized firearms, as well as new restrictions on carrying firearms in public places. Virginia also enacted laws to expand civil liability for gun manufacturers and dealers.
In welcoming Rideout to Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp stated that his state’s “pro-business approach, skilled workforce, and enduring support for constitutional freedoms make us an ideal home for manufacturers like Rideout Arsenal.”
In May, it became public that Ruger had relocated its head office from Fairfield, Connecticut, to Mayodan, North Carolina, at the start of the year. Although the company has not issued a public statement, it listed Mayodan as its location in its quarterly earnings report and has since confirmed the move.
Connecticut, once known as the “arsenal of democracy,” had been home to several of America’s largest firearms manufacturers, including Smith & Wesson, Winchester, and now Sturm, Ruger & Co. Since the 2012 massacre of 26 first-grade children and teachers at Sandy Hook School in Newtown, the state has passed a series of laws to limit access to guns. In addition, the state has been the site of a number of lawsuits against gun makers, such as the $73 million settlement of a lawsuit brought by the parents of Sandy Hook children against Remington and threats of civil litigation against Ruger in November 2025.
Moving out of left-leaning states may lead to a more business-friendly environment, but it will do little to protect firearms manufacturers from lawsuits, Oliva said.
“The threat of litigation is still alive, since states like New Jersey and New York have pursued laws that allow for loosely designed ‘public nuisance’ lawsuits to skirt the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act,” Oliva said. “The move to these states is more about the ability to produce the firearms today’s gun owners want and the legislative threats to that business.”
The 2005 Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act prohibits lawsuits against manufacturers or dealers of firearms and ammunition for harm solely caused by criminal misuse of their products.






















