The Complete 2026 Guide

FRT Trigger AR-15 — Everything You Need to Know

How forced reset triggers work, what makes them legal, the hardware they need to run right, and the best AR-15 FRT trigger available today.

Updated 2026 Post-Cargill Legal Status Mil-Spec Compatible USA-Made Options
Definition

What Is an FRT Trigger for an AR-15?

An FRT trigger — short for Forced Reset Trigger — is a drop-in cassette trigger designed for AR-15 platform rifles. Unlike a standard semi-automatic trigger, an FRT uses the bolt carrier group's rearward travel to mechanically force the trigger to reset before the bolt returns to battery.

The result: the trigger is already reset and ready to fire by the time a new round is chambered. A trained shooter maintaining rearward pressure can achieve dramatically faster split times compared to a standard trigger — without any modification to the BCG, barrel, or lower receiver.

FRT = Forced Reset Trigger

The BCG does the resetting — not your finger. One round per trigger pull, every time. Federally legal as of May 2025.


Mechanics

How Does an FRT Trigger Work on an AR-15?

The difference comes down to one step in the firing cycle:

Standard Mil-Spec Trigger:

1
Pull trigger → hammer falls → round fires
2
BCG travels rearward, disconnector catches hammer
3
You must release the trigger forward until it clicks into reset
4
Pull again to fire the next round

FRT Trigger:

1
Pull trigger → hammer falls → round fires
2
BCG travels rearward under gas pressure
3
The BCG physically contacts the FRT mechanism and pushes the trigger forward — reset is mechanical, not manual
4
Trigger is already reset before bolt closes — fires again immediately if you maintain pressure
↑ One mechanical step. Completely different speed ceiling.

Legal Status 2026

Are FRT Triggers Legal on an AR-15?

The landmark ruling came in June 2024 when the Supreme Court decided Garland v. Cargill 6-3, establishing that devices requiring a separate trigger function per shot are not machine guns under the NFA. A federal court then applied this directly to FRT triggers. The Trump DOJ settled all FRT litigation in May 2025, ending federal enforcement permanently.

State law varies. Several states maintain independent restrictions regardless of federal law — currently California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and DC.

See our complete state-by-state FRT legality guide or the full Garland v. Cargill breakdown.


Buyer's Guide

What Makes a Good AR-15 FRT Trigger?

1. Drop-In Cassette Architecture

The best FRT triggers use a self-contained cassette — all components housed in a single unit. This maintains factory tolerances, eliminates fitment variables, and makes installation a straightforward trigger pin swap. The Takedown Tools

THE TRIGGERED COMPANY DROP IN FRT 

2. BCG Interface Precision

The reset lobe that contacts the BCG must be machined to tight tolerances. Sloppy geometry causes inconsistent resets and trigger freeze, especially as the rifle heats up.

3. Buffer Compatibility

FRT triggers require an H2 buffer minimum. The added weight slows the BCG's rearward velocity, giving the reset mechanism time to complete reliably. See our complete FRT buffer guide.

4. M16 BCG Required

An M16-profile bolt carrier group is required. The extended tail provides the contact surface the FRT reset mechanism needs. A standard AR-15 BCG will not work reliably. See our M16 BCG vs AR-15 BCG guide.

5. USA Manufacturing

For a component with this level of mechanical precision and legal scrutiny, domestic manufacturing matters for both quality and documentation.


Comparison

FRT Trigger vs Standard AR-15 Trigger

Feature Standard Mil-Spec FRT Trigger
Reset mechanism Spring tension — manual release BCG-driven — mechanical reset
Rounds per trigger pull One One
Fire rate ceiling Limited by finger speed Limited by BCG cycle time
NFA classification Semi-auto — unrestricted Semi-auto — federally legal
BCG requirement Any AR-15 or M16 BCG M16-profile BCG required
Buffer requirement Standard carbine buffer H2 minimum required
Installation Individual parts and springs Drop-in cassette — 10 min
Price range $30–$300 $249–$499

Full breakdown: Forced Reset Trigger vs Standard Mil-Spec

best FRT triggers for AR-15

The Best FRT Trigger for AR-15 in 2026

Partisan Disruptor — USA-made, patented drop-in cassette, $299. Authorized dealer. Free AR Takedown Tool with every order.

Shop the Partisan Bundle — $449.99 Compare All FRTs →

Required Hardware

What Hardware Does an AR-15 FRT Need?

This is where most first-time buyers run into problems. Two non-negotiable requirements:

M16-Profile BCG (Required)

The underside geometry of the M16 BCG is what the FRT's reset mechanism contacts during cycling. A standard AR-15 BCG lacks this geometry and will cause reset failure. Running an M16 BCG in a semi-auto AR-15 is completely legal — the BCG profile itself is not a regulated component.

H2 Buffer Minimum (Required)

A standard carbine buffer cycles too fast for reliable FRT reset timing. H2 is the minimum starting point. Carbine gas builds and suppressed setups often need H3. The Partisan Disruptor bundle includes an H2.5 buffer matched to the trigger's cycling requirements.


FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

FRT stands for Forced Reset Trigger — a trigger design where the bolt carrier group mechanically forces the trigger to reset during the rearward stroke, rather than requiring the shooter to manually release the trigger to achieve reset.
No. An FRT fires one round per trigger pull — every time. Full-auto fires continuously with a single trigger function. The FRT mechanism is legally distinct from any full-auto component. If you hold the trigger fixed and prevent reset, the rifle stops firing. A machine gun doesn't.
Yes — an M16-profile BCG is required. The extended tail provides a larger, more consistent contact surface for the FRT's reset mechanism. A standard AR-15 BCG lacks the geometry required and will cause reset failure. The Partisan Disruptor bundle includes a compatible M16 BCG.
An H2 heavy buffer is the minimum for FRT trigger AR-15 builds. H2.5 is the sweet spot for most carbine builds. H3 is recommended for carbine gas builds with barrels under 16 inches or suppressed setups. A standard carbine buffer is too light for reliable FRT operation.
The Partisan Disruptor is compatible with standard mil-spec AR-15 lower receivers using standard trigger pin spacing. No machining, fitting, or modification to the lower is required.
The Partisan Disruptor FRT is available here at ARTakedownTool.com — standalone at $299 or as part of the FRT + M16 BCG + H2.5 Buffer Bundle at $449.99. We are an authorized Partisan Triggers dealer. We verify compliance on every order and do not ship to restricted states.