What started as whispers about payment issues between the Swiss parent company and its U.S. operation has now blown up into a full-blown termination of the licensing agreement — plus a fresh federal trademark lawsuit flying the other direction.
Here’s the breakdown based on court filings, public documents, dealer insights, and industry reports circulating right now (as of late March 2026).
What Actually Happened: The License Termination
B&T AG (the original Swiss company, aka Brugger & Thomet) officially ended its licensing deal with B&T USA LLC back on February 19, 2026. The core reason? Repeated failure by B&T USA to pay outstanding licensing fees and invoices for products/services going all the way back to 2023.
According to documentation shared publicly (including a termination notice highlighted by James Reeves of The Firearm Blog on X), B&T AG had been patient:
- Multiple payment reminders over the years
- A formal demand on November 24, 2025
- Notice of default on January 20, 2026 (right before SHOT Show)
- Even settlement attempts, including a WhatsApp call (January 12), in-person talks during SHOT week, and flexible payment offers from B&T AG CEO Karl Brügger
B&T USA reportedly rejected or ignored all of it. B&T AG then got lawyers (Wiley Rein) involved on February 17, got no response, and pulled the plug two days later.
The termination means B&T USA must:
- Immediately stop using the B&T trademark (including in its own company name — they have seven days to rebrand)
- Return any U.S.-registered trademarks and intellectual property developed under the agreement
- Send back inventory supplied by B&T AG (or get refunds/credits; otherwise they might sell through existing stock)
- Cease all sales, distribution, and branding tied to the Swiss parent
In short: B&T USA is cut off from officially importing, producing, or selling authentic B&T products under that name moving forward.
The Counterpunch: B&T USA Sues Back
Just a few weeks later, on March 17, 2026, B&T USA LLC filed a federal trademark infringement lawsuit against B&T A.G. (plus president Karl Brügger and Namada Enterprises) in the U.S. Middle District of Florida (case 8:26-cv-00714).
The claims flip the script: B&T USA accuses the Swiss side of unauthorized use of the B&T trademark in U.S. commerce and trying to “unlawfully take over” B&T USA’s management and trademark rights starting in January 2026. They’re asking for injunctive relief (to stop the alleged infringement), statutory damages, and destruction of infringing materials.
This is classic escalation — the U.S. entity is fighting to hold onto the brand rights it built domestically, while the Swiss parent says the license was validly revoked over money owed.
Dealer & Community Perspective
A solid dealer rant video from Mugi Chan (featuring Flandre, a B&T dealer) lays out the frustration on the ground. Dealers have dealt with massive delays on popular items like TP9s, APCs, suppressors (MP5 SD, FEG HD 18), backorders stretching 1+ years, canceled orders without notice, ghosting from sales reps, and broken promises on timelines. Internal chaos at B&T USA — like the move from Florida to Utah causing staff quits, tariff/exchange rate hits, and a pivot to 3D-printed suppressors — didn’t help.
The dealer flat-out advises customers to steer clear for now due to cancellation risks, warranty uncertainty, and potential supply disruptions. Community forums (HKPRO, Reddit threads in airsoft/firearms subs) echo the sentiment: sadness over the mess, speculation that B&T AG will set up a new U.S. importer (like SIG, Glock, or HK have done), and questions about warranties on existing guns (especially mods like FRT conversions that B&T USA may have touched).
What This Means Going Forward
For end-users and collectors:
- Short-term availability of genuine B&T imports could dry up or get messy
- Existing inventory might still sell under old branding (sell-through allowed in some cases)
- Warranties and support? Big question mark — Swiss side may not honor through the old U.S. channel
- B&T AG seems motivated to keep selling in the U.S. (they want the market), so expect a restructured presence eventually
This isn’t just paperwork — it’s a messy divorce between a Swiss innovator and its American partner, fueled by money disputes and control of a valuable brand in the tactical firearms/suppressor world.
If you’re sitting on a B&T piece or were eyeing one, keep an eye on official announcements from B&T AG or new U.S. distributors. The community will be watching this lawsuit and any settlements closely.

