Most shooters buy one gun and use it for everything. That's understandable from a budget perspective. But here's the question most people never stop to ask: Is the gun you're having fun with at the range actually the gun you should conceal carry and trust with your life?
Sometimes, the answer is yes, but more often, the gun best suited for long hours at the range and the gun best suited for concealed carry are not the same firearm.
Here's how to think through the type of gun that may be the best fit for a range gun vs. an ideal concealed carry gun.
At the range, you're looking for accuracy and comfort over long sessions. Size and weight are huge things to consider when looking for a range gun.
"If you're looking for a gun to shoot for fun, for sport, for competition, typically you want a bigger gun," said John McClain, competitive shooter and team member at Rock Island Armory and Armscor. "The bigger and the heavier the gun, the better it handles. It'll help you handle recoil."
A heavier frame absorbs recoil energy, which means less muzzle rise and more consistent follow-up shots. A longer barrel gives you a longer sight radius (the distance between the front and rear sights), translating directly to better accuracy.
"If you're planning on long range sessions or if it's accuracy-driven, the longer the barrel and the bigger the gun size-wise, you're just gonna have a more comfortable experience," John said. "Your hands will not get as beat up. The recoil won't be as hard. There won't be as much muzzle rise."
A carry gun has almost opposite priorities from that of a range gun. You're choosing something you'll wear for hours, stake your safety on, and draw under pressure. John ranks the priorities in order.
First up, reliability is key.
"I'm fairly certain most people that have ever had to use a gun didn't care if it recoiled a lot or had a nasty trigger," he said. "All they really care about is: did I pull the trigger 10 times and did the gun go bang 10 times? Reliability is your number one. You want a gun you can literally trust your life with."
Second is how well you personally shoot it.
"Every bullet that you send has a potential lawsuit attached to it," John said. "If you can't perform well with the gun, then you probably shouldn't be carrying it."
Third is comfort, and John is realistic about what that means.
"Carrying a gun is not meant to be comfortable," he said. "If you're OK with slight discomfort, carry a small gun. If you're OK with a little more, you'll carry a bigger gun. You also have to dress around the gun."
Going smaller for concealability comes with trade-offs worth knowing up front.
"If you want it to be as small as possible, you're going to have to sacrifice capacity and potential accuracy," John said. "You'll probably go with a single stack, eight, nine, 10 rounds, versus a double stack with more capacity and a longer barrel."
For concealed carry, the Rock Island Armory compact-size pistol lineup brings the familiar 1911 trigger feel and manual safety in a more concealable package. (armscor.com) For a modern mid-size option, the RIA-USA lineup offers striker-fired options with the reliability and capacity that daily carry demands.
Yes but with trade-offs. John's personal example is a mid-size pistol he can run a 500- to 700-round training session with and then carry the rest of the day without issue. It's the STK200.
"It's a comfortable gun for me to shoot and it's a comfortable gun for me to carry," he said.
Mid-size guns tend to be the sweet spot for shooters who want one firearm that covers both roles reasonably well. They're not the ultimate range gun and not the most concealable option, but they hold their own in both categories.
That said, a compact, small carry gun has real limitations as a training tool.
"It's a smaller gun, very short barrel, very short sight radius — you have to work way harder to be accurate with it, and it's going to be considerably snappier," John said. Knowing that going in helps you train smarter and set realistic expectations.
The Bottom Line
The best gun for the range and the best gun for your holster may or may not be the same firearm. What they always have in common: they have to be reliable, you have to perform well with them, and you have to actually train.
"Whatever gun you choose, be ready to practice with it," John said. "Don't get upset about the results you're not getting from the work you're not doing."
Rock Island Armory and RIA-USA build firearms for every part of that equation.
John's Recommendations
For the Range For Concealed Carry For Both