How we chose
IronScout doesn't sell ammo and doesn't earn affiliate commissions on specific products. Our picks are based on:
- FBI ballistic gel protocol results — 12–18 inches penetration through 4 layers of denim
- Expansion consistency — reliable mushrooming across barrel lengths from 3" micro-compacts to 5" full-size
- Feed reliability — no known widespread feed issues in common carry platforms (Glock 43/48, Sig P365, S&W Shield, Springfield Hellcat)
- Availability — consistently in stock at multiple retailers
- Real-world track record — used by law enforcement agencies, documented in after-action reports
We don't pick a single "best" because your carry gun, budget, and preferences matter. Instead, here are top picks across three tiers.
Top picks by category
Budget — Speer Gold Dot 124gr JHP
The Gold Dot has been a law enforcement standard for over two decades. The bonded core prevents jacket separation, and 124gr offers a good balance between velocity and penetration from short barrels. It's the most affordable of the "proven" defensive loads.
Typical price: $0.55–0.75/rd
Why this might not be for you: Gold Dot can be velocity-sensitive from very short barrels (under 3"). In micro-compacts like the Sig P365 or Springfield Hellcat, expansion may be inconsistent. If you carry a barrel under 3.1", consider the short-barrel variant (Gold Dot Short Barrel) or Federal HST Micro.
Mid-tier — Federal HST 147gr JHP
The HST is arguably the most tested defensive handgun bullet in production. The 147gr version runs subsonic from most barrel lengths, producing less muzzle flash and blast — a real advantage in indoor scenarios. Expansion is remarkably consistent across a wide velocity range.
Typical price: $0.70–0.95/rd
Why this might not be for you: 147gr is heavier and slower, producing a different recoil impulse than the 115gr FMJ most people train with. If you don't regularly practice with your carry ammo (at least a mag or two every range session), the transition from 115gr training to 147gr carry can feel different under stress.
Premium — Hornady Critical Duty 135gr FlexLock
Critical Duty was specifically designed to pass all FBI barrier tests — auto glass, plywood, wallboard, sheet metal, and heavy clothing. The FlexLock bullet uses a polymer tip to prevent clogging and an InterLock band to keep the core and jacket together. It's the choice for maximum barrier penetration.
Typical price: $0.85–1.20/rd
Why this might not be for you: Critical Duty is optimized for full-size duty pistols with 4"+ barrels. For subcompact carry guns, Hornady recommends Critical Defense instead, which uses a lighter bullet and is designed for shorter barrels and less barrier penetration. Don't confuse the two lines — Duty is for duty-size guns, Defense is for carry-size guns.
If your pick is out of stock
Defensive ammo goes out of stock frequently. These alternatives perform comparably:
| If you can't find... | Try instead |
|---|---|
| Speer Gold Dot 124gr | Federal Punch 124gr or Sig V-Crown 124gr |
| Federal HST 147gr | Federal HST 124gr or Winchester Ranger T 147gr |
| Hornady Critical Duty 135gr | Hornady Critical Defense 115gr or Federal HST 124gr +P |
The key: don't carry FMJ because your preferred JHP is out of stock. Any quality JHP from a major manufacturer is better than ball ammo for defense.
What this costs
Defensive 9mm JHP runs $0.50–1.20 per round depending on brand and availability. You only need 2–3 boxes (100–150 rounds) — enough to load your carry magazines, one spare mag, and function-test through your specific firearm.
That's $50–120 for a year's supply of carry ammo. The real ongoing cost is training ammo — buy cheap 9mm FMJ for that.
Compare current 9mm defensive ammo prices →
Practice strategy
Whatever you carry, train with ammo that matches the feel:
| Carry load | Training match |
|---|---|
| 124gr JHP | 124gr FMJ (Federal American Eagle, S&B, Magtech) |
| 147gr JHP | 147gr FMJ (Federal AE 147gr, Winchester USA 147gr) |
| 115gr JHP | 115gr FMJ (any — this is the cheapest and most common) |
Shoot at least one magazine of your carry ammo through your carry gun every other range session. This confirms reliability and keeps you familiar with the recoil profile.
The bottom line
Pick a proven JHP from a major manufacturer. Confirm it feeds reliably in your specific carry gun. Buy 2–3 boxes and rotate your carry ammo every 6–12 months if it's exposed to sweat, temperature swings, or gets chambered repeatedly (which can cause bullet setback). Don't overthink it — all three picks above have been used by law enforcement and have extensive real-world track records. The differences between them matter far less than consistent practice with your carry firearm.
Set a price alert for 9mm defense ammo →
Related articles
Sources
- FBI Protocol for Duty Ammunition Testing — FBI ballistic testing methodology
- Federal HST Technical Data — Manufacturer specifications
- SAAMI Cartridge Standards — Industry pressure specifications