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Best AmmoLast updated March 17, 2026

Best 9mm range ammo

The cheapest reliable 9mm for training — ranked by cost, with honest notes on quality differences.

How we chose

IronScout doesn't sell ammo and doesn't earn affiliate commissions. Our picks are based on:

  • Reliability — feeds and fires without malfunctions across common handgun platforms
  • Price — lowest cost per round in its category
  • Accuracy — adequate for practical pistol training (3–5" groups at 25 yards)
  • Availability — consistently in stock at multiple retailers
  • Case material — brass-cased and steel-cased ranked separately

Range ammo doesn't need to be accurate to 1" at 25 yards. It needs to go bang every time, cycle your gun, and cost little enough that you actually shoot it. The best 9mm range ammo is the cheapest ammo that's reliable — and for most shooters, that's Blazer Brass 124gr FMJ at $0.17–0.22/rd.

Quick answer: Buy Blazer Brass 124gr FMJ if you carry a 124gr defensive load, or Magtech 115gr FMJ if you just want the cheapest reliable option. Buy by the case (1,000 rounds) to save 10–15%. Avoid remanufactured ammo — the $0.02/rd savings isn't worth the risk of a squib load.

Best brass-cased 9mm range ammo

Brass-cased is the default recommendation. Accepted at all ranges, reloadable, and runs in every firearm without question.

Top picks — ranked by typical price

1. Blazer Brass 124gr FMJ — $0.17–0.22/rd

The most commonly recommended budget 9mm for good reason. CCI primers are among the most reliable in the industry. 124gr weight matches common defensive loads for consistent training. Available in 50-round boxes and 350-round bulk packs. This is the default — if you have no strong preference, buy Blazer Brass.

2. Magtech 115gr FMJ — $0.17–0.22/rd

Brazilian-made by CBC (Companhia Brasileira de Cartuchos), one of the world's largest ammunition manufacturers. Consistently at or near the bottom of brass-cased pricing. Slightly less consistent in velocity than Blazer Brass in chrono testing, but the difference is irrelevant for training. 115gr is snappier than 124gr.

3. Federal American Eagle 124gr FMJ — $0.18–0.24/rd

Made at Federal's Anoka, Minnesota plant. Marginally more expensive than Blazer Brass on average, but availability is excellent — Federal's production capacity means AE is almost always in stock somewhere. Quality control is very consistent.

4. Fiocchi 124gr FMJ — $0.19–0.25/rd

Italian-made, slightly premium but noticeably cleaner-burning and more consistent than the budget picks. If you shoot indoors frequently, Fiocchi's cleaner burn and more consistent velocities are worth the extra penny or two per round.

5. Winchester USA Target 115gr FMJ — $0.18–0.23/rd

Winchester's "White Box" line — widely available at retail and big-box stores. Quality has been inconsistent over the years — some lots are excellent, others have hard primers or velocity spread. Acceptable but not the top choice if other options are available at similar prices.

Bulk buying tip

Case quantities (500–1,000 rounds) save 10–15% over box pricing. A 1,000-round case of Blazer Brass 124gr typically runs $170–200 — roughly $0.17–0.20/rd. The math is simple: if you shoot 200+ rounds per month, buy by the case.

Compare 9mm FMJ prices →

Best steel-cased 9mm range ammo

Steel-cased ammo runs $0.04–0.08/rd cheaper than brass. The tradeoff: some ranges ban it, cases aren't reloadable, and accuracy is typically 10–20% worse (still plenty accurate for training).

Top picks

Tula 115gr FMJ — $0.13–0.17/rd

Russian-made (or from relocated/licensed production since import restrictions). The cheapest 9mm you'll find. Bi-metal jacket triggers magnet tests at some ranges. Runs reliably in most modern pistols, though extraction is slightly rougher than brass-cased. Perfectly functional training ammo.

Wolf 115gr FMJ — $0.13–0.18/rd

Similar to Tula (both originated from Russian manufacturers). Polymer-coated steel cases feed slightly smoother than lacquer-coated alternatives. Same caveats as Tula — range restrictions and no reloading.

Should you shoot steel-cased?

Modern handguns (Glock, Sig, S&W M&P, CZ, Springfield, Beretta) handle steel-cased ammo without issue. The harder cases cause marginally more extractor wear over tens of thousands of rounds, but the cost savings more than cover a replacement extractor ($10–30 part) if it ever becomes necessary.

The only practical reasons to avoid steel-cased:

  1. Your range bans it
  2. You reload your brass
  3. You shoot a tight-chambered competition gun that's picky about ammo

What grain weight to train with

Match your carry load. If you carry 124gr JHP, train with 124gr FMJ. If you carry 147gr, train with 147gr. The recoil impulse, muzzle rise, and point of impact are more consistent when grain weight matches.

Carry loadTrain withWhy
124gr JHP (HST, Gold Dot)124gr FMJClosest recoil match
124gr +P JHP124gr FMJ (standard)+P recoil is slightly more; 124gr standard is the closest practical match
147gr JHP147gr FMJBoth subsonic, similar slow-push recoil impulse
115gr JHP115gr FMJDirect match

If you don't carry, or you're a new shooter building fundamentals, the grain weight doesn't matter. Buy whichever is cheapest.

For more on grain weights: What does grain mean?

How much to buy

A general guideline based on shooting frequency:

FrequencyMonthly volumeAnnual volumeAnnual cost (brass FMJ)
Casual (1x/month)100 rounds1,200 rounds$200–280
Regular (2x/month)200 rounds2,400 rounds$400–560
Serious (weekly)400 rounds4,800 rounds$800–1,100
Competitive800+ rounds10,000+ rounds$1,700–2,200

At serious-to-competitive volumes, the $0.04–0.08/rd savings from steel-cased ammo adds up to $200–800/year. That's real money.

What to avoid

Remanufactured / reloaded ammo — Factory seconds reassembled from once-fired components. Quality control varies wildly by manufacturer. Squib loads (bullet stuck in barrel) and overpressure rounds are rare but documented. Not worth the $0.02–0.04/rd savings over new-manufacture budget ammo.

No-name imported brands — Some ultra-cheap imports have inconsistent powder charges, hard primers, and poor accuracy. Stick with established manufacturers (Blazer, Magtech, Federal, Fiocchi, PMC, Tula, Wolf, S&B).

+P for range training — More expensive, more recoil, more wear, no training benefit over standard pressure. Save +P for your carry ammo.

Related articles

Related caliber pages

Search 9mm FMJ → | Search 9mm bulk ammo →

Sources