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PCP Air Rifle Buyer’s Guide: How to Choose the Right One

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Several PCP air rifles arranged on a dark workbench.

PCP Air Rifle Buyer’s Guide: How to Choose the Right One

A precharged pneumatic (PCP) air rifle is the most accurate, most capable kind of airgun you can buy, and the range of choices can be overwhelming. This guide breaks the decision into the handful of things that actually matter, then points you to deeper reads on each. Get these right and you’ll buy once instead of twice.

1. Start with what you’ll shoot

Everything flows from intended use. Punching paper and plinking at 25 yards asks for something very different than hunting at 50. Pest control around a property rewards a quiet, compact rifle. Decide the job first — it sets your caliber, power, and size.

2. Caliber

Caliber is the biggest single decision. In short: .177 is flat and frugal for targets and small pests; .22 is the do-everything hunting caliber; .25 hits harder at the cost of air; .30 and up are for larger quarry. We cover this in depth in the air rifle caliber guide.

3. Regulated vs unregulated

A regulator holds your velocity steady across a band of pressure, which means consistent point of impact shot to shot. Most quality PCPs today are regulated, and it’s the feature that separates a precision rifle from a plinker. If you care about accuracy at distance, buy regulated.

4. Shot count and fill pressure

Ask how many useful shots a rifle gives per fill in your caliber, and what pressure it fills to. Bigger calibers and higher power use more air, so a hard-hitting .25 will give fewer shots than an efficient .22. This drives your fill gear.

5. How you’ll fill it

You’ll need air. A hand pump is cheap and portable but hard work; a carbon-fiber tank is the popular sweet spot; a compressor is set-and-forget for high-volume shooters. Budget for this from day one — it’s part of the cost of a PCP.

6. Size, layout, and budget

Traditional sporters handle like a normal rifle; bullpups pack a full barrel into a short frame for tight spaces. Try both if you can. As for budget, spend on the rifle, the glass, and the air — those three decide your experience.

Where to go next

When you’re ready, browse the full lineup of air rifles — or reach out and we’ll help you match a rifle to the job.

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