Last updated: March 2026
The best .22 LR rifles for beginners in 2026 are the Ruger 10/22 (~$300), S&W M&P 15-22 ($499–$569), Henry Lever Action .22 (~$450), and Marlin Model 60 (~$250). For beginners who plan to eventually shoot AR-15s or semi-automatic rifles, the S&W M&P 15-22 is the top training investment. For pure value and simplicity, the Ruger 10/22 has no equal.
Why .22 LR Is the Right Starting Point
Whether you’re introducing a new shooter to the range for the first time or building fundamentals as an adult, .22 LR is the universally recommended starting caliber for a reason: low recoil, low noise, low cost per round ($0.06–$0.12/round vs. $0.25–$0.40 for 9mm), and widely available at every gun shop and sporting goods store in the country.
The question isn’t whether to start with .22 LR — it’s which .22 LR rifle fits your goals and budget. Here’s our honest breakdown for 2026.
Best .22 LR Rifles for Beginners
1. Ruger 10/22 Carbine — ~$300 | Best Overall Value
The Ruger 10/22 has introduced more Americans to rifles than any other platform in modern history. The rotary bolt action is reliable, the 10-round BX-1 magazine (upgradeable to 25-round BX-25) is simple, and the 18.5-inch barrel is well-balanced for new shooters. Ruger’s fit and finish for a $300 rifle is excellent.
The 10/22’s true advantage for beginners is peace of mind: you know what you’re getting. Six decades of production means the bugs are long gone, parts are everywhere, and any gunsmith in America can service it.
- ✅ Best value entry price
- ✅ Enormous aftermarket for growth
- ✅ Proven reliability for 60+ years
- ❌ Traditional controls — doesn’t build AR muscle memory
2. S&W M&P 15-22 Sport — $499–$569 | Best for AR Training
If the new shooter in your household will eventually want to shoot AR-15 style rifles, the M&P 15-22 is the best head-start investment available. The controls mirror an AR-15 exactly — safety, charging handle, magazine release, all in the same positions. Training on the 15-22 builds the muscle memory that makes transitioning to a centerfire AR natural rather than requiring a complete relearn.
The Flag Finish 250th Anniversary edition at $569 adds Magpul MBUS sights and a stunning Cerakote finish.
- ✅ Direct AR-15 control transfer
- ✅ 25+1 capacity, threaded barrel
- ✅ Collapsible stock fits any size shooter
- ❌ $200 more than a base 10/22
3. Henry Lever Action .22 LR — ~$450 | Best Classic Experience
The Henry lever-action .22 is the right choice for shooters who want a traditional, heirloom-quality rifle experience. The tube magazine holds 15–21 rounds, the brass receiver is beautiful, and the lever-action manual of arms is simple and satisfying. Less tactically focused than the AR-style options, but often a better fit for shooters who aren’t interested in tactical training.
- ✅ Beautiful heirloom quality
- ✅ Simple, intuitive operation
- ❌ Lever-action is different from semi-auto training
- ❌ Tube magazine requires emptying before cleaning
4. Marlin Model 60 — ~$250 | Best Budget Pick
The Marlin Model 60 has an 18-round tube magazine and a simple semi-automatic blowback action. At $250, it’s the most affordable quality .22 semi-auto available. For shooters who just want to plink affordably, the Model 60 delivers without any complications.
- ✅ Lowest price for a quality .22
- ✅ 18-round tube mag
- ❌ Dated design
- ❌ Limited aftermarket
5. CZ 457 American — ~$500 | Best for Accuracy Training
The CZ 457 is a bolt-action .22 LR with a match-quality barrel and trigger. For shooters specifically interested in marksmanship training — groups, fundamentals, benchrest — the CZ 457 produces tighter groups than any semi-auto at this price. The tradeoff is single-shot cycling (bolt-action), which slows range tempo.
- ✅ Best accuracy in this comparison
- ✅ Excellent trigger for marksmanship training
- ❌ Bolt-action slows tempo for rapid-fire training
Comparison Table
| Rifle | Action | Capacity | Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruger 10/22 | Semi-auto | 10+1 (25 opt) | ~$300 | Best all-around value |
| S&W M&P 15-22 | Semi-auto | 25+1 | $499–$569 | AR training |
| Henry Lever Action | Lever-action | 15–21 | ~$450 | Classic experience |
| Marlin Model 60 | Semi-auto | 18 | ~$250 | Budget plinker |
| CZ 457 American | Bolt-action | 5+1 | ~$500 | Marksmanship training |
Safety First for New Shooters
At White’s Arms in Salt Lake City, we believe every new shooter deserves proper safety training before going to the range. Whether you choose the Ruger 10/22 or the M&P 15-22, please take a basic rifle safety course, practice the four rules of firearm safety, and always supervise new shooters until they’ve demonstrated consistent safe habits.
Browse our full rifle selection and see our handgun inventory for when you’re ready to add a pistol to your training regimen.
Frequently Asked Questions
What age is appropriate for a first .22 LR rifle?
With adult supervision, children as young as 6–8 can safely shoot .22 LR with an appropriately-sized rifle. The Henry lever-action and S&W 15-22 (with stock collapsed) both accommodate smaller shooters. Always supervise minors with firearms and ensure they understand the four safety rules before handling any firearm.
Is .22 LR enough for self-defense?
It’s the minimum recommended for self-defense if cost or recoil sensitivity prevents shooting a larger caliber. More powerful centerfire options like 9mm are preferred for self-defense. .22 LR is primarily a training and recreational round in this context.
What .22 LR ammo should beginners buy?
CCI Standard Velocity and CCI Mini-Mag are the most reliable choices for semi-auto .22 LR rifles. Federal AutoMatch and Remington Golden Bullet also run well. Avoid the cheapest bulk packs (Winchester Wildcat, Remington Thunderbolt) in semi-auto actions — low quality control causes more failures.
How often do I need to clean a .22 LR rifle?
.22 LR is dirtier than centerfire ammo due to rimfire primer residue and lead bullets. Clean after every range session of 100+ rounds. A bore snake and CLP is the minimum. Deep clean with patches every 500 rounds.