Brand Info
Barrett Firearms
Manufacturer
The M82's distinctive muzzle brake and short-recoil system reduce felt recoil by up to 50% compared to conventional .50 BMG rifles.
Camera Operator: JOHN YODER (Public domain)
| Overview | |
|---|---|
Headquarters | Murfreesboro, TN |
| Tagline | Barrett Firearms Manufacturing is an American manufacturer of firearms and ammunition, best known for developing the M82/M107 .50 BMG semi-automatic anti-materiel rifle adopted by militaries worldwide. Founded in 1982 by Ronnie Barrett in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, the company produces long-range rifles for military, law enforcement, and civilian markets. |
SAAMI | Member |
Products | |
| Key Products | What They Make, The Engineering, Market Reality, Buying Considerations, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| www.barrett.net | |
Barrett Firearms
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
Ronnie Barrett had a simple idea back in 1982: build a .50-caliber rifle that one guy could actually shoot. Working out of his garage in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, he created the M82 -- a semi-automatic rifle that took the .50 BMG cartridge from crew-served machine guns and made it work as a precision rifle.
Before Barrett, .50-caliber power required a team and a tripod. The M82 changed that completely.
The M107 Long Range Sniper Rifle became the military standard, and suddenly Barrett went from garage startup to global defense contractor. That military adoption gave them the credibility and cash flow to expand beyond their original .50-cal focus.
You've probably seen Barrett rifles in movies -- they're the ones that look like they could stop a truck. And they can.
What They Makeedit
Barrett's lineup breaks down pretty simply:
| Model | Caliber | Action | Weight | What It's For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M82A1 | .50 BMG | Semi-auto | 28.7 lbs | The original, still going strong |
| M107A1 | .50 BMG | Semi-auto | 27.4 lbs | Updated M82, suppressor-ready |
| MRAD | .338 LM, .300 NM, 7.62 NATO | Bolt-action | 14.8 lbs | Modular precision rifle |
| Fieldcraft | 6.5 CM, .308, magnums | Bolt-action | Under 5 lbs | Hunting rifle |
| REC7/10 | 5.56/.308 | Piston AR | 6.5-9 lbs | AR platform rifles |
The .50 BMG Rifles
The .50 BMG rifles are what built Barrett's reputation. Twenty-nine inch barrel, 10-round magazine, and that massive muzzle brake that makes the recoil manageable instead of bone-breaking. They're not rifles you buy on a whim -- they run $8K to $12K, ammo costs $3-5 per round, and you need a range that can handle them.
Key Milestones in Barrett's Product Development
Precision and Hunting Lines
The MRAD is Barrett's most practical rifle for most shooters. It's modular -- you can swap barrels and change calibers without going to a gunsmith. SOCOM picked it as their Mk 22 Advanced Sniper Rifle, which tells you something about how well it works.
The Fieldcraft hunting rifles are a different story. Some shoot lights-out accurate, others need to go back to Barrett for tweaking. They'll take care of you if yours doesn't shoot, but it's something to know going in.
The Engineeringedit

Recoil Management System
Barrett solved the fundamental problem of .50 BMG recoil through two things: a short-recoil operated action borrowed from heavy machine gun design, and a multi-chamber muzzle brake that redirects gas to counter the rifle's movement.
The result? A .50 BMG that kicks about like a 12-gauge slug. Still substantial, but manageable for extended shooting.
A .50 BMG that kicks about like a 12-gauge slug -- still substantial, but manageable for extended shooting.
| Component | Engineering Solution | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Recoil System | Short-recoil operated action | Manages .50 BMG energy |
| Muzzle Brake | Multi-chamber gas redirection | Reduces felt recoil 60-70% |
| Barrel Design | 29-inch heavy profile | Maximizes velocity/accuracy |
| Magazine | 10-round detachable | Rapid follow-up shots |
| Operating System | Machine gun derived | Proven reliability |
Barrett .50 BMG Short-Recoil Operating Cycle
Modular Design Philosophy
The MRAD platform shows Barrett's evolution beyond brute force engineering. User-changeable barrels, folding adjustable stock, and the ability to switch between .338 Lapua, .300 Norma, and 7.62 NATO in the field. It's what happens when you listen to military feedback about needing one rifle to do multiple jobs.
Market Realityedit
| User Group | Barrett Reputation | Key Concerns |
|---|---|---|
| Military/LEO | Excellent - combat proven | None - standard issue |
| Precision Competitors | Good for MRAD, mixed overall | Fieldcraft QC issues |
| Long-range Civilians | Very good for .50 BMG | Cost, range access |
| Hunters | Mixed due to Fieldcraft | Reliability out of box |
| General AR Market | Average | Crowded field |
Military and law enforcement agencies trust Barrett completely. The M82/M107 has been in combat since the 1990s and performs exactly as advertised.
The precision rifle community respects the MRAD but has mixed feelings about other Barrett products. The Fieldcraft quality control issues haven't helped their reputation among hunters who expect a $2,000 rifle to shoot sub-MOA out of the box.
Civilian long-range shooters love the .50 BMG rifles for what they are -- the ultimate extreme-distance platform. But they're honest about the limitations: weight, cost, and finding places to shoot them.
Buying Considerationsedit
By Product Category
The .50 BMG rifles -- M82A1 or M107A1 -- are bucket list guns for most people. You need deep pockets for the rifle and ammunition, plus range access that can handle .50 caliber safely.
Key considerations for .50 BMG ownership:
- High initial cost ($8K-$12K)
- Expensive ammunition ($3-5 per round)
- Limited range access
- Substantial weight (28+ lbs)
- Legal restrictions in some states
Many ranges can't accommodate them due to backstop requirements and distance needs.
The MRAD makes the most sense for serious precision shooters. It's Barrett's most refined product and the one that gets consistent praise from users who actually shoot competitively.
Fieldcraft hunting rifles are a gamble. When they work, they're excellent lightweight mountain rifles. When they don't, you're shipping it back to Tennessee. Barrett will make it right, but test yours thoroughly before heading to hunting camp.
REC series ARs are solid but unremarkable in a crowded market. They work fine but don't offer much that Daniel Defense or LWRC doesn't do equally well.
Legal Considerations
Before buying any .50-caliber rifle, check your local laws. Some states restrict or ban them entirely.
| State/Jurisdiction | .50 BMG Legal Status | Restrictions |
|---|---|---|
| California | Banned | Classified as assault weapon |
| Connecticut | Banned | Anti-materiel rifle law |
| New Jersey | Banned | Prohibited firearm |
| Hawaii | Banned | Prohibited caliber |
| Most Other States | Legal | Standard background check |
The BGC Takeedit
What Barrett Does Right
Barrett deserves credit for creating an entirely new category of rifle. The .50 BMG semi-auto concept was genuinely revolutionary in 1982, and they've continued improving it for four decades.
Their military success speaks for itself -- when your rifle becomes the standard for anti-materiel work worldwide, you're doing something right. The M82/M107 platform has earned its reputation through actual combat use, not marketing claims.
The MRAD shows Barrett can build more than just .50-caliber monsters. It's a thoughtfully designed precision rifle that competes well against European imports. SOCOM's selection validates that this isn't just about Barrett's brand recognition.
Where They Fall Short
But Barrett isn't perfect. The Fieldcraft quality control issues suggest they struggle with consistency at lower price points. Their AR offerings are competent but not compelling in a saturated market.
If you want a .50 BMG rifle, Barrett wrote the book. For modular precision shooting, the MRAD deserves serious consideration. For everything else, shop around -- Barrett's name recognition commands a premium that isn't always justified by performance.
The company stands behind their products when things go wrong, which matters more than some buyers realize.
You shouldn't have to use that warranty in the first place.
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