Brand Info
Fiocchi
Ammunition

| Overview | |
|---|---|
Founded | 1876 |
Headquarters | Ozark, MO |
| Tagline | After over 140 years of activity in the production of a wide range of small-caliber ammunition, Fiocchi is appreciated in hunting, target shooting, security and defense fields, as well as in specific industry sectors. |
SAAMI | Member |
Products | |
| Key Products | Manufacturing and Quality, Performance in the Field, Common Issues, Buying Guide, Availability and Pricing, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| fiocchiusa.com | |
Fiocchi
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
Fiocchi has been making ammunition in Italy since 1876--which puts them in the same longevity club as Winchester and Remington. Giulio Fiocchi started the company in Lecco, Italy, and they've been cranking out shells ever since, surviving two world wars and every market upheaval in between.
In 1983, they set up shop in Ozark, Missouri, giving them production on both sides of the Atlantic. This means they can make ammo to European CIP specs and American SAAMI standards--handy when you're selling globally.
Fiocchi brings 140+ years of manufacturing experience to a market dominated by newer American brands, and their Italian heritage shows up in their attention to shotshell consistency.
The company supplies military, law enforcement, and civilian markets. They're a SAAMI member and have facilities in both Italy and Missouri cranking out handgun, rifle, and shotgun ammunition.
Product Linesedit
Fiocchi's American reputation runs strongest with shotshells.
Fiocchi's American reputation runs strongest with shotshells - walk into any trap range and you'll see stacks of their target loads for good reason.
Fiocchi's complete product line hierarchy showing specialization by application
Shotgun Excellence
| Product Line | What It's For | Available In | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Exacta Target | Trap, skeet, sporting clays | 12, 20, 28, .410 | Consistent patterns, competitive pricing |
| Golden Pheasant | Upland birds | 12, 20 | Nickel-plated shot, tight patterns |
| Flyway | Waterfowl | 12 gauge | Steel shot, 2.75" and 3" |
| Defense Dynamics | Home defense | 12 gauge | Buckshot and slugs |
| 3 Gun | Competition | 12 gauge | Light recoil, fast cycling |
| Low Recoil | Training, youth shooters | 12, 20 | Reduced kick |
Their Exacta Target loads are what put Fiocchi on the map here. Quality clay loads at prices that undercut Federal and Winchester premium stuff by a couple bucks per box. When you're burning through 200 rounds at a trap session, that adds up.
Centerfire Options
Centerfire Handgun
| Caliber | What They Make | Price Point |
|---|---|---|
| 9mm Luger | Range Dynamics (FMJ), Defense | Budget to mid-range |
| .45 ACP | Range Dynamics, practice loads | Budget to mid-range |
| .40 S&W | Range Dynamics | Budget range stuff |
| .380 ACP | Practice and defense | Compact carry market |
| .38 Special | Range and defense | Revolver loads |
| .357 Magnum | Shooting Dynamics | Range and hunting |
Their Range Dynamics line is solid practice ammo. Not the cheapest you can buy, but reliable and available in bulk when you need to feed a 9mm habit.
Centerfire Rifle
| Caliber | Product Lines | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| .223/5.56 | Shooting Dynamics, Exacta | Range and precision |
| .308 Win | Exacta Match, hunting loads | Match and big game |
| .30-06 | Shooting Dynamics | Traditional hunting |
| 6.5 Creedmoor | Exacta | Precision market entry |
Their rifle stuff is decent but not where they shine. The Exacta Match line shoots okay--not Federal Gold Medal good, but acceptable for the price.
Manufacturing and Qualityedit

Dual-Facility Operations
Fiocchi runs two facilities that complement each other well. The Italian plant in Lecco handles most shotshell production and has 140+ years of institutional knowledge baked in.
The Missouri facility focuses on centerfire and some shotshells for the American market.
| Facility | Location | Focus | Standards |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main Plant | Lecco, Italy | Shotshells, heritage production | CIP European specs |
| American Plant | Ozark, Missouri | Centerfire, U.S. market | SAAMI standards |
| Combined Capacity | Both facilities | Global distribution | Dual-standard compliance |
This dual setup lets them meet both European CIP and American SAAMI standards. More importantly, it keeps shipping costs reasonable and supply chains shorter for U.S. customers.
Key milestones in Fiocchi's 140+ year manufacturing history
Quality Control Standards
Their quality control includes electronic inspection for charge weights and primer seating. Shot sorting keeps pellet sizes consistent in target loads--something you notice when you're trying to dust clay birds at 40 yards.
Fiocchi's Italian manufacturing heritage shows up most in their shotshells. Europeans take clay sports seriously, and that attention to consistency translates well to American trap and skeet ranges.
Performance in the Fieldedit

Competition Performance
| Application | Fiocchi Performance | Best Use Case | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clay Sports | Excellent - consistent patterns | High-volume target shooting | Premium competitors may edge out slightly |
| Upland Hunting | Very Good - tight patterns | Pheasant, quail at distance | Limited load variety vs. major brands |
| Range Practice | Good - reliable cycling | Bulk training sessions | Not cheapest option available |
| Precision Shooting | Adequate - sub-MOA capable | Budget precision work | Outclassed by match-grade competitors |
| Home Defense | Standard - reliable performance | Basic defensive needs | No significant advantages |
Their Exacta Target loads pattern consistently and cycle reliably in semi-auto shotguns. Velocities stay consistent box to box, which matters when you're dialing in leads.
The Golden Pheasant upland loads use nickel-plated shot that stays rounder longer and delivers tighter patterns. Good stuff for pheasants and quail at longer ranges.
Training and Practice
Their Range Dynamics handgun ammo is solid for practice. Burns clean enough, cycles reliably, and comes in bulk packs when you want to buy in volume. Not the absolute cheapest, but you get what you pay for.
Precision Applications
The Exacta Match rifle line is adequate. It'll shoot sub-MOA in a good rifle, but don't expect it to compete with Federal Gold Medal or Hornady Match. Fair performance for the price point.
Common Issuesedit
Fiocchi generally runs clean and reliable, but there are a few things to watch for:
| Issue Type | Frequency | Product Lines Affected | Impact Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primer inconsistency | Occasional | Budget centerfire | Minor - affects precision |
| Velocity variations | Some batches | Rifle ammunition | Moderate - impacts long-range accuracy |
| Underpowered loads | Rare | Handgun ammunition | Minor - still cycles actions |
| Overall reliability | High | All product lines | Low issue rate overall |
- Occasional primer consistency issues in budget centerfire lines
- Some batches of handgun ammo run slightly underpowered
- Rifle ammunition sometimes shows more velocity variation than premium competitors
Nothing deal-breaking, but worth knowing if you're planning to use their stuff for precision work or competition where consistency matters most.
Buying Guideedit
Recommended Applications
For Clay Sports: Buy Exacta Target loads without hesitation. Excellent value and proven performance at high volumes. Most trap ranges stock them.
For Upland Hunting: Golden Pheasant is solid, especially in 20 gauge. The nickel-plated shot makes a difference on longer shots.
For Range Practice: Range Dynamics 9mm and .45 ACP are good middle-ground options. More expensive than steel-case imports but more reliable.
For Home Defense: Their Defense Dynamics 00 buckshot performs like any other standard buckshot load. Nothing special, nothing wrong with it.
Applications to Avoid
Skip For: Precision rifle work where consistency is critical, or budget plinking where cheapest possible is the goal.
Availability and Pricingedit
Most sporting goods stores stock Fiocchi shotshells--they're mainstream enough that Dick's and Sportsman's Warehouse carry them. Centerfire availability varies more by region and distributor.
Online retailers like MidwayUSA and Natchez usually have good selection and pricing. Many trap and skeet ranges sell Fiocchi target loads on-site, often at competitive prices.
Price-wise, they sit between premium American brands and budget imports. Shotshells offer the value proposition--centerfire is fairly priced but not particularly cheap.
The BGC Takeedit
Fiocchi built their American reputation on shotshells, and that's still where they shine. Their target loads deliver consistent performance at prices that make sense for high-volume shooting.
When you're burning through cases of shells at trap league, the savings over Federal or Winchester add up without sacrificing reliability. Their centerfire stuff is adequate but not exceptional. It's well-made ammunition that cycles reliably and shoots reasonably well, but there's nothing about it that makes you choose it over domestic alternatives except occasional pricing advantages.
The Italian heritage brings real value in shotshells where 140+ years of manufacturing experience shows up in consistent shot charges and reliable ignition.
If you shoot clays regularly, try their Exacta Target loads. If you're looking for practice handgun ammo, their Range Dynamics line is worth considering when priced competitively. For everything else, buy based on availability and price rather than brand loyalty.
See Also:
- Federal Premium - Primary American competitor in shotshells
- Winchester - Historical comparison in longevity and market position
- Shotgun Sports - Where Fiocchi excels
References:
- Fiocchi of America: fiocchiusa.com
- Company history documentation (1876-present)
- Range testing data from Shotgun Sports magazine
- User feedback from trap/skeet communities
- Quail Creek Plantation(Okeechobee, FL)
- Val Verde Gun Club(Del Rio, TX)
- Boston Firearms(Everett, MA)
- 2aHawaii(Honolulu, HI)
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