Sig Sauer Ammunition
Ammunition
| Overview | |
|---|---|
Headquarters | Jacksonville, AR |
| Tagline | A new standard in centerfire pistol and rifle ammunition, providing SIG reliability, accuracy and elite performance. Round after round. |
SAAMI | Member |
Products | |
| Key Products | Performance Comparison, Common Issues, Buying Recommendations, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| www.sigsauer.com/ammunition | |
Sig Sauer Ammunition
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
Sig Sauer got into the ammunition business in 2014 when they opened their Jacksonville, Arkansas facility. They're the new guys on the block compared to Federal or Winchester, but they came in swinging with a clear strategy -- control everything from the gun to the bullet.
The real story here isn't their V-Crown defensive loads or Match Grade rifle ammo, though both are solid. It's the .277 SIG Fury cartridge that won the U.S. Army's Next Generation Squad Weapon program. That hybrid case design running at 80,000 PSI isn't marketing fluff -- it's the future of military ammunition.
Product Linesedit

Defensive Handgun (V-Crown)
The V-Crown line uses a dual-cavity hollow point design that's engineered for consistent expansion. Nothing groundbreaking, but it works.
| Caliber | Bullet Weight | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 9mm Luger | 115 gr / 124 gr / 147 gr | Standard defensive weights |
| .380 ACP | 90 gr | Short-barrel optimized |
| .40 S&W | 165 gr / 180 gr | Traditional LE weights |
| .45 ACP | 185 gr / 200 gr / 230 gr | Full weight range |
| .357 SIG | 125 gr | High-velocity load |
| 10mm Auto | 180 gr | Full-power loading |
365 Elite Performance
This is where Sig Sauer actually innovated. They took their V-Crown design and specifically tested it in micro-compact pistols like the P365. Most manufacturers test their defensive ammo in full-size guns, then assume it'll work in a 3-inch barrel with a light recoil spring.
- 9mm 115gr V-Crown -- Reliable expansion from short barrels
- 9mm 124gr FMJ -- Training ammo that matches the defensive load ballistics
- .380 ACP 90gr V-Crown -- Micro-.380 optimized
Match Grade Rifle Ammunition
Sig Sauer rifle ammo is genuinely accurate. They're using quality match bullets -- Sierra and Nosler mostly -- and the quality control is tight.
| Caliber | Bullet Weight | Application |
|---|---|---|
| 6.5 Creedmoor | 140 gr OTM | Long-range precision |
| .308 Winchester | 168 gr / 175 gr OTM | Competition standard |
| .300 Win Mag | 190 gr OTM | Magnum precision |
| 6mm Creedmoor | 107 gr OTM | PRS competition |
| .223 Remington | 77 gr OTM | Service rifle match |
The .277 SIG Fury Story
Here's where it gets interesting. The .277 Fury uses a hybrid case design -- steel case head with a brass body. This lets it run at 80,000 PSI, nearly double what conventional brass can handle.
The result is a 135-grain bullet at 3,000 fps from a 16-inch barrel. That's enough velocity to defeat Level IV body armor at ranges where 5.56 NATO can't even scratch it.
Hybrid Case Innovation
The U.S. Army adopted it as 6.8x51mm for their XM7 rifle and XM250 automatic rifle.
The .277 Fury represents a fundamental shift in cartridge design -- hybrid cases running at 80,000 PSI deliver armor-defeating performance that conventional brass simply cannot achieve.
You can buy civilian .277 Fury, but it'll cost you $2-3 per round, and the recoil is substantial. This cartridge was designed for fighting the next war, not punching paper at your local range.
Development path and capabilities of the .277 SIG Fury cartridge system
Performance Comparisonedit

Ballistic Performance Data
How V-Crown stacks up against the competition:
| Category | SIG V-Crown | Federal HST | Speer Gold Dot | Hornady Critical Defense |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penetration (FBI gel) | 12-18 inches | 12-18 inches | 12-17 inches | 12-16 inches |
| Expansion consistency | Very good | Excellent | Excellent | Good |
| Barrier blind | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| LE contracts | Growing | Dominant | Widespread | Limited |
| Availability | Good | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent |
| Cost per round | $0.65-0.70 | $0.60-0.70 | $0.60-0.70 | $0.55-0.65 |
The honest assessment? V-Crown is a solid defensive round, but Federal HST still owns the law enforcement market for good reason.
V-Crown is solid defensive ammunition, but Federal HST still dominates law enforcement for good reason -- decades of proven real-world performance.
Common Issuesedit
Performance Strengths
- V-Crown delivers consistent expansion in gelatin testing
- 365 line genuinely solves micro-compact reliability issues
- Match Grade rifle ammo shoots sub-MOA groups in quality rifles
- Training ammo ballistically matches defensive loads
Market Limitations
| Issue Category | Problem | Impact | Workaround |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing | 15-25% premium over competitors | Higher training costs | Mix with cheaper training ammo |
| Availability | Spotty during shortages | May need alternatives | Stock up during normal times |
| Selection | Limited caliber range | Fewer obscure options | Use other brands for oddball calibers |
| Track Record | Only 9 years in market | Less real-world data | Consider proven alternatives for duty use |
Buying Recommendationsedit
Use Case Analysis
If you shoot a P365 or similar micro-compact: The 365 V-Crown 115gr is worth the premium. Most defensive ammo is tested in full-size guns, but this was specifically developed for 3-inch barrels.
For general 9mm defensive use: V-Crown 124gr is solid, but Federal HST has more real-world data backing it up. Both cost about the same.
For precision rifle work: The Match Grade line competes with Hornady Match and Federal Gold Medal. Good accuracy at a fair price.
For training ammo: Unless you specifically want the ballistic matching with V-Crown, Federal American Eagle or Blazer Brass will save you money.
Specialty Applications
For .277 Fury: Sig Sauer is currently your only option. You'll need either their Cross rifle or an XM7-pattern rifle to shoot it.
Decision tree for SIG Sauer ammunition selection by use case
The BGC Takeedit
Market Position
Sig Sauer Ammunition entered a crowded market and carved out a niche through quality and smart product development. The V-Crown is a competent defensive round, the Match Grade rifle ammo delivers on accuracy, and the 365 line's micro-compact optimization addresses a real problem other manufacturers ignored.
But let's be honest -- they're not revolutionizing handgun or rifle ammunition. Federal HST remains the defensive gold standard, and you can get perfectly good training ammo for less money elsewhere.
Historical Significance
Where Sig Sauer Ammunition becomes historically significant is the .277 Fury. Winning the Army's NGSW program with a hybrid case cartridge running at 80,000 PSI is a genuine technical achievement. Whether that cartridge changes civilian shooting remains to be seen, but it's already changing military small arms.
The bottom line: Sig Sauer makes quality ammunition at premium prices.
Sig makes quality ammunition at premium prices. You're paying more for newer branding on proven technology -- unless you're shooting .277 Fury, where they're the only game in town.
If you want ammunition designed specifically for Sig Sauer firearms, or you value the ballistic matching between their training and defensive loads, the extra cost makes sense. Otherwise, you're paying more for newer branding on proven technology.
See Alsoedit

- History of Firearms(firearms)
- Gun History Law at SCOTUS(news)
- Birthright Citizenship Heads to SCOTUS(news)
- Great Expectations Hunting Preserve(Kimberly, OR)
- Neil's Powder House(Elko, NV)
- Lotus Gunworks of South Florida(Jensen Beach, FL)
- American Responder Services(Lewes, DE)
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