Brand Info
Taurus USA
Manufacturer
| Overview | |
|---|---|
Founded | 1939 |
Headquarters | Bainbridge, GA |
| Tagline | Taurus USA is the American subsidiary of Taurus Armas, a Brazilian firearms manufacturer. Based in Bainbridge, Georgia, Taurus produces a wide range of affordable handguns including revolvers and semi-automatic pistols. Popular models include the G2C, G3, and TX22 series, along with the iconic Raging Judge revolver. |
SAAMI | Member |
Products | |
| Key Products | How We Got Here, Current Lineup, The Reality Check, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| www.taurususa.com | |
Taurus USA
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
Taurus USA is the American arm of Brazil's Taurus Armas S.A., founded in 1939. They run operations out of Bainbridge, Georgia, selling budget handguns to the North American market. They're a SAAMI member, which means something -- though exactly what depends on who you ask.
Taurus is the most polarizing brand in gun stores. Half the guys at the range will tell you to never buy one, the other half swear theirs runs fine. The truth sits somewhere in the middle -- they make affordable guns that usually work, sometimes surprise you, and occasionally need a trip back to Georgia.
The big story everyone remembers is the 2015 recall. About a million pistols had a drop-fire problem -- not exactly confidence-inspiring. But their current stuff, especially the TX22 and G3 series, represents a real step up from the old days.
How We Got Hereedit

Brazilian Origins and Beretta Connection
Taurus started making guns in Porto Alegre back in 1939. The turning point came in 1980 when they bought Beretta's São Paulo factory and got their hands on the tooling for the 92 series. That's why some Taurus pistols look familiar -- they literally came from the same machines.
Key Product Milestones
Key milestones in Taurus's evolution from Brazilian startup to controversial American brand
| Year | Event | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1939 | Taurus Armas S.A. founded in Porto Alegre, Brazil | Company establishment |
| 1980 | Acquired Beretta's São Paulo factory and tooling | Gained 92 series manufacturing capability |
| 1980s | Taurus USA established for distribution | North American market entry |
| 2006 | Judge revolver launched (.410/.45 Colt) | Created new market category |
| 2015 | Major recall (1 million pistols, drop-fire issue) | Reputation damage |
| 2019 | G3 pistol launch | Quality improvement initiative |
| 2020 | TX22 becomes flagship success | Market credibility restored |
The Judge created an entire category that every manufacturer has since copied.
Current Lineupedit

G-Series Striker-Fired Pistols
Their striker-fired pistols center around the G-series. The G3 is their full-size 9mm at around $250-300. Holds 15 or 17 rounds depending on the magazine. The G3c is the compact version -- 12+1 capacity, runs about $230-280.
Both represent the improved quality control era.
| Model | Type | Capacity | Price Range | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| G3 | Full-size 9mm | 15+1 or 17+1 | $250-300 | Striker-fired, improved QC |
| G3c | Compact 9mm | 12+1 | $230-280 | Concealed carry focused |
| GX4 | Micro-compact 9mm | 11+1 | $300-350 | Hellcat/P365 competitor |
| GX4 Carry | Micro-compact 9mm | 13+1 | $300-350 | Extended grip version |
The GX4 is their attempt at the micro-compact market. It's their answer to the Hellcat and P365, holding 11+1 in a small package. Runs $300-350. The GX4 Carry adds a longer grip for 13+1.
TX22 - The Standout Success
The TX22 is genuinely the exception to every Taurus stereotype - it just runs.
The TX22 is genuinely the exception to every Taurus stereotype. This .22 LR pistol eats any ammunition you feed it -- bulk CCI, Federal, Remington, whatever. Most .22 semi-autos are picky about ammo and jam constantly.
At $280-330, it holds 16 rounds and actually cycles reliably. The gun community that argues about everything agrees the TX22 is excellent.
| Model | Caliber | Capacity | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TX22 | .22 LR | 16+1 | $280-330 | Standard model, exceptional reliability |
| TX22 Compact | .22 LR | 13+1 | $280-330 | Smaller grip frame |
| TX22 Competition | .22 LR | 16+1 | $300-350 | Threaded barrel |
Revolver Heritage
Their revolver line still includes the famous Judge in various configurations. The standard Judge runs $400-500, while the Raging Judge handles .454 Casull along with .410 and .45 Colt. They make traditional revolvers too -- the Model 856 is a 6-shot .38 Special that competes with J-frame, and the Model 605 is their budget .357 Magnum snub-nose.
| Model | Caliber | Capacity | Price Range | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Judge | .410/.45 Colt | 5 | $400-500 | Standard defensive revolver |
| Raging Judge | .454 Casull/.410/.45 Colt | 6 | $600-700 | Magnum power version |
| Model 856 | .38 Special | 6 | $250-300 | J-frame competitor |
| Model 605 | .357 Magnum | 5 | $300-350 | Budget snub-nose |
The Reality Checkedit
Honest Quality Assessment
Here's the honest assessment: if you can spend $100-150 more, a Ruger or Smith & Wesson will give you better quality control and customer service. Taurus makes sense when your budget is truly fixed and the choice is "this or nothing."
The TX22 is the standout -- genuinely one of the better .22 pistols regardless of price. The G3 and G3c represent solid budget options if you inspect them carefully and test them thoroughly after purchase.
Decision flowchart for Taurus purchase considerations
Practical Buying Considerations
- Buy new models (post-2018) only
- Check recall databases for older models
- Inspect firearms carefully before purchase
- Test thoroughly with 200+ rounds early
Their warranty is lifetime for original owners, but turnaround times can be frustratingly long. Resale value is poor -- you'll lose 40-50% immediately. No law enforcement agencies stake their reputation on Taurus pistols, which tells you something about institutional confidence levels.
- Lifetime warranty for original owners
- Long turnaround times for repairs
- Poor resale value (40-50% immediate loss)
- No law enforcement agency adoption
The BGC Takeedit
Taurus has improved meaningfully since the dark days of the 2015 recall. The TX22 proves they can build a genuinely excellent firearm when they focus. The G3 series shows their quality control has gotten better.
But let's be realistic -- they're still the budget option with budget-level consistency. Some guns will run perfectly for years. Others will need warranty work. Customer service remains hit-or-miss.
If your budget caps at $300, the G3c will probably serve you well. For everyone else, spend the extra hundred - the reliability step-up is worth more than the price difference suggests.
If your budget absolutely caps at $300 and you need a functional 9mm, the G3c will probably serve you well. Inspect it carefully, run 200 rounds through it early, and keep your receipt. If you want a .22 pistol under $400, the TX22 is the easy choice.
For everyone else, spend the extra hundred bucks on a Ruger Security-9 or used police trade-in Smith. The step up in reliability and customer service is worth more than the price difference suggests.
The Judge remains what it always was -- a conversation starter that's genuinely useful for certain specific tasks and completely impractical for others. If you know why you want one, go for it. If you don't, you probably don't need one.
See Also:
- Budget Handgun Buyers Guide
- .22 LR Training Pistols
- First-Time Gun Buyer Recommendations
- Quail Creek Plantation(Okeechobee, FL)
- Val Verde Gun Club(Del Rio, TX)
- Boston Firearms(Everett, MA)
- 2aHawaii(Honolulu, HI)
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