Brand Info
Wilson Combat
Manufacturer

Cross-section of the M1911 reveals John Browning's locked-breech, short-recoil design—the fundamental architecture Wilson Combat builds and refines.
U.S. Army Ordnance Department (Public domain)
| Overview | |
|---|---|
Headquarters | Berryville, AR |
| Tagline | Wilson Combat has been the innovator in custom pistols, long guns, and accessories since 1977. Home of the Wilson Combat 1911, EDC X9, WCP320, and more! |
SAAMI | Member |
Products | |
| Key Products | Company Background, The 1911 Lineup, Beyond the 1911, Parts and Accessories, How Wilson Stacks Up, Reputation and Community Standing, What to Buy, The BGC Take |
Links | |
| www.wilsoncombat.com | |
Wilson Combat
Reference article
From The Boise Gun Club Handbook
Wilson Combat is what happens when a competitive shooter gets fed up with subpar 1911s and decides to build them right.
Wilson Combat is what happens when a competitive shooter gets fed up with subpar 1911s and decides to build them right.
Bill Wilson started fixing other people's guns in 1977 in Berryville, Arkansas -- then realized he could build better ones himself.
Four decades later, Wilson Combat sets the standard every other custom 1911 shop measures itself against. They're not cheap -- $3,000 to $4,500 for a pistol -- but the trigger, fit, and reliability show you what the 1911 platform was always supposed to deliver.
Company Backgroundedit
Bill Wilson was competing in practical pistol matches and couldn't find 1911s that ran reliably enough for serious use. So he started building his own.
Wilson Combat is what happens when a competitive shooter gets fed up with subpar 1911s and decides to build them right.
The progression was logical -- custom gunsmithing led to making parts, which led to full manufacturing. By the 2000s, Wilson Combat was forging their own frames and slides instead of starting with someone else's castings.
Wilson Combat's evolution from one-man shop to industry leader
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1977 | Bill Wilson starts gunsmithing operation in Berryville, Arkansas |
| 1980s-90s | Builds reputation as premier 1911 custom shop |
| 2000s | Transitions to full in-house manufacturing, forging own frames/slides |
| 2017 | Launches EDC X9 double-stack pistol |
| 2020s | Expands beyond 1911s with WCP320 and SFT9 |
Wilson Combat is a SAAMI member and still operates out of Berryville, Arkansas.
The 1911 Lineupedit

Wilson's bread and butter is still custom 1911s.
Core Models Overview
| Model | Purpose | Calibers | Price Range | What Makes It Different |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CQB | Tactical/duty | .45 ACP, 9mm | $3,200-$3,800 | Light rail, aggressive texturing, combat-ready |
| Professional | All-purpose | .45 ACP, 9mm | $3,200-$3,600 | Ambidextrous safety, undercut trigger guard |
| Protector | Concealed carry | .45 ACP, 9mm | $3,000-$3,400 | Compact frame, carry-friendly features |
| Classic | Traditional | .45 ACP | $3,000-$3,400 | Clean lines, no frills, purist's choice |
| Vickers Elite | Larry Vickers collaboration | .45 ACP, 9mm | $3,800-$4,200 | Enhanced grip, battle-ready features |
| Supergrade | Premium/collector | .45 ACP, 9mm | $5,500-$6,500 | Hand-polished, premium wood grips |
What Sets Wilson Apart
The CQB is their flagship model and showcases what Wilson Combat does well -- a trigger that breaks clean at 3.5 pounds with zero creep and zero overtravel. You won't find a production 1911 trigger this good anywhere else.
Every Wilson Combat 1911 uses match-grade barrels, hand-fitted parts, and their proprietary magazines. The fit and finish genuinely look custom despite semi-production volumes.
Beyond the 1911edit
Wilson Combat recognized that not everyone wants to carry a single-stack .45, so they've branched out:
Double-Stack Innovation
| Model | Type | Capacity | Key Features | Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EDC X9 | Double-stack 1911-style | 15+1 | 1911 grip angle, premium trigger | $3,000-$3,800 |
| WCP320 | Modified striker-fired | 17+1 | SIG P320 FCU, Wilson grip module | $1,200-$1,800 |
| SFT9 | Wilson striker-fired | 17+1 | 1911-inspired ergonomics | $2,800-$3,200 |
The EDC X9 Series is Wilson Combat's answer to the 1911 capacity problem. It holds 15+1 rounds of 9mm but maintains the 1911's grip angle and trigger feel. The X9 2.0 offers compensated versions and refined ergonomics. Prices run $3,000 to $3,800.
Striker-Fired Options
The WCP320 takes a SIG P320 fire control unit and builds it into their own grip module with a premium trigger. It's the cheapest way into Wilson Combat territory at $1,200 to $1,800.
The SFT9 is Wilson's own striker-fired design that tries to capture 1911 ergonomics in a modern platform. Still relatively new at $2,800 to $3,200.
AR Platform Offerings
- AR-15 rifles in multiple configurations ($2,500-$4,500)
- AR-10 precision rifles for long-range applications
- Quality builds but not Wilson's core competency
- Competes with established AR manufacturers
Parts and Accessoriesedit
Why this matters: Wilson Combat doesn't just build complete guns -- they make the parts that let you upgrade whatever 1911 you already own.
Their ETM (Elite Tactical Magazine) is widely considered the most reliable 1911 magazine available. At $30 to $45 each, they're expensive for magazines but they solve the feed reliability issues that plague cheaper 1911 mags.
| Component | Price Range | Key Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| ETM Magazines | $30-$45 | well-regarded reliability |
| Trigger Kits | $40-$70 | Drop-in upgrade for any 1911 |
| Match Barrels | $200-$350 | Improved accuracy |
| Grips | $50-$150 | Enhanced ergonomics |
| Internal Parts | Varies | Complete rebuild capability |
Wilson Combat also sells drop-in trigger kits ($40-$70), match barrels ($200-$350), grips ($50-$150), and a full line of internal parts. This means you can "Wilson-ize" any 1911 without buying a complete Wilson Combat gun.
Their AR-15 parts line includes triggers, handguards, and receivers, though they're not as dominant in the AR market as they are with 1911s.
How Wilson Stacks Upedit
Against other premium 1911 builders, Wilson Combat holds its own:
| Feature | Wilson CQB | Ed Brown Kobra | Nighthawk GRP | Les Baer Premier II |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price | ~$3,500 | ~$3,400 | ~$3,800 | ~$2,300 |
| Trigger quality | Exceptional | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent |
| Build time | Weeks to months | Months | Months | Weeks to months |
| Parts availability | Extensive | Limited | Limited | Limited |
Wilson's advantage is consistency and parts support. Les Baer builds guns that are 90% as good for about 65% of the price, but Wilson's trigger is more consistently perfect, and you can actually buy Wilson parts to maintain or upgrade the gun.
Wilson's advantage is consistency and parts support -- 90% perfection isn't enough when you can achieve 100%.
Reputation and Community Standingedit
Wilson Combat occupies the aspirational tier of the gun world -- they're the 1911 most people want to own someday.
Professional Recognition
| User Category | Primary Models | Key Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| Competition Shooters | CQB, Professional | Exceptional trigger, reliability |
| Law Enforcement | CQB | Proven durability, tactical features |
| Special Operations | Various custom builds | Mission-specific configurations |
| Collectors/Enthusiasts | Supergrade, Limited editions | Premium finishes, investment value |
Among 1911 enthusiasts, Wilson Combat is the gold standard. Competition shooters rely on CQB and Professional models for USPSA and IDPA. Several law enforcement agencies issue the CQB, and special operations units reportedly use Wilson guns.
Common praise centers on that trigger -- it's genuinely the benchmark other 1911 triggers are measured against. The fit and finish look custom despite semi-production volumes, and their magazines solved reliability problems for thousands of 1911 owners.
Market Criticism
The criticism is predictable -- $3,500 is a lot of money for a 1911 when a Springfield Loaded costs under $1,000. Wait times can stretch for months on custom configurations. Some longtime fans were disappointed when Wilson reduced their catalog and discontinued certain models.
Recent attempts to expand beyond 1911s haven't generated the same enthusiasm. The WCP320 is well-made but expensive for what amounts to a modified P320. The SFT9 is too new to judge, but early adopters seem pleased.
What to Buyedit
Entry-Level Options
If you want the Wilson Combat experience without the full commitment, start with their ETM magazines. At $35 each, they'll make any 1911 more reliable and give you a taste of Wilson's attention to detail.
Wilson Combat purchase decision tree
Complete Firearms
For a complete gun, the Professional is the most versatile Wilson Combat 1911 -- ambidextrous controls, clean features, suitable for carry or competition. The CQB adds a light rail and more aggressive texturing if you want a tactical-oriented pistol.
The EDC X9 makes sense if you want 1911 ergonomics with modern capacity. Fifteen rounds of 9mm solves the single-stack .45's biggest limitation while keeping the trigger feel that makes 1911s special.
Budget Alternatives
Budget-conscious buyers should look at Les Baer, which delivers similar quality for significantly less money. Or consider buying a Springfield and upgrading it with Wilson parts -- ETM magazines and a Wilson trigger kit run about $150 total and transform any 1911.
The BGC Takeedit
Wilson Combat makes the finest production 1911s available. That's not marketing hyperbole -- the triggers, fit, and reliability demonstrate what the 1911 platform can achieve when everything is done right.
At $3,000 to $4,500, these aren't impulse purchases. But if you shoot 1911s seriously, compete with them, or carry one professionally, Wilson quality is worth the premium. The trigger alone justifies the price difference over lesser guns.
Buy Wilson Combat for the 1911s and magazines. Everything else they make is well-executed but not necessarily where they add the most value.
Their expansion beyond 1911s shows mixed results. The EDC X9 genuinely solves the capacity problem while preserving 1911 ergonomics. The WCP320 and SFT9 feel like Wilson trying to chase market trends rather than leveraging their core competencies.
The bottom line: Buy Wilson Combat for the 1911s and magazines. Everything else they make is well-executed but not necessarily where they add the most value. If you can't afford a complete Wilson gun, their parts will make whatever 1911 you own significantly better. And if you've ever wondered what a properly built 1911 feels like, a Wilson will show you.
See Also:
- Quail Creek Plantation(Okeechobee, FL)
- Val Verde Gun Club(Del Rio, TX)
- Boston Firearms(Everett, MA)
- 2aHawaii(Honolulu, HI)
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