Calculate the cost per round of ammunition across calibers, brands, and pack sizes. Compare bulk vs retail ammo prices to find the best deal.
Ammunition prices vary significantly by caliber, brand, quantity, and retailer. The Price Per Round Calculator helps shooters and hunters determine the true cost per round for any ammunition purchase, making it easy to compare bulk deals against smaller boxes and identify the best value for your shooting budget.
Whether you're stocking up on range ammo, comparing premium hunting loads, or evaluating reloading vs buying factory ammunition, knowing the exact cost per round is essential for budget planning. This calculator supports any caliber and lets you compare two options side by side, with projections for monthly and annual shooting costs based on your estimated usage.
Ammunition prices have been volatile in recent years, with supply chain issues and demand surges causing dramatic price swings. Having a reliable per-round calculator helps you recognize a good deal when you see one and avoid overpaying during price spikes. Check the example with realistic values before reporting.
Ammunition is a recurring expense for shooters, and small per-round savings add up quickly. At 200 rounds per month, saving just $0.05 per round saves $120 per year. This calculator helps you maximize every dollar of your shooting budget. Keep these notes focused on your operational context. Tie the context to the calculator’s intended domain. Use this clarification to avoid ambiguous interpretation.
Price Per Round = (Total Price + Shipping) ÷ Total Rounds. Monthly Cost = Rounds Per Month × Price Per Round. Annual Cost = Monthly Cost × 12.
Result: $0.345/round — Monthly cost: $69.00 — Annual: $828
$329.99 + $15.00 shipping = $344.99 for 1000 rounds = $0.345 per round. At 200 rounds/month, that's $69.00/month or $828/year.
The price per round varies dramatically based on several factors. Caliber is the primary driver — common calibers like 9mm and .223/5.56 have more competition and higher production volumes, keeping per-round costs lower. Less common calibers like .300 Blackout or 6.5 Creedmoor command premium pricing. Within a caliber, bullet type matters: full metal jacket (FMJ) range ammo is cheapest, while hollow points, match-grade, and specialty rounds cost 2-4× more per round.
The per-round economics of bulk buying are straightforward: manufacturers and distributors offer volume discounts, and packaging costs per round decrease with larger quantities. A 50-round box of 9mm at $15 ($0.30/round) vs a 1000-round case at $250 ($0.25/round) represents a 17% savings. Over a year of regular shooting (2400 rounds), that's $120 saved. However, tying up capital in bulk purchases requires weighing the savings against the opportunity cost and storage requirements.
Smart budgeting starts with tracking your round count by caliber. Most recreational shooters fire 100-300 rounds per range session, 1-4 times monthly. Competitive shooters may go through 500+ rounds per week. Calculate your annual consumption by caliber, multiply by your target per-round cost, and add maintenance costs (cleaning supplies, parts replacement) for a complete annual shooting budget. Setting a per-round spending target for each caliber helps you buy strategically and avoid impulse purchases at inflated prices.
Usually, but not always. Bulk cases typically save 10-30% per round vs retail boxes. However, during shortages, bulk prices can be inflated. Always calculate per-round cost before buying.
Absolutely. Online ammo deals often look better than they are once you add shipping, which can be $10-30+ for heavy ammo cases. The calculator includes shipping in the per-round cost.
As of 2025, decent 9mm FMJ range ammo runs $0.25-0.35/round. Premium hollow points cost $0.50-1.00/round. Prices fluctuate with supply conditions.
For high-volume shooters, reloading can save 30-60% per round once you've recovered the startup equipment cost. The savings are largest for rifle calibers and premium loads.
For common calibers you shoot regularly, buying cases of 500-1000 rounds typically offers the best per-round savings. Only buy what you'll use within a year for optimal freshness.
Properly stored ammunition can last decades. However, for reliability, most experts recommend rotating stock and using ammo within 5-10 years. Store in a cool, dry environment.