Suppressor costs, talk to me

2tuna

FNG
Joined
Oct 30, 2025
Messages
11
Allrighty, as a gap-tooth, slack-jawed recent convert to the esoteric arts of precision shooting, I have questions.

Why are suppressors so expensive?

I understand they're carefully machined, and sometimes made from titanium or other hard-to-work materials, but aren't they essentially static baffles?

I have a pretty good collection of high end big game fishing tackle: Stellas, Makairas, Penn Torques, etc - and these reels with their multitude of beautifully machined parts, abec bearings, sculpted forms, complicated mechanics, waterproof seals, and drags that will wear down 300 pound yellowfin are substantially cheaper.

They're more than my mid-tier scopes. Even some of my bows.

Is it just an economy of scale/prudiction issue? Has the hunting market for cans not yet settled in, with dominant mfrs came to the fore?

It's obvious I'm missing something. Please educate me.

Not that it matters. I live in Kali. Sigh...
 
Why are suppressors so expensive?

Supply and command

There's not a lot of appetite for getting into a controversial market like suppressors when the whims of the man in the whitehouse can either make them impossible to sell or dirt cheap and easy to sell overnight.
 
You can’t compare commoditized high volume items like fishing gear and scopes to suppressors. We are still a ways off from that unfortunately. They’ll charge what the market will bear until enough disruption happens to drive a pricing change.
 
Specialty item and lots of regulatory red tape for the manufacturers, at least that's my understanding. There's a higher barrier to entry for new companies than with, say, fishing reels. So they're able to mark prices up more and there's not much competition fighting for market share to bring it down. This might change in the next 5 to 10 years depending on legislation.
 
I already own a couple suppressors so I’m in a different spot than someone wanting their first, but I’d hold off. With 3d printers, everyone with a few bucks and some credit seems to be coming out with a can. Competition is good and WILL put downward pressure on prices. That, coupled with lots of innovation in the suppressor game due to 3d printing, has me waiting to buy another can.
 
They’ll charge what the market will bear until enough disruption happens to drive a pricing change.
It's that simple. I also think prices are absurd for what you get - in a more perfect world they'd be $49 in a blister pack at the checkout aisle at your local sporting goods store - but here we are. People charge what they can get for them, and in doing so make money, which is the whole reason that most of us get out of bed every morning anyway.
 
Back
Top