Tell me about Tikkas

Joined
Jan 16, 2026
Messages
97
Location
Western North Carolina
I’m leaning towards a T3x
30-06, SS synthetic
I want an adjustable trigger that will go below 3 #
Sub 7 pound rifle with a standard stock.

Threaded muzzle not required
Rifle would be a non magnum do all gun for a backup to anything…


I see lots of people badmouthing the Tikka stocks. What’s wrong with them?

Are the basic T3s pretty easy to get shooting sub MOA with decent factory ammunition?

No rush here, is there any kind of sale I should be lucky if king for?
Even end of year is cool, I have a few rifles that still have never seen the woods.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Tikka would fit those requirements, theres nothing wrong with the stocks i add the vertical grip thats cheap , you can still find sales on the T3x , eurooptics.com had some close outs


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
There’s nothing wrong with the basic Tikka T3X. I prefer wooden stocks, but for a basic synthetic stock, the T3X is fine. If you prefer a more vertical grip, that’s a $20 add-on.

You should also check out the Sauer 100. That’s a rifle that punches way above its price tag.

I personally will never shoot another unsuppressed rifle unless I have no other choice. A 22” threaded barrel .30-06, Tikka or Sauer, with an Airlock ZG 30 and an SWFA 3-9x sounds like a pretty sweet “only need one rifle” setup.
 
I’m leaning towards a T3x
30-06, SS synthetic
I want an adjustable trigger that will go below 3 #
Sub 7 pound rifle with a standard stock.

Threaded muzzle not required
Rifle would be a non magnum do all gun for a backup to anything…


I see lots of people badmouthing the Tikka stocks. What’s wrong with them?

Are the basic T3s pretty easy to get shooting sub MOA with decent factory ammunition?

No rush here, is there any kind of sale I should be lucky if king for?
Even end of year is cool, I have a few rifles that still have never seen the woods.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
There are no factoet rifles with a better stock than a Tikka IN THEIR PRICE RANGE. The Tikka stock is just a regular basic plastic factory stock. The only rifles that IMO come woth a nicer factory stock, in the T3x price range are the X Bolts.

Sent from my SM-S931U using Tapatalk
 
As others have said, its a basic stock. 100% useable out of the box. What you hear people complain about is that it suffers from all of the same drawbacks of any plain synthetic stock, and they dont have all the tricks and features that many have come to expect.....but if they had those features, they would cost more and likely weigh more.

Virtually all of the money you pay for with a T3x is in the barreled action. Great trigger, smooth, reliable action, great barrel, lightweight.

One thing you may or may not know is that all T3x actions are the same dimensionally. So a long action model (.30-06, .270, etc) is the same action as a short action (.308, .243, 6.5CM). In many cases you can change catridge with just a new barrel. This is part of what makes them popular, ease of changing cartridge.
 
As a sidenote, you didnt ask for this advice so it may be worth exactly what you paid for it.

.30-06 is a great cartridge and will do anything you could want. But I would suggest considering something lighter recoiling. There are ALOT of great cartridges that will do the job and be more pleasurable to shoot.
 
Im not sure what distances you hunt but if your only looking to shoot a couple hundred yards I personally wouldn't waste money on a aftermarket stock if money is a significant factor for you. There's virtually no way your spotting shots at 200 yards with a 06 anyway. Id add a vertical grip and a thinner foam cheek riser and move on with my day. Also probably a limbsaver pad depending on caliber
 
It’s a good, basic bolt action rifle with a reasonably good plastic stock…for a plastic stock. Rather than spend money on bells and whistles, tikka saved money by minimizing parts (ie one action size for all cartridges, shared parts for different mags and models, etc), in order to prioritize good quality barrels and generally very reliable, very smooth actions with good manufacturing tolerances. Some people appreciate the efficiency because they wind up with a very high quality gun for the price. Other folks, the things that allow the price-point, get on their nerves. Objectively I think they are a good value even though they are more $ than they used to be. Also, if down the road you decide you want a different stock, etc there are a lot of aftermarket options at most any price point, that can turn a standard tikka into the rival of many custom guns. In many ways tikkas are the AR’s of the bolt-action world, ie due to the good tolerances compared to other off the shelf rifles around the same price point, it’s quite easy to build and rebuild different configurations from off the shelf parts that match whatever use or nuance you want. Ie, if you decide your 3006 isnt what you want, with a barrel and a few inexpensive parts you can simply turn it into something else, anything from a lw hunting rifle to a heavy match gun.
 
The plastic stock is fine until you develop what you want different, then you can intelligently upgrade.

Get a 6.5 PRC. It’s superior to the 3006 in all meaningful ways at all ranges, but it becomes particularly stark after 400 yards.
 
I had a 7mm rem mag tikka in the factory stock. Probably similar recoil to a 30-06.
That thing sucked to shoot. Legitimately bruised my shoulder and severely impacted my shooting. I temporarily remedied this with a Bell and Carlson stock. It was my only rifle for a couple years, and I killed some awesome animals with it and took it on some fun hunts, but the recoil was always a huge downside.

I swapped the barrel to a 6.5 PRC with a threaded barrel, added a suppressor, and I’ll never go back to a big magnum unsuppressed.

I also got a Tikka 6.5 Creedmoor cut to 17” and threaded, and that wears a factory stock and an unknown OG. That is a setup I would rather carry and shoot every day of the week over a full size setup regardless of cartridge.

In my experience, the factory tikka stock is okay for lighter rounds.
 
Back
Top