.38 Special Ammo
The .38 Special is the most widely used revolver cartridge in America, with a history stretching back to 1898 and decades of law enforcement use behind it. It fires a .357-inch bullet at moderate velocity, producing manageable recoil that makes it accessible to a wide range of shooters. Modern .38 Special +P defensive loads deliver genuine stopping power from any quality revolver, and the caliber’s mild recoil makes it an excellent choice for new shooters and those who find larger calibers difficult to control.
Read our full .38 Special Ammunition Buying Guide ↓
Ballistics Overview
Standard .38 Special loads run 130–158 grains at 700–900 fps from a 4-inch revolver barrel. Lightweight 110–125 grain loads are faster but produce a sharper, snappier recoil impulse in small revolvers. The 158-grain lead round nose (LRN) load is the classic, reliable choice for range use. +P loads in 110–125 grain push velocity to 950–1,050 fps and are the standard recommendation for defensive carry in any revolver rated for +P use—expansion at standard .38 velocities is marginal for some hollow point designs.
Standard vs. +P
Standard pressure .38 Special is appropriate for any revolver chambered for the cartridge, including older and lightweight models. +P loads run at higher pressure and meaningfully improve defensive hollow point expansion. Most modern revolvers are +P rated; check your owner’s manual before running +P loads in an older or lightweight snub-nose revolver. For range and practice use, standard pressure loads are gentler on the gun and easier to shoot accurately over extended sessions than +P loads.
Defensive Load Selection
Federal HST 150gr Micro +P is specifically engineered for short-barrel revolvers and is one of the best .38 Special defensive choices for snub-nose carry guns. Speer Gold Dot 135gr +P Short Barrel is another purpose-designed short-barrel option with strong published performance data. For full-size revolvers, standard Gold Dot 125gr +P and Hornady Critical Defense 110gr FTX are both proven performers. Avoid older hollow point designs that were not specifically engineered for .38 Special velocity ranges.
Range and Practice Loads
For range practice, lead round nose (LRN) and FMJ loads in 130–158 grain are standard. Winchester White Box, Federal American Eagle, and Remington UMC all offer reliable .38 Special range loads at reasonable prices. Lead wad-cutter loads are popular for bullseye and precision revolver shooting due to their flat-nosed profile and clean target holes. Note that shooting lead bullets requires more frequent barrel cleaning than jacketed loads to prevent lead fouling buildup.
.38 Special vs. .357 Magnum
.38 Special revolvers can only fire .38 Special. .357 Magnum revolvers fire both .357 Magnum and .38 Special, making them more versatile. If you’re choosing between them, the .357 revolver is almost always the better buy—you get the option to practice with mild .38 Special and use full-power .357 when maximum performance is needed. The .38 Special is the right choice primarily when platform size or weight requires it, as in lightweight snub-nose revolvers where .357 recoil would be unmanageable. See our .357 Magnum ammo page.
Related Pages
Browse our .38 Special revolvers page for compatible platforms, or visit our handguns page to compare all revolver options. See our handgun ammo overview for other calibers.
