
Beretta M9
The Beretta M9 is the commercial version of the pistol that served as the official sidearm of the United States military from 1985 to 2017—over three decades of continuous service across every branch of the armed forces. Built on the same 92FS platform with specific military-contract features including a chrome-lined barrel, ambidextrous safety/decocker, and anodized aluminum frame, the commercial M9 delivers the same operating system that millions of service members trained on. The M9 family spans the base configuration through the M9A1, M9A3, and the modern M9A4 Overlanding variant with threaded barrel and Cerakote finish.
Read our full Beretta M9 Buying Guide ↓
M9 vs. 92FS: What’s Actually Different
The M9 and 92FS are closely related but not identical. The M9 uses a chrome-lined barrel (vs. the 92FS’s standard barrel), a matte Bruniton finish optimized for military service conditions, and a lanyard loop on the base of the grip. The safety/decocker operates identically on both. The M9 magazine is interchangeable with the 92FS. The practical differences for civilian use are modest—the chrome-lined barrel adds durability and ease of cleaning, the matte finish reduces glare. For buyers with military backgrounds who trained on the M9, the commercial M9 replicates that familiar platform exactly.
The Beretta 92 Platform’s Military Legacy
The M9 won the US military’s XM9 pistol trials in 1985, beating out designs from Smith & Wesson, SIG Sauer, and others on criteria including accuracy, reliability, safety, and maintainability. It served through Desert Storm, Iraq, and Afghanistan before being replaced by the SIG Sauer M17 in 2017. Over 600,000 M9 pistols were manufactured for US military use. The platform’s open-slide design was specifically valued for its resistance to sand and debris fouling in desert conditions—a real-world durability test that speaks directly to the platform’s fundamental reliability.
Trigger System and Accuracy
The M9 uses the 92 platform’s DA/SA trigger—a longer double-action pull for the first shot, then single-action for subsequent shots. The rotating locking block design provides an extremely consistent barrel lockup that contributes to the platform’s accuracy potential. Factory M9s produce consistent 3” groups at 25 yards from a rest. The single-action pull on a well-maintained M9 breaks cleanly at approximately 5.5 lbs with very short reset.
M9A1, M9A3, and M9A4 Variants
Beretta has updated the M9 platform across several generations. The M9A1 adds a Picatinny rail, checkered front strap, and beveled magazine well. The M9A3 adds a threaded barrel, interchangeable backstraps, and a Vertec-style thin grip. The M9A4 Overlanding is the most modern variant—a 5.1” threaded barrel, Cerakote finish in multiple colors, optics-ready slide, and a field kit designed for hard use. For buyers who want suppressor capability or a modernized M9 with a red dot, the M9A4 is the appropriate choice over the base M9 or M9A1.
Related Pages
See the modern suppressor-ready variant on the Beretta M9A4 page, compare the civilian equivalent on the Beretta 92FS page, or browse all Beretta handguns.
