Cart is Empty
Add items to get started
When you walk into any gun store you’ll find an entire wall of ammunition. For a new gun owner, it can feel overwhelming. What’s the difference between FMJ and hollow point? What caliber is right for your gun? What’s the best defensive ammo? This guide is here to provide answers to many of those questions, to help you when choosing which ammunition is right for you and your firearm.

Every cartridge has four components: the case (the brass or steel shell), the primer (ignites the powder), the powder (propellant), and the bullet (the projectile that exits the barrel). When you pull the trigger, the firing pin strikes the primer, igniting the powder, which propels the bullet down the barrel.
FMJ bullets have a soft lead core wrapped in a harder metal jacket. They feed reliably in semi-automatic firearms and are ideal for range practice because they’re inexpensive and accurate. However, FMJ bullets penetrate deeply without expanding, making them less ideal for home defense due to overpenetration risk.
Hollow point bullets have a cavity in the tip that causes the bullet to expand or “mushroom” upon impact. This expansion transfers more energy to the target, creates a larger wound channel, and reduces overpenetration risk. Hollow points are the standard for self-defense ammunition and are used by virtually all law enforcement agencies in the United States.
Soft point bullets have an exposed lead tip that allows for controlled expansion. They expand more than FMJ but less dramatically than hollow points. Commonly used for hunting, they offer a balance between penetration and expansion for taking game cleanly.

This is a personal choice, but here’s a general guideline:
Steel-cased ammo (like Wolf or TulAmmo) is significantly cheaper than brass but has drawbacks. It’s harder on extractors, can’t be reloaded, and some firearms don’t feed it as reliably. For range use, it’s fine for most guns, though some ranges do not allow it. For defensive use, always use quality brass-cased ammunition.
Ammo selection matters. Don’t carry FMJ for self-defense, don’t cheap out on what goes in your home defense gun, and always verify that your defensive load functions reliably in your specific firearm before depending on it. A gun that won’t feed its defensive ammo is worse than useless in a crisis.
At Parish Tactical, we stock defensive hollow points, range ammo, and specialty cartridges in the most common calibers.
Browse our ammunition selection and stock up today — because the best time to buy ammo is before you need it. In other words…. #PrepareWithParish
Parish the Pelican
Author
Join the Conversation
Be the first to leave a comment.