Fortis Manufacturing is one of those brands that serious AR-15 builders know by its products before they know it by name. The REV free-float handguard, the lever-locking SWITCH rail, the RED muzzle brake, the oversized Hammer charging handle — these are the parts that show up on well-built rifles. Fortis is a small, founder-led shop with a simple promise stamped into its tagline: “Strength By Design.” Here is who they are, what they make, and what is worth bolting onto your rifle.
Who Fortis Manufacturing is
Fortis Manufacturing makes the parts serious AR-15 builders know by product before name, from the REV free-float handguard and lever-locking SWITCH rail to the RED muzzle brake and oversized Hammer charging handle. It is a small, founder-led shop.
Fortis was founded in 2011 by Paul Hwang and remains privately held and founder-led — by their own description, a small boutique shop rather than a faceless factory. The company’s first breakout product was the REV rail in late 2012, and that lightweight free-float design set the tone for everything since: clean machining, low weight, and a finish a notch above the ordinary. Fortis machines its parts in-house in the USA on its own bank of CNC machines, which is why fit and finish are consistent across the catalog.
On the quality ladder, Fortis sits in the mid-to-premium tier — a step below the prestige (and price) of Geissele, but clearly above budget furniture. You are paying for American machining, hard-coat anodizing, and thoughtful design rather than the absolute lowest sticker price.
What Fortis makes
Handguards: REV and SWITCH
Handguards are Fortis’s home turf. The REV (and REV 2.0) is a lightweight one-piece free-float rail that clamps to a standard barrel nut and comes in M-LOK, in lengths from roughly 7 to 14 inches. It is the simple, light, get-it-done option. The SWITCH Mod 2 adds the brand’s signature trick: a quick-attach “Lever Lock” that lets you pull the rail without fighting a barrel nut, plus a vented top. If you swap setups or want easy access under the rail, the SWITCH is the one to look at.
Muzzle devices: the RED brake
The R.E.D. — “Rapid Engagement Device” — is Fortis’s stainless muzzle brake and compensator, made in 5.56 (1/2×28) and .308 (5/8×24). It is built to keep the muzzle flat for fast follow-up shots, which is exactly what its competition-minded audience wants.
Charging handles: Hammer and Clutch
Fortis makes two charging handles, and the difference matters. The Hammer is an oversized single-grip handle for AR-15 and AR-10. The Clutch is deliberately not ambidextrous — it uses a cam system and comes in right- and left-hand versions. If you specifically want a true ambi handle, that is Radian’s Raptor territory; Fortis built the Clutch for shooters who want a strong single-side handle, not an ambi one.
Billet and small parts
Round it out with the License Gen 2 billet lower (7075, with an ambi option), a matching billet upper, and the modular SHIFT grip — a hand-stop/angled/vertical grip system that Fortis says is its most counterfeited product, which tells you how popular it is.
Build quality and where it’s made
Everything is made in the USA, in-house. Handguards and the SWITCH body use 6061-T6 aluminum; the SWITCH lever, the Clutch, and billet receivers use harder 7075-T6; the RED brake is stainless. Finishes are mil-spec Type III hard-coat anodizing, with Black, OD Green, and FDE on some SKUs. It is furniture built to a spec and a weight target, and it shows.
How Fortis compares
In the handguard market, Aero Precision and Midwest Industries are the value-volume leaders and Geissele is the premium proprietary-mount benchmark. Fortis differentiates with the SWITCH’s tool-free lever lock and the REV’s light, simple profile. On charging handles, remember the Clutch is single-side by design — if ambidexterity is the goal, the Radian Raptor is the category standard, not the Fortis. Fortis’s sweet spot is the competition and weight-conscious builder who wants well-finished American parts without paying top-tier prices.
Who should buy what
- Competition shooters: the RED brake plus the Hammer charging handle.
- Weight-conscious builders: the REV handguard and the SHIFT grip.
- Anyone who swaps setups: the SWITCH handguard for its tool-free lever lock.
- Single-side handle users: the Clutch (buy your hand’s version).
If you need a true ambidextrous charging handle or you are building to the lowest possible budget, Fortis is not the natural pick — but for light, well-made AR furniture, it is a strong one.
The Fortis design philosophy
What ties the Fortis catalog together is a refusal to add weight or complexity that does not earn its place. The REV handguard is a good example: rather than chase the longest spec sheet, Fortis built a one-piece rail that is light, rigid, and dead simple to install on a standard barrel nut. The SWITCH takes the opposite-but-complementary approach — it adds a single genuinely useful mechanism, the lever lock, so you can pull the rail in seconds without tools. Neither design is trying to be everything; each solves one problem cleanly. That is the “Strength By Design” idea in practice, and it is why Fortis parts tend to age well rather than feel like a fad.
It is also worth understanding the SHIFT grip, because its story says something about the brand. Fortis describes the SHIFT — a modular system that converts between a hand stop, an angled grip, and a vertical grip — as its most counterfeited product. Counterfeiters copy what sells, and the SHIFT sells because it lets one mounting solution cover several shooting styles. If you buy one, buy it from a reputable seller so you get the real 6061/7075 part and not a soft knockoff.
How to choose your Fortis setup
Start with the handguard, because it defines the rifle. If you want the lightest, simplest free-float rail and you will rarely remove it, the REV is the answer. If you value being able to get under the rail quickly — for maintenance, wiring a light, or swapping a gas block — the SWITCH and its lever lock are worth the small weight penalty. From there, the RED brake is the obvious muzzle choice if recoil management for fast strings is your priority, while the Hammer charging handle suits anyone who runs the rifle right-handed and wants a bigger, easier-to-grab latch. Pair the SHIFT grip to your support-hand style, and you have a coherent Fortis build that is light, well-finished, and entirely made in the USA.
Fortis and the competition crowd
It is no accident that so many Fortis parts show up on 3-gun and practical-competition rifles. The combination the brand chases — low weight, a flat-shooting muzzle device, and a charging handle and grip that are easy to run fast — is exactly what a competitor wants when seconds matter. The RED brake keeps the muzzle settled for quick follow-ups, the REV rail keeps the front end light and balanced for fast transitions between targets, and the SHIFT grip lets a shooter set up their support hand precisely. None of it is flashy for its own sake; it is gear chosen to shave time and effort. That competition-driven design is part of why Fortis parts also work well on a serious general-purpose carbine — what helps you run a stage fast tends to help you run the gun well anywhere.
Shop Fortis Parts & Prices
Live products and current prices for Fortis Manufacturing, organized by department and updated automatically.
Handguards & Rails
Grips
Charging Handles
Lower Parts
Buffer Tubes
Barrels
Where Fortis Fits in Our Buying Guides
Fortis Manufacturing FAQ
Are Fortis parts made in the USA?
Yes — designed and CNC-machined in-house in the USA from 6061 and 7075 aluminum, with mil-spec Type III hard-coat anodizing.
Is the Clutch charging handle ambidextrous?
No — it is single-sided by design and comes in right- and left-hand versions, so order the one for your dominant hand. For a true ambi handle, look at the Radian Raptor.
What is the RED?
The “Rapid Engagement Device,” Fortis’s stainless muzzle brake/compensator, offered in 5.56 (1/2×28) and .308 (5/8×24).
REV or SWITCH handguard?
The REV is the lighter, simpler free-float rail; the SWITCH adds a quick-attach lever lock and a vented top for tool-free removal.
Does the SWITCH handguard hold zero on a mounted optic?
For a light or laser mounted on the rail, yes — the lever lock returns to the same position. As with any rail-mounted aiming device, confirm zero after reinstalling.
Will Fortis parts fit a standard mil-spec AR-15?
Yes — the REV and SWITCH mount on standard barrel nuts, and the charging handles and grip fit standard AR-15 and AR-10 platforms.
Where is Fortis Manufacturing based?
Fortis is a small founder-led shop based in Spring, Texas, where it designs its AR-15 handguards, muzzle devices and controls.
What tier is Fortis?
Mid-to-premium — above budget furniture, a step below Geissele on price and prestige.
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