Last updated June 2026 · By Nick Hall, covers suppressors and precision rifles for USA Gun Shop
Quick take: Banish, the suppressor brand out of Silencer Central, just dropped the VRMT 223K Ti, a featherweight titanium can built for bolt-action .224 rifles. It runs 4.7 inches long, weighs a flat 8 ounces, and still delivers over 25.9 dB of sound reduction. At $599 for titanium (or $499 if you’d rather have stainless), it’s aimed squarely at the precision crowd that hates hanging dead weight off the end of a tack-driver. The Firearm Blog reported the launch on June 16, 2026.

- What it is: A lightweight titanium rifle suppressor from Banish (Silencer Central), optimized for bolt-action .224-caliber rifles up through .22 Creedmoor.
- The specs: 4.7 in, 8 oz, five user-serviceable baffles, 25.9+ dB reduction.
- Price: $599 titanium / $499 stainless.
- Who it’s for: Bolt-gun shooters running .224 rounds who want a quiet, balanced rifle without adding a brick to the muzzle.
A Featherweight Built for .224 Bolt Guns
The VRMT 223K Ti was designed around one job: keeping a .224-caliber bolt gun quiet without throwing off its balance. Banish built this can specifically for bolt-action rifles chambered in the .224 family, all the way up to .22 Creedmoor. That’s a deliberate choice. Bolt guns don’t have the gas system or cycling demands of a semi-auto, so a suppressor maker can shave weight and length without fighting reliability issues.
If you shoot a precision .224, the appeal is obvious. A heavy can hanging off the muzzle changes how the rifle handles, how it sits in a bag, and how it tracks during recoil. A lightweight titanium suppressor like this one lets you keep the gun feeling like the rifle you zeroed, just a whole lot quieter. Shooters who run something like one of the best PRS rifles for 2026 will understand exactly why every ounce at the muzzle matters.
What 8 Ounces and 4.7 Inches Buys You
The headline numbers are the whole story here: 4.7 inches long, 8 ounces on the scale, and over 25.9 dB of sound reduction. Eight ounces is genuinely light for a rifle can, and at under five inches it adds very little to your overall length. For a bolt gun that’s already long, that’s a meaningful difference in how the rifle carries and shoulders.
The 25.9 dB of reduction is the part that makes the package work. Plenty of ultra-light cans cut weight by giving up performance, but Banish is claiming better than 25.9 dB out of this one, which keeps a .224 rifle in hearing-safe territory at the muzzle for most shooters. The other practical detail is the five user-serviceable baffles. That just means the owner can take the baffle stack apart to clean it, which matters because rifle cans collect carbon and fouling over time, and a sealed unit you can’t open is a unit you can’t maintain yourself.
Titanium vs Stainless: $599 or $499
Banish offers the VRMT 223K in two flavors: the titanium version at $599 and a stainless-steel version at $499. The $100 difference comes down to material. Titanium is what gets you to that 8-ounce weight; stainless steel is heavier but cheaper, and it’s a perfectly reasonable choice if you care more about your wallet than about shaving every last ounce.
For most precision shooters, the titanium is the one to want. The whole point of a can like this is the light weight, and giving that up to save $100 somewhat defeats the purpose. But if you’re building out a heavier benchrest setup where a couple extra ounces at the muzzle don’t bother you, the $499 stainless gets you the same baffle design and sound numbers for less money. Either way, this is the kind of upgrade that pairs naturally with the heavier-recoiling rigs we cover in our roundup of the best .300 Win Mag bolt action rifles when you want to tame both sound and felt recoil.
The NFA Reality Check
Before you get too excited, remember that a suppressor is an NFA-regulated item, which means it’s not an over-the-counter purchase. In the United States, a suppressor (also called a silencer) requires an ATF tax stamp, and that involves paperwork and a wait before the can is legally yours to take home. You can’t just buy it and walk out the door the way you would a scope or a sling.
None of that is unique to the VRMT 223K Ti, it’s true of every suppressor sold in the country. The important thing is to go through the proper legal process and make sure suppressor ownership is allowed where you live, since the rules vary by state. We won’t pretend to be your lawyer here, but the short version is simple: follow the legal channels, do your paperwork, and be patient. Silencer Central, the company behind the Banish brand, builds a lot of its business around walking buyers through that process, so the path to ownership is well-trodden. For more on the legal landscape, see our coverage of the federal suppressor challenge in Texas.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Reading
- Texas Fails With Federal Suppressor Challenge
- 9 Best .300 Win Mag Bolt Action Rifles (2026)
- Best PRS Rifles for 2026: Precision Rifle Series Guns Ranked
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