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How Much Does a Suppressor Cost in 2026? Full Price Breakdown

Last updated July 2026.

The single most common question first-time buyers ask is simple: how much does a suppressor cost? The honest answer in 2026 is “less than it used to.” Most suppressors run $300 to $1,400 depending on caliber and design, and the old $200 federal tax stamp is now $0 — eliminated on January 1, 2026. Below is the full breakdown: the can itself, the setup costs nobody warns you about, and what a complete suppressed rig really costs once everything is added up.

Table of Contents

The Short Answer

A quality suppressor costs $300–$1,400. Rimfire cans are cheapest (around $300–$600); centerfire rifle and magnum cans sit at the top of the range. On top of the can, budget for a one-time NFA registration (now $0 in tax, but the paperwork is still required) and a few supporting parts — a threaded barrel, a mount, and, on a handgun, taller sights. A realistic all-in first suppressor lands somewhere between $450 and $1,800 depending on what you are suppressing.

Suppressor Prices by Type (2026)

Price tracks the caliber and the materials. Titanium and Inconel cans cost more than stainless; modular, multi-caliber designs cost more than dedicated ones. These are typical 2026 street prices — brands and sales move them around.

Suppressor TypeTypical 2026 PriceBest For
Rimfire (.22 LR)$300–$600Cheapest entry point; plinking, pest control
9mm / Pistol$500–$800Handguns and pistol-caliber carbines
.45 ACP$600–$900Big-bore pistols, multi-caliber pistol use
5.56 / .223 Rifle$700–$1,100AR-15s and varmint rifles
.30 Caliber / Hunting$700–$1,300Deer and big-game rifles (.308, 6.5, .300)
Magnum / Big Bore$900–$1,400.338, .50-cal, heavy magnums
Multi-Caliber / Modular$700–$1,200One can across several firearms

Not sure which to pick? Our roundup of the best suppressors for every caliber pairs each of these categories with a specific, currently-available model and live pricing.

The Tax Stamp Is Now $0 (What Changed in 2026)

For decades, every suppressor purchase carried a $200 federal transfer tax — the “tax stamp.” Effective January 1, 2026, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act dropped that tax to $0 for suppressors, short-barreled rifles, short-barreled shotguns, and AOWs. That is a straight $200 saving on every can.

One important caveat: the tax is gone, but the process is not. Suppressors are still NFA items. You still file an ATF Form 4, submit fingerprints and a photo, pass an FBI background check, and wait for approval before you can take the can home. The $0 change removed the cost, not the paperwork. For the full picture, see our guide to the $0 suppressor tax stamp.

The Other Costs Nobody Mentions

The can is the headline number, but a suppressed setup usually needs a few supporting parts. Here is what to budget beyond the suppressor itself:

CostTypical RangeDo You Need It?
NFA tax stamp$0 (was $200)Always — but now free
Dealer transfer / handling fee~$50–$150Usually, if you buy online and transfer to a local SOT dealer
Gun trust$0–$500Optional; many dealers include a free trust, attorneys charge $200–$500
Threaded barrel / barrel work$100–$300Only if your firearm is not already threaded
Suppressor-height sights (handguns)$100–$200Optional, so you can see over the can
QD mount system$100–$200Optional; for swapping the can between guns
Subsonic ammo (ongoing)$600–$1,200 / ~1,000 rdsOptional; for the quietest performance

A gun trust is worth a word. It lets more than one person legally possess the suppressor and simplifies passing it to heirs. Silencer Central and many other dealers now include a free basic trust with purchase, so this line is often $0.

Example: What a Suppressed Setup Really Costs

Three realistic 2026 builds, tax stamp included (at $0):

  • Budget rimfire plinker: $350 rimfire can + $0 stamp + $75 transfer = ~$425 all-in (assuming a threaded .22 you already own).
  • Suppressed 9mm handgun: $650 can + $0 stamp + $100 transfer + $250 threaded barrel + $150 tall sights = ~$1,150 all-in.
  • .30-caliber hunting rifle: $950 can + $0 stamp + $100 transfer + $150 muzzle device/mount = ~$1,200 all-in (most modern hunting rifles are already threaded).

How to Save Money on a Suppressor

  • Buy one modular, multi-caliber can instead of a dedicated can per gun — one $900 modular suppressor can cover several firearms.
  • Take the free trust your dealer offers rather than paying an attorney, unless your estate situation is complex.
  • Start with a threaded firearm to skip the $100–$300 barrel work.
  • Watch for sales — suppressor prices swing widely, and the $0 tax stamp already made every can ~$200 cheaper.

Is a Suppressor Worth the Cost?

For most shooters, yes — and more so now that the tax is gone. A suppressor protects your hearing, reduces recoil and muzzle blast, makes training more comfortable, and is a genuine courtesy on public ranges and while hunting. With the $200 tax eliminated and quality cans starting around $300, 2026 is the cheapest year in NFA history to buy one. Ready to start? Read our full guide on how to buy a suppressor in 2026, check the current Form 4 wait times, and confirm suppressors are legal where you live with our suppressor laws by state guide.

Disclaimer: Prices in this guide are typical 2026 ranges for general reference and vary by brand, dealer, materials, and sales. They are not quotes. Confirm current pricing with a licensed dealer before you buy.

How much does a suppressor cost in 2026?

Most suppressors cost between $300 and $1,400. Rimfire (.22 LR) cans are the cheapest at roughly $300 to $600, while centerfire rifle and magnum cans sit at the top of the range. The old $200 federal tax stamp is now $0 as of January 1, 2026.

Is the $200 tax stamp still required?

No. As of January 1, 2026, the federal transfer tax on suppressors is $0, eliminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. You still file an ATF Form 4, submit fingerprints, and pass a background check, but there is no longer a $200 tax to pay.

What is the cheapest suppressor?

Rimfire (.22 LR) suppressors are the cheapest, typically $300 to $600. They are a popular first can for plinking and pest control.

What extra costs should I budget for beyond the suppressor?

Plan for a dealer transfer or handling fee (often about $50 to $150), possibly a threaded barrel if your firearm is not already threaded ($100 to $300), and on a handgun, suppressor-height sights ($100 to $200). A gun trust is optional and often free.

Do I need a gun trust, and does it cost extra?

A gun trust is optional. It lets more than one person legally possess the suppressor and simplifies passing it to heirs. Many dealers include a free basic trust with purchase, while an attorney-drafted trust runs about $200 to $500.

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