The 20 Best Squirrel Guns Ever

A look at the all-time best rifles, shotguns, and handguns for chasing America’s favorite small game
A gray squirrel clings the trunk of an oak tree with open woods in background.
A gray squirrel peers around the side of an oak tree. (Photo/Adobe Stock - quietbits)

The 20 Best Squirrel Guns Ever

I love to squirrel hunt for the pure, low-brow fun of it. You get to see a lot of game, make a lot of stalks, and do a lot of shooting. That’s the Good Time Trifecta in my book. Plus, it’s cheap and accessible. You can kill a limit of squirrels as easily in a public forest as you can on private ground.

Squirrel hunting is also the perfect opportunity to pull a favorite old gun out of the safe and use it. A couple years ago on on opening weekend, a buddy of mine hit the field with an antique pump .22 that belonged to his grandfather—and he killed a limit with it. All of the guns below, both the classics and some modern favorites, have proven themselves in the woods. I’ve seen them all out there and but for a few exceptions, I’ve killed squirrels with all of them, too. You’re free to argue with my choices, but enter into the fray knowing that if I agreed with you, we’d both be wrong.

The Best Squirrel Rifles

Marlin 39A

Marlin 39A on a white background.
The Marlin 39A is a true classic squirrel rifle and still as deadly as ever. (Photo/Marlin)

Annie Oakley’s lever-action .22 is also the most iconic squirrel rifle of all time. When I think of it, I think of my dad, because that’s the gun he carried, and he’s the one who taught me to hunt squirrels. Most don’t associate lever guns with precision, but this one isn’t built like most lever guns. It’s big and heavy, with a wide forend that rests perfectly against saplings, and a Micro Groove barrel that is famous for cloverleaf groups. Dad’s gun likes a Winchester 37-grain Super Speed hollowpoint, wears the same fixed 4x scope that it’s always had, and will shoot tight groups to this day. The 39A is no longer made, but there are plenty of good used ones on the market. They aren't cheap (usually in the $700 to $1,200 range), but they're worth it.

Remington 552 Speedmaster

Remington 552 Speedmaster on a white background.
You can find Speedmasters on the used market for under $500. (Photo/Rock Island Auction Company)

With a classic walnut stock and the unmistakable brass deflector, the 552 Speedmaster is another icon of the squirrel woods, edging out the Nylon 66 as my semi-auto of choice from Remington. The Speedmaster looks better and in my experience, shoots better, too. It’s a tube-fed autoloader, and it’s one of the very few autoloaders that will handle Short and Long .22 cartridges, in addition to the usual Long Rifles. That’s not a huge advantage these days, since few people shoot anything other than .22LR, but 20 years ago, many of the serious squirrel hunters I knew swore by the .22 Short, because it destroyed very little meat.

CZ 457 Varmint

CZ 457 Varmint on a white background.
The CZ 457 Varmint is perfect for sniping squirrels at longer ranges. (Photo/CZ-USA)

Two years ago, I got this rifle—mine’s a .17 HMR—on loan from CZ. It remains the most accurate firearm I’ve ever owned, though the newer suppressor-ready 457 ProVarmint in .22 LR is a close second. When they asked for it back, I told them no, and sent them a check for it instead. My 10-year-old son, Anse, squirrel hunts with me often as not, and he long ago dubbed the gun Big Blister. When squirrels are out of range for him, he asks me to press Big Blister into service, because he is from a bloodline that does not like to see things get away. With this gun, squirrels seldom do. I shoot a 20-grain CCI Game Point out of it, which isn’t as explosive as most .17 HMR rounds are on squirrels. Still, you’re best to aim for the eyeballs to keep all the quarters intact.

Browning SA-22

The Browning SA-22 Grade VI.
The Browning SA-22 Grade VI was the first semiauto 22 introduced and is still in production today. (Photo/Browning)

In all my years as an outdoor writing hack, the question I’m asked most often is, “How the hell do you skin those squirrels so fast?” It’s because I paid attention as a kid. When my neighbor saw me struggling to skin game with the traditional, cut-across-the-back method, he taught me a better way. And after skinning a few thousand bushytails, I’ve gotten OK at it. That neighbor was a squirrel killer, and the rifle he used was Browning’s SA-22. The bottom-ejecting autoloader, based on a John Browning patent, was the first semi-auto .22 ever put into production—and they’re still made to this day. With walnut furniture, a sleek forend, and a tubular magazine that loads through the stock, the gun is unmistakable. The current production Grade VI models have golden critters engraved into the receiver—squirrels included. The rifle is a take-down, and the barrel, not the receiver, is drilled and tapped for scope mounting.

Marlin 880 SQ

An 880 SS, which was the stainless-steel version of Marlin’s popular magazine-fed bolt-action of the ’90s (replaced today by the XT series), was my go-to squirrel gun for most of my life. I still have it and hunt with it to this day, and it’s still one of the best-shooting .22s I’ve ever owned. But I’ve always wanted the SQ version of the same rifle. It’s my gun, but with a heavy barrel and recessed crown. The 880 SQ wasn’t an expensive gun but in its day, if you saw a squirrel hunter toting one, you knew he was serious about his head-shooting.

Ruger 10-22

Ruger 10-22 on a white background.
The standard Ruger 10-22 is accurate enough for the squirrel woods, but it's also made to be customized. (Photo/Ruger)

The most-often customized rimfire in the world definitely makes the list—though it’s a safe bet the plain, wood-stocked factory version bought straight off the gun rack has been carried to the squirrel woods more than anything else. Autoloading .22s don’t get much more reliable, and when fitted with a heavy aftermarket barrel, they’re hell-on-wheels-accurate. But in my experience, even the skinny, factory carbine tubes are plenty accurate enough for squirrel hunting. My hunting buddy in high school carried one, and when we’d finish our limits of a morning, we’d take whatever ammo was left in our pockets and load it into the 30-round “banana mag” he kept in his backpack. Then, we’d spray .22 bullets into a muddy creek bank, fast as we could pull the trigger. That was good redneck fun, back when ammo was cheap and people weren’t hoarding it. The 10-22 is handy and inexpensive, and if you’re the type to tinker, there’s just nothing better.

Read Next: Four Tactics for Hardcore Squirrel Hunters

Winchester Model 62

Winchester Model 62 on a white background.
The Winchester Model 62. (Photo/Rock Island Auction Company)

Most of these classic pump-action “gallery guns” are surprisingly good shooters that will last forever, because they were designed to entertain the class of people who enjoy attending traveling carnivals (by God, I love carnivals). That gun I referenced earlier, that my buddy hunted with on opening weekend, and that his grandfather also hunted with decades and decades ago, was a vintage Model 62 pump. I have a stainless-steel Taurus reproduction of the same rifle that I bought in the late ’90s, and I kept it in my truck during my later years in college, after I sold my Model 60. It’s a take-down gun that easily breaks apart and stashes in a gear bag. Scope mounting is possible but inconvenient, so I never added an optic. But I had better eyes back in college, and I used its open sights to keep our dorm room crockpot a bubbling with fresh squirrel quarters at all times.

Ruger American .22 WMR

Ruger American .22 WMR on a white background.
The Ruger American .22 WMR shoots above it's price point. (Photo/Ruger)

During that same college experience, I met my buddy Ryan while I was cleaning squirrels in the dorm parking lot on the tailgate of my pickup. We’ve hunted together every season since, and these days, run a part-time outfitting operation for folks who want to hunt squirrels with precision rimfire rifles. If you are a squirrel, he is to be avoided at all costs, particularly if he’s carrying his pet Ruger American .22 WMR—which he just calls “Twenty-Two Magnum.” For less than $400, this is a rifle that has an adjustable trigger, shoots way better than it should, and is nearly indestructible. He loaned to a friend just last weekend, and that friend said the gun was so good, the scope seemed to have an “autocorrect” function so as to prevent missing. Thinking about it, I’m not sure I’ve ever seen Ryan miss anything with it.

Traditions Crockett .32

Traditions Crockett .32 on a white background.
The Traditions Crockett .32 can be very accurate once you dial in the right load. (Photo/Traditions)

Years ago, I had a .32-caliber Traditions muzzleloader that’s similar to the Crockett rifle in current production. A classic percussion sidelock, the gun is about the closest thing you can get today to the rifle Jeremiah Johnson settled for before he found Hatchet Jack’s frozen carcass and .50-caliber Hawken on the mountainside. Small-bore muzzleloaders can be a little finicky—but they’re also amazingly accurate once you dial into the right load. Mine shot best with just 12 grains of FFFG black powder and a patched .310 lead round ball, and that combo was lethal on 25-yard squirrels.

Marlin Model 60

Marlin Model 60 semiauto 22 rifle on white background.
Marlin's Model 60 has always been an extremely reliable semiauto. (Photo/Rock Island Auction Company)

Popular as Ruger’s rimfire autoloader still is, the Marlin Model 60 was arguably even more so in its heyday. The rifle was lightweight at 5.5 pounds and fed by way of a tubular magazine. It had Marlin’s signature Micro-Groove rifling, which made it plenty accurate enough for squirrel hunting though, in my experience, the 10-22 and any of Marlin’s bolt-actions shot a little better. The Model 60 was always dead-nuts reliable and I’ve several of them over the years, including one I bought my freshman year of college for bumming around in Land Between the Lakes. The rifle was discontinued in 2020, and Ruger has since acquired the Marlin brand. Although they’ve done an excellent job at reintroducing some of Marlin’s classic lever guns (I’m hoping the 39A is next), I don’t see them reintroducing the 10-22’s chief competitor anytime soon.

Anschutz 1761 AV Threaded 18

Anschutz 1761 AV Threaded 18" bolt-action 22 LR on white background.
The Anschutz 1761 AV Threaded 18 goes for about $1,850 new. (Photo/Anschutz)

I’m not choosing this particular “Annie” because it’s any better than the others in the esteemed rifle maker’s extensive lineup. And it’s one of the only guns on this list that I haven’t used extensively myself. But Anschutz makes Olympic-grade competition rifles, and several squirrel hunters who I trust, and who know more than I do about guns, say that when it comes to high-end rimfires, nothing beats an Anschutz. With a classic wooden stock and blued finish, they’re certainly nice to look at—but with an 18-inch bull barrel that’s threaded for a suppressor, and an overall weight of just a little more than 6 pounds, this is the .22 I might buy to squirrel hunt with when I retire.

Bergara BMR Carbon

Bergara BMR Carbon bolt-action rimfire rifle on white background.
Bergara BMR Carbon makes a great lightweight squirrel-sniping rifle. (Photo/Bergara)

The Bergara Micro Rimfire (BMR) is one of the newer rifles on this list, but one that’s proven to me that a rimfire capable of target-grade accuracy needn’t weigh 8+ pounds when scoped. If you like to cover ground while squirrel hunting, perhaps behind a couple yapping feists or curs, then this 5-pound rifle makes all the sense in the world. Mine’s chambered in .22 WMR and accurate to thread bullets through a squirrel’s eyeballs at 75 yards, but you can get the gun in .17 HMR and .22 LR, too. It’s threaded for a suppressor, like any modern rimfire rifle ought to be.

Related: Squirrel Hunting: The Ultimate Guide to Chasing Bushytails

Shotguns

Winchester Model 37

Winchester Model 37 on a white background.
The Winchester Model 37 is another classic in the squirrel woods. (Photo/Rock Island Auction Company)

Any shotgun will work just fine for squirrel hunting. Tote a Perazzi to the hickories, if that’s your thing. But a single-barrel introduced during the Great Depression gets my nod as the best squirrel-hunting scattergun of all time. The Model 37 sported a small exposed hammer and beefy “Steelbilt” construction. The automatic ejector popped those spent hulls out damn near as hard as the gunpowder propelled the shot, too. Most of them came with factory full chokes—almost as if the Winchester folks knew that these would be used for dropping squirrels from high out of the canopies. I have one in 16 gauge that was my dad’s first gun when he was a kid, and the shotgun he carried when he wasn’t carrying a rifle. He called it “Brother Win,” and loaded it with hi-brass “ounce and an eighth sixes.” Brother Win would kill a fox squirrel at 50 steps back then, and it still will today.

Mossberg 510 Mini Youth Super Bantam

Mossberg 510 Mini Youth Super Bantam on a white background.
Mossberg's 510 Mini Youth Super Bantam goes for under $400. (Photo/Mossberg)

A little shotgun that fits, with a woods full of squirrels, is about the best way I know of to get a kid into hunting. With an 18.5-inch barrel and weight of just 5 pounds, I don’t know of a shotgun any smaller than this micro-sized pump, either. The 510 is based on Mossberg’s time-tested Model 500. I’ve shot the 20-gauge version, and its recoil with anything heavier than a dove load is akin to Daniel LaRusso’s crane kick to the face. But the .410 version isn’t bad at all, and if you’re using lead shot, squirrel hunting is the one pursuit where that little shell and its 11/16-ounce payload is actually useful.

Harrington & Richardson Topper

Harrington & Richardson Topper on a white background..
You can sometimes find used Toppers for under $150. (Photo/Harrington & Richardson)

You can find as many of these old guns stamped with the New England brand as the H&R brand, but they’re all under the same umbrella. Like the Winchester M37, the Topper had everything going for it, as squirrel guns go. It was rugged, inexpensive, simple, and reliable—plus, with a full choke, it threw a tight, game-killing pattern. There were compact and Junior versions, trap versions, versions with color-case-hardened receivers, and even a survival-style Tamer version in .410. But the standard Topper, usually in 20-gauge, is the gun I’ve seen used most in the squirrel woods, and it’s still one of the best bargains going in the world of single-barrel shotguns.

CVA Scout .410

CVA Scout .410 on a white background.
The Scout .410 goes for about $400 new. (Photo/CVA)

Seeing as this gun is new for 2020, it might seem a stretch to include in a list of best guns ever. But my son used it to kill his first squirrel just the other day, and I know a winner when I see it. It’s functionally like any other break-action single shot—but with some thoroughly modern enhancements. Marketed as a turkey gun to pair with TSS .410 shells, it has a Jeb’s turkey tube, a scope base, and a synthetic camo stock with removable spacers to accommodate a growing hunter. All of those things help for precision shooting, which is exactly how you should think of a .410 in the squirrel woods. It’s much closer to rifle shooting than wing-shooting. You need a tight pattern aimed right at them, same as you’d aim at a gobbler’s head.

Handguns

Ruger New Model Single Six Hunter .17 HMR

Ruger New Model Single Six Hunter .17 HMR on a white background.
The New Model Single Six Hunter .17 HMR goes for a little over $800 new. (Photo/Ruger)

My introduction to the .17 HMR came while field-testing this handgun during squirrel season some 15 years ago. I was impressed with the cartridge’s accuracy potential then, and I still am today. The revolver had a 7.5-inch barrel with a slab of steel on top, cut for the included Ruger scope rings. I added a variable-power Leupold pistol scope to it, and from a good rest, the gun would outshoot my .22 rifle. And at reduced handgun velocities, the .17 HMR wasn’t any more destructive on squirrels than a high-velocity .22 hollowpoint from a rifle, either. I didn’t have the money to buy that gun at the end of the review, and so I returned it. I’d call it one that got away. A similar version with the integral mount is still listed today on Ruger’s website, but best I can tell, it’s only offered in .22 Long Rifle.

Smith & Wesson 617

Smith & Wesson 617 on a white background.
The Smith & Wesson 617 has a great reputation for accuracy. (Photo/S&W)

Built on Smith’s K-frame, this one is a big double-action—big at least, as rimfires go. The modern version of the Model 17 K-22 Masterpiece (a 6-shooter introduced in 1947), the 617 is a stainless gun with a 10-round cylinder. It has a reputation for being one of the most accurate production revolvers out there. My buddy got one for Christmas when we were in high school, and he still has it today. He mounted a red-dot sight to it, and though I prefer a scope for hand-gunning squirrels, it’s still a fine setup for close-range hunting.

Ruger Mark IV Hunter

Ruger Mark IV Hunter on a white background.
The Ruger Mark IV Hunter. Ruger starts at around $1,000. (Photo/Ruger)

The Mark IV solved the biggest issue many shooters had with Ruger’s classic Mark II semi-auto, with its one-button takedown system. With a fixed barrel and receiver, these pistols produce the accuracy necessary for a dedicated squirrel pistol. The Hunter version has good adjustable sights, a 6.8-inch tube, stainless finish, and nice-looking wood grips. It’s also drilled and tapped for an optics base, which is all but mandatory for hand-gunning squirrels.

Browning Buck Mark Field Target

Browning Buck Mark Field Target on a white background.
The Browning Buck Mark Field Target sells for $730 new. (Photo/Browning)

Like the Ruger, there are many iterations of the Buck Mark, and they’ll all work on squirrels in a pinch. But choosing a model that’s a little “dressed up” is the way to go if you’re looking for a dedicated hunting gun. Although there is a “Hunter” version of the Buck Mark available, my nod for a new squirrel pistol would actually go to the suppressor-ready Field-Target model, which has a full-length Picatinny rail for mounting whatever optic you’d like to use. The muzzle is threaded for use with a suppressor, too. Sub-sonic ammo makes for the quietest report, but it sucks for hunting—especially at yet slower handgun speeds. Still, a suppressor will dampen the crack of the high-velocity hollowpoints that you need to use for this game, which is handy for both saving your own hearing and for keeping multiple squirrels in one tree from scattering to parts unknown after the first shot is fired.

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