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Best Camp Guns of 2023

These guns are ideal for packing into camp or stashing in a bugout bag
Skinner Sights Bush Pilot Carbine Survival Kit.

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Best Camp Guns of 2023

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Best Overall

Best Camp Guns: Ruger 10/22 Takedown

Ruger 10/22 Takedown

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Best Budget

Best Camp Guns: Chiappa Little Badger

Chiappa Little Badger

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Best Rated

Best Camp Guns: Henry Arms AR-7

Henry Arms AR-7

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A camp gun is generally considered a gun kept handy for dispatching vermin and potting small game around camp. The notion being that for big game and predator defense, you’ll have a more powerful rifle available. Over the years, a variety of guns have filled this role, but as guns became more specialized, we started to see manufacturers offering purpose-built camp guns. These guns are not only compact, but can also be taken down for easy storage and transport in a vehicle, canoe, or backpack.

We’ve reviewed and ranked some of the best camp guns available today below, from big names like Ruger, Savage, and Browning.

How We Picked the Best Camp Guns

Rimfires dominate this genre of firearms but in some instances, a camp might need a gun with a little more punch. The last thing someone wants to do is fend off a bear with a .22 rifle. So, the modern definition of a camp gun could be: A light, compact rifle, that can be broken down for easy transport, offering sufficient power to protect a camp and dispatch food, respective of the location and potential threats.

As broadly as that might be interpreted, there aren’t a lot of rifles that fit that description. And, while options might be limited, fortunately, they are good. Here are the best camp guns ranging in price from $200 to $2,000. One of them should work for your camp, whether it’s on the back 40 of your grandfather’s farm in Nebraska, or in the wilds of wolf-infested Idaho.

Best Camp Guns: Reviews and Recommendations

Best Overall: Ruger 10/22 Takedown

Best Camp Guns: Ruger 10/22 Takedown

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Ruger’s 10/22 is undeniably the most successful rimfire rifle ever manufactured. It is offered in countless variations and there are more aftermarket accessories for the 10/22 than there are Justin Bieber fans. Including distributor exclusives, Ruger currently offers 15 different takedown versions of the 10/22 with a variety of stocks. The basic model features a stainless steel finish and comes with a carrying case. Open sights and a flush-fitting 10-round magazine are standard, as is a Weaver-style scope base. From the standpoint of dependability, accuracy, practicality, and cost, the Ruger 10/22 Takedown is, without question, the best rimfire camp gun in current production. If you do not own one already, don’t tell anyone, they’ll only think less of you, and a trip to your therapist might be in order.

Best Budget: Chiappa Little Badger

Best Budget

Best Camp Guns: Chiappa Little Badger

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Chiappa’s Little Badger Survival Rifle will not win you any shooting matches, but it is solidly in competition for the ugliest rimfire rifle ever created. However, at about $200 retail, it’s also the least expensive survival/camp rifle you’ll find. This break-action single-shot is available in .22 LR or .22 WMR. It weighs less than three pounds and is only 17 inches long when broken-down.

The buttstock has a built-in shell holder, there are Picatinny rails just forward of the receiver for mounting accessories, and an optional handle/cleaning kit combination can be screwed into the receiver. It even has a threaded muzzle. I don’t think this is a gun anyone will brag about owning, but I’m betting it’s one they’ll be glad to have in their hands if things get ugly.

Best Rated: Henry Arms AR-7

Best Rated

Best Camp Guns: Henry Arms AR-7

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Developed in 1959 from the AR-5, a U.S. Air Force pilot/aircrewman survival weapon, rights to the Armalite AR-7 were eventually acquired by Henry Repeating Arms in 1980. It might be the most recognizable survival rifle of all time and has probably earned that reputation, if not in the real world, at least on the Internet. (James Bond even used one in the movie, From Russia with Love.) This eight-shot, semi-automatic rifle’s barrel and action can be stored in its hollow, impact and water-resistant stock.

Takedown and assembly take only seconds and require no tools, and the receiver has a rail for scope mounting. Over the years, the AR-7 has been offered in several finishes but is currently available in either black, True Timber-Kanati, or True Timber-Viper Western camo. With street prices of less than $300, it’s hard to imagine any serious outdoorsman without one of these behind their truck seat.

Best Compact: Marlin 70 PSS Takedown

Best Compact

Marlin 70 PSS Takedown

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For easy in-the-backpack transport, Marlin’s model 70 PSS Takedown—also known as the Papoose—seems to be the perfect option. The design has been around for more than 30 years and the rifle comes with a small spanner wrench to assist with takedown and assembly. This 3¼-pound, seven-shot, autoloader comes with its own zippered and padded case that floats in case it falls out of your canoe.

All of the metal surfaces on this rifle are nickel-plated to help with corrosion resistance, and the stainless-steel barrel measures 16 ¼-inches long. The rifle is even fitted with sling swivel studs. The Papoose can be assembled and taken apart in a matter of seconds and with an across-the-counter price of about three bills, it won’t make your wallet weep. Surprisingly, ProMag offers a 25-round magazine for this jewel.

Best Caliber: Browning SA 22

Best Caliber

Browning SA 22

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The Browning SA 22 might be way too elegant to be considered a camp gun, but it is just too reliable, handy, and accurate not to be included on this list. The least expensive Grade I is probably best suited for camp duty. It weighs in at 5 pounds and is about a meter long. It also can be broken down in just seconds.

Unlike most take-down rimfire rifles, the Barrel on the SA 22 is almost 20 inches. This length increases the sight radius and helps you shoot more accurately. The SA 22 is uniquely loaded through the buttstock and just as oddly, ejects the empty cases from the bottom of the receiver, which is grooved to accept scope mounts. If you have $1,600 to spend, get the Grade VI version. It’ll bleed your wallet, but you’ll have the coolest rimfire at the campfire.

Most Versatile: Savage 42 Takedown

Most Versatile

Savage 42 Takedown

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It’s been suggested that a shotgun might be the most versatile gun you can own. However, true rimfire aficionados will argue that point. Maybe the solution to versatility is a gun that can fire rimfire ammo and shotgun ammo. The Savage 42 Takedown is a break-action, takedown gun with over/under barrels. It is less than a meter long, weighs only six pounds, and is available in two configurations; .22 LR and .22 Winchester Magnum. Both have a bottom barrel that fires .410 shotshells.

This gun breaks down with the simple push of a single button and comes with a bug-out bag for easy transport. Throw a handful of rimfire rounds, a couple .410 slugs, and a box of shotshells in the bag, and you’re ready for just about anything. Well, almost anything. It won’t win any beauty contests; this gun is as ugly as it is useful.

Most Customizable: Ruger PC Carbine

Most Customizable

Ruger PC Carbine

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Outdoorsmen often think of camp guns as guns that’ll be used to feed themselves, dispatch vermin, and maybe provide some protection from four-legged predators. However, a camp gun might very well be needed for defense against two-legged predators, too. In the tradition of the discontinued Marlin Camp Carbine, Ruger is offering the PC Carbine, which is a compact, take-down, semi-auto rifle, chambered for either the 9mm Luger or .40 S&W. Ruger offers 19 versions with a wide variety of features, the lightest of which weighs only 6.8 pounds and is shorter than a yardstick.

These carbines also accept either Ruger SR-Series, Glock, or Ruger American pistol magazines, which makes them a great companion to one of those sidearms.

Best Camp Guns: Final Thoughts

Why Trust Us

For more than 125 years, Field & Stream has been providing readers with honest and authentic coverage of outdoor gear. Our writers and editors eat, sleep, and breathe the outdoors, and that passion comes through in our product reviews. You can count on F&S to keep you up to date on the best new gear. And when we write about a product—whether it’s a bass lure or a backpack—we cover the good and the bad, so you know exactly what to expect before you decide to make a purchase.