When Browning introduced the 12-gauge A5 a dozen or so years ago, a 20-gauge seemed like a natural follow-up. Instead, some marketing genius at Browning realized a Sweet Sixteen version would be pure catnip for upland hunters, and it was. The success of the Sweet Sixteen meant a 20-gauge went on the back burner, where it has been simmering, up until now.
It was worth the wait. I’ve had a chance to shoot one for a while and to give it tough enough workout in the uplands that I put a dent in the rib (not sure how I did that. Sorry!), as well as a dent in local pheasant population, too. Given the choice between the coolness of a 16-gauge and the practicality of the 20, I’d take the 20-gauge every time, because I am soulless and boring that way, but also because this is a terrific small-bore semiauto.
Browning A5 Hunter 20-Gauge Specs
Length: 49.75 inches (with 28-inch barrels and stock spacers in place)
Weight: 5 2/3-pounds
Barrel: 28-inch flat vent rib, small fiber-optic bead, three Invector DS 2 chokes
Action: Inertia semiautomatic
Trigger: 6 pounds, 15 ounces
Capacity: 4+1
Finish: Gloss black receiver, blued barrel
Stock: Gloss walnut
Chambering: 3-inch 20-gauge (16-gauge and 3- and 3 ½-inch 12-gauge models also available)
Price: $1,599
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Browning A5 Hunter 20-Gauge Overview
![Close-up photo of Browning A5 Hunter 20-gauge shotgun on a wood background.](https://images.ctfassets.net/fbkgl98xrr9f/4AsH6ocXDRtvxPgOfywtOA/bac0c14ad500f31e9d652c498ae7bdf8/MAT7471_HR.jpg?fm=webp&q=75)
The A5, of course, is not the original Auto 5, but an inertia-operated semiauto with the squared-off, humpback receiver of the original. Despite its Benelli-like inertia system, it is very much a Browning semiauto with the level of fit and finish you’d expect from a Browning gun. The stock of the Hunter model has a gloss urethane finish with panels of checkering. They wouldn’t be my first aesthetic choice, but they are well-executed, and they grew on me. The receiver is gloss-black anodized, and the barrel is deeply blued. The butt has Browning’s excellent Inflex 2 recoil pad—which comes in handy on a featherlight inertia gun—and the barrel is threaded for Browning’s Invector DS 2 chokes. It has a flat vent rib and a small, unobtrusive, orange fiber-optic sight. Stock dimensions are 1 ¾ at the comb and 2 inches at the heel, and the gun has a pronounced pistol grip which a lot of hunters like.
The gun has some features developed on other Browning semiautos: the Speed-Load two-piece carrier, the highly convenient “Turn Key” magazine plug that pops out easily if you need to remove it, and, best of all from my left-handed perspective, a very easily-switched, large safety button. The trigger guard is enlarged for easier use with gloves, too.
Test Results from the Range and the Field
![The Browning A5 Hunter 20-gauge lying on the ground with a pair of pheasants taken with the gun.](https://images.ctfassets.net/fbkgl98xrr9f/7cW2T1QAaA4EIYYiUkuKX/2e494707c419aa9f4c4046b99c2a3136/A5_20_gauge_and_pheasants.jpg?fm=webp&q=75)
My test gun fit me just fine out of the box, and it is shim-adjustable. With a weight of just 5 pounds, 10 ounces with a 28-inch barrel, it was a joy to carry. Recoil was not terrible, due to the soft, thick pad. I shot it on a pattern plate, and it hit about 65/35 (maybe even 60/40) above and below point of aim, which is great for most people and for most types of hunting. It took me a couple of rounds of skeet to get used to it because I usually shoot heavier target and field guns. Once I got more familiar with it, I found it to be great on going away and quartering targets, and tolerable on crossers. While not a gun I would choose for any clay shooting, I could hit skeet targets with it reasonably well.
The going-away and quartering versus crossing shot rule held true in the field, as well. The one bird I scratched down was a medium-distance crosser. (Of course, it could never be my fault I didn’t hit the bird squarely could it?) Otherwise the A5 popped to my shoulder and shot exactly where I wanted it to. Loaded with Boss 7/8 ounce bismuth “Stinger” 5s, it did not seem to recoil at all, and it killed birds cleanly, too. I did shoot a couple birds with 3-inch Winchester bismuth loads, and in the excitement of the flush, I didn’t feel them go off at all either.
![A shooter fires the new Browning A5 Hunter 20-gauge on the skeet range.](https://images.ctfassets.net/fbkgl98xrr9f/5BPO6EAMUKVw0KOipIuc1x/58f0e9b5d22cf80091845acb6dd0b5cc/A5_20_gauge_skeet_shooting.jpg?fm=webp&q=75)
Besides the large safety, which I like, the gun also has a nice, big bolt-lock button in front of the trigger guard in place of the little metal tabs on other guns. It’s easy to load; there’s no thumb-pinching and the bolt is easy to pull back, even without an enlarged handle. The trigger is on the heavier side at 6 pounds, 15 ounces, but I was fine with it. All in all, it performed about as well as I could have hoped for on the range, and even better better in the field.
Related: 10 Best Shotguns for Pheasant Hunting
Final Thoughts on the New Browning A5 Hunter 20-Gauge
![The new Browning A5 20-gauge on a table with grouse fans, shotgun shells, a hunting vest, and a hat.](https://images.ctfassets.net/fbkgl98xrr9f/2QUuJVJiOIsWnm0sUSfYBZ/70fbd6b685d5dec970ebaa4efb7b1225/MAT7742B_HR.jpg?fm=webp&q=75)
Pros
Light weight
Good fit and finish
Easy-to-use controls
Cons
Crossing shots require a little more concentration
Possiblity of out-of-battery misfire, though I did not experience it
The A5 is an inertia gun, meaning that there is the possibility of a misfire if you don’t slam the bolt shut and make sure you don’t bump it. Although I have had “click” misfires, I have never had one in the uplands. As long as you keep this gun in its natural habitat—the grouse woods, chukar ridges, quail thickets, and pheasant fields—you shouldn’t have a problem.
As for 20 vs 16, this gun is a couple of ounces lighter than I remember the Sweet 16 as being. With a 3-inch chamber, it can actually shoot steel loads that are a smidge heavier than 16-gauge steel, and 20-gauge ammo is easy to find and more likely to be available for less money. In all, the new A5 Hunter 20 a great addition to Browning’s semiauto lineup—and possibly to your own personal shotgun lineup, too.