Close Menu
  • Stories
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
        • Elk Hunting
        • Bear Hunting
      • Deer Hunting
        • Whitetail Hunting
        • Mule Deer Hunting
      • Predator Hunting
        • Bobcat Hunting
      • Small Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Dogs
        • Hunting Dogs
        • Canine Gear & Accessories
      • Turkey Hunting
      • Waterfowl Hunting
        • Duck Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Freshwater Fishing
        • Bass Fishing
        • Catfishing
        • Trout Fishing
        • Pike & Muskie Fishing
      • Saltwater Fishing
        • Striped Bass Fishing
      • Ice Fishing
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Handguns Ammo
        • Shotguns Ammo
        • Rifles Ammo
      • Rifles
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
    • Survival
      • Survival Food
      • Wilderness Survival
      • All Survival
    • Conservation
      • Hunting Conservation
      • Fishing Conservation
      • Public Lands & Waters
      • Wildlife Conservation
    • Cooking
      • Recipes
  • Outdoor Gear
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Bow Hunting
        • Crossbows
        • Compound Bows
      • Boots
      • Hunting Calls & Decoys
      • Knives
      • Hunting Apparel & Accessories
      • Optics
        • Binoculars
        • Scopes and Sights
        • Rangefinders
      • Trail Cameras
      • Waterfowl Hunting
      • Turkey Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Baits, Lures, and Flies
      • Fishing Reels
      • Fishing Rods
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Shotgun Ammo
        • Rifle Ammo
        • Handgun Ammo
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
      • Rifles
    • Camping & Outdoor Rec
      • Auto & Truck
      • Camping Gear
      • Hiking & Backpacking
    • Gift Guides
    • Cooking
      • Cooking Gear
  • Shop
    • Shop Field & Stream
      • F&S Shop
      • Hunting
      • Fishing
      • Camping & Hiking
      • Clothing
      • Footwear
      • Gear
      • Outdoor Living
      • Member Merch
      • Journals
      • Gift Cards
      • Membership Gift Card
      • Merchandise Gift Card
    • Shop Field & Stream at:
      • Tractor Supply Co.
      • Amazon
      • Moultrie
      • Yuengling
      • Old Wood Signs
      • Best Home Furnishings
      • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
      • Gokey
      • WearSPF
  • F&S TV
  • Membership
    • Subscription Plans
    • Free Membership
    • Member Login / Create an Account
    • Gift a Subscription
      • Premium Membership
      • Print Membership
Search
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Join the 1871 Club to access two limited-edition Father's Day gifts · LEARN MORE
Field & Stream
  • Stories
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
        • Elk Hunting
        • Bear Hunting
      • Deer Hunting
        • Whitetail Hunting
        • Mule Deer Hunting
      • Predator Hunting
        • Bobcat Hunting
      • Small Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Dogs
        • Hunting Dogs
        • Canine Gear & Accessories
      • Turkey Hunting
      • Waterfowl Hunting
        • Duck Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Freshwater Fishing
        • Bass Fishing
        • Catfishing
        • Trout Fishing
        • Pike & Muskie Fishing
      • Saltwater Fishing
        • Striped Bass Fishing
      • Ice Fishing
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Handguns Ammo
        • Shotguns Ammo
        • Rifles Ammo
      • Rifles
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
    • Survival
      • Survival Food
      • Wilderness Survival
      • All Survival
    • Conservation
      • Hunting Conservation
      • Fishing Conservation
      • Public Lands & Waters
      • Wildlife Conservation
    • Cooking
      • Recipes
  • Outdoor Gear
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Bow Hunting
        • Crossbows
        • Compound Bows
      • Boots
      • Hunting Calls & Decoys
      • Knives
      • Hunting Apparel & Accessories
      • Optics
        • Binoculars
        • Scopes and Sights
        • Rangefinders
      • Trail Cameras
      • Waterfowl Hunting
      • Turkey Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Baits, Lures, and Flies
      • Fishing Reels
      • Fishing Rods
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Shotgun Ammo
        • Rifle Ammo
        • Handgun Ammo
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
      • Rifles
    • Camping & Outdoor Rec
      • Auto & Truck
      • Camping Gear
      • Hiking & Backpacking
    • Gift Guides
    • Cooking
      • Cooking Gear
  • Shop
    • Shop Field & Stream
      • F&S Shop
      • Hunting
      • Fishing
      • Camping & Hiking
      • Clothing
      • Footwear
      • Gear
      • Outdoor Living
      • Member Merch
      • Journals
      • Gift Cards
      • Membership Gift Card
      • Merchandise Gift Card
    • Shop Field & Stream at:
      • Tractor Supply Co.
      • Amazon
      • Moultrie
      • Yuengling
      • Old Wood Signs
      • Best Home Furnishings
      • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
      • Gokey
      • WearSPF
  • F&S TV
  • Membership
    • Subscription Plans
    • Free Membership
    • Member Login / Create an Account
    • Gift a Subscription
      • Premium Membership
      • Print Membership
JOIN THE 1871 CLUB
Join the 1871 Club Today - Spring Journal Ships in April
Field & Stream
Home / Outdoor Gear / Guns / Ammo / Clip vs Magazine: What’s the Difference?
Ammo

Clip vs Magazine: What’s the Difference?

Richard MannBy Richard MannJanuary 23, 2026

FIELD & STREAM NEWSLETTERS

ALL F&S NEWSLETTERS

We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more ›

When it comes to clip vs magazine, there seems to be some confusion among many shooters, or at least a tendency to say one when we mean to other. Both “clip” and “magazine” describe a device used to help feed ammunition into a repeating firearm, but they’re not the same thing. If you’re on the range shooting a Glock with a buddy, and you ask him to hand you another “clip,” he’ll know exactly what you mean. But you’ll be saying the wrong thing—so let’s get clip vs magazine cleared up.

Clip vs Magazine, the Short Answer

photo showing a clip on the left and a magazine on the right
Here, you have clip on the left and a magazine on the right. (Photo/Richard Mann)

Simply put, a magazine holds the ammunition of a loaded repeating rifle and helps feed it into the chamber as the rifle’s action is worked. A clip, on the other hand, is a device used to help load ammunition into a magazine. That’s the short answer and the photo above shows the common examples of what most people mean when they say “clip” and “magazine.” As basic as all of that sounds, though, there are several types of clips and magazines, which makes things a little more complicated. So, it’s worth taking a minute to fully sort out the clip vs magazine issue if only to help you communicate with your fellow shooter more effectively. Here’s the full breakdown.

The Internal Magazine

photo showing a lever-action rifle with a tubular magazine
Many lever-action rifles have an internal tubular magazine under the barrel. (Photo/Marlin)

The magazine is at the very heart of every repeating firearm, as it holds ammo at the ready for repeated shots. Without it, you’d have to load rounds individually, and you’d have a single-shot, not a repeater. There are two types of magazines: external and internal. The former are removable and the latter are fixed. So, let’s start with the latter.

Internal magazines come in different forms. Some rifles, like pump-action 22s and many lever-action rifles, have a tubular magazine that’s attached under the barrel. Most, however, have an internal magazine that’s situated just below the action. If your bolt-action rifle has a hinged floorplate and you load it by opening the bolt and pushing rounds down against a spring-loaded follower, then you are loading the rifle’s internal magazine. However, nobody calls an internal magazine a “clip.” The confusion comes with external, detachable magazines. So”¦

The Detachable Magazine

photo of a detachable magazine
The author loads a double-stack detachable magazine into a rifle’s magazine well. (Photo/Richard Mann)

A detachable external magazine is a steel or plastic rectangular box that serves the same purpose as a fixed internal magazine—but can be removed. The area from which it’s removed is called the magazine well and is usually situated under the action, just like most internal mags.

Almost all modern semi-automatic repeating firearms feed from a detachable magazine; it’s become the standard. Detachable magazines are used with semi-automatic handguns and rifles, as well as with many bolt-action rifles because they make ammunition management outside of the firearm easy, and they make loading and reloading fast and reliable, which is especially useful when volume fire is needed. Most detachable magazines are rectangular and either of the single- or double-stack design. But there are also drum magazines, and you could argue that the linked belt that feeds some machine guns is a magazine of sorts, even though it uses clips (links) to hold the ammunition together.

The Stripper Clip

photo of a stripper clip
A stripper clip loaded with 30-06 rounds. (Photo/Richard Mann)

The stripper clip is used to help load a rifle’s internal magazine, but it’s not inserted into the rifle’s internal magazine with the ammunition it holds. A stripper clip holds several cartridges in a straight line and is inserted into a slot in the top rear of a rifle’s receiver when the bolt is open. Once that’s done, you just push down on the top round in the clip and all the cartridges are stripped from the clip and forced into the rifle’s internal magazine. Then the stripper clip is discarded or saved for use again. Though detachable magazines are now very popular with bolt-action rifles, some shooters still use stripper clips with rifles like the 1903 Springfield to help manage ammunition and to help load the rifle faster. Stripper clips can also be used to assist with the loading of some detachable magazines.

The En Bloc Clip

photo of en block clip
An en block clip for the M1 Garand. (Photo/Richard Mann)

The most famous rifle to use an en block clip is the M1 Garand, which replaced the 1903 Springfield as our military’s service rifle in 1936. The M1 Garand is a semi-automatic rifle, and though it was originally designed to feed from a detachable magazine, the Ordnance Department specified the en block clip because another rifle designer convinced them it was better. The en block clip holds several cartridges together so they can be inserted into a rifle’s internal magazine at the same time. Unlike a stripper clip, the en block clip goes into the internal magazine with the ammunition. In the case of the M1 Garand, when the last round has been fired, the rifle’s bolt is locked to the rear, the en block clip is ejected, and the shooter can reload with another clip of ammunition. There are some other old military rifles that also use an en block clip, but modern rifles have transitioned to the detachable magazine.

Moon Clips

photo of a revolver with moon clips
A revolver with moon clips, shown at the bottom right. (Photo/Richard Mann)

Moon clips are used to hold several cartridges together to allow for faster loading and ejection in revolvers. They are also used to help revolvers chamber and fire rimless cartridges. The blue tool in this photo is used to press the cartridges into the moon clips.

There’s another kind of clip that’s specifically used with revolvers to allow them to chamber and fire cartridges that do not have a rim, or to allow them to be loaded with multiple cartridges at once. Most revolver cartridges have a rim that extends beyond the diameter of the cartridge body. This rim stops the cartridge from sliding too far into the cylinder. But some revolvers are chambered for un-rimmed cartridges, and the moon clip serves as a rim for these cartridges. In some cases, the moon clip is a half-moon, only holding half the cartridges that will fill the cylinder.

Moon clips are sometimes used in place of speed loaders, because they’re smaller and make it so that all of the empty cartridge cases are ejected together. Because of this, some revolver cylinders are machined to accept a moon clip even if it’s a revolver chambered for a rimmed cartridge. Moon clips are fast to load and eject, but the process of inserting the cartridges into the clip takes a bit of time and sometimes a special tool is used to press each one into its respective slot.

Clip vs Magazine Conclusion

So there you have it. Those are the standard types of clips and magazines. Now that you’ve got all the information, let’s revisit that simple explanation of the difference between a clip and a magazine, but make it even simpler: A clip helps to load a firearm’s magazine. A magazine—even if it is detachable—is the rifle’s magazine.

content_ammo,content_guns,content_outdoor-gear
Field & Stream 1871 Club

THE 1871 CLUB

The best outdoor stories the way they were meant to be read: in print. 160+ pages. Coffee table-quality. 2 issues per year.

Club Magazines and Hat
JOIN THE CLUB

Recommended Products

Richard Mann

    Richard Mann was born and raised in West Virginia and has hunted from the Montana mountains to the green hills of Africa. In 2015, Mann began contributing to Field & Stream to cover guns, ammunition, ballistics, and hunting. In 2022, he was named as the brand’s Shooting Editor. Highlights Education Mann has a degree in criminal justice and is a graduate of the West Virginia State Police Academy and the Southwest Law Enforcement Academy of Virginia. He is also graduate of the NRA’s Tactical Law Enforcement Firearms Instructor School as well as multiple courses at Gunsite Academy. As a high school senior, Mann was failing English and his teacher told him, “Choose another career path, because you’ll never write for Field & Stream.” Experience Because his mother was a hunter, Mann was hunting before he was born. He has traversed the world in pursuit of small, large, and dangerous game. He was a member of the 1995 West Virginia Police Pistol Governor’s Twenty, won the 1999 WV National Guard State Pistol Match, and the 2004 WV Muzzleloader Metallic State Championship. Mann established a Scout Rifle training course for Steyr and assisted Gunsite Academy with the development of their Laser Integrated 250 Pistol Course. Mann has worked with many bullet manufacturers conducting ballistic experiments and has a patent for a bullet testing media and a scope reticle. He’s contributed to many periodicals, presented reloading seminars for the NRA, appeared on the Discovery Channel as a firearms expert, and was the executive producer of WildCraft: South Africa, on Amazon Prime. In 2019, Mann was awarded the Bill McRea Lifetime Achievement Award for his writings. F&S Lightning Round Favorite Place to Hunt: Family hunting camp in West Virginia,Favorite Critter to Hunt: Whitetail deer,Bucket List Adventure: Lion hunt with PH Geoffrey Wayland and my son,Most Prized Piece of Gear: New Ultra Light Arms Model 20S in .30 Remington AR,All-Time Favorite F&S Story: “Ghosts of Africa” by David E. Petzal Notable Work

    Related Posts

    A hunter holds up a fired 270 Winchester cartridge.

    The Best Long Range Cartridge for the Money Will Surprise You

    May 5, 2026

    Behind the Brand: An Interview with Barnes Bullets

    March 11, 2026

    The Best Cyber Monday Ammo Deals of 2024

    February 18, 2026

    The Best Black Friday Ammo Deals of 2025

    February 18, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    1871 CLUB
    Field & Stream 1871 Club

    JOIN THE CLUB

    Spoil your dad with a gift of a Field & Stream Membership, then go the extra mile with our exclusive Father's Day add ons.

    Father's Day Gifts
    JOIN THE CLUB TODAY

    NEWSLETTERS

    NEWSLETTERS

    Weekly recaps of the latest outdoor news, hunting and fishing tips - plus exclusive offers, giveaways and more!

    Field & Stream Newsletter Whitetail 365 The Strike Zone The Strike Zone
    SIGN UP
    F&S PICKS
    An ATV rider on public lands in the West. Conservation

    Trump Orders More Off-Road Vehicle Use on America’s Public Lands

    Federal’s new 6.5 Creedmoor +PEAK standing on a scope turret. Rifle Ammo

    Ammo Review: Federal’s New 6.5 Creedmoor +PEAK Is the Next Step in a Rifle Cartridge Revolution

    Knives

    The Best Early Prime Day Knife Deals—Starting at Just $11

    Weekly recaps of the latest outdoor news, hunting and fishing tips - plus exclusive offers, giveaways and more!

    SIGN UP
    Instagram Facebook-f X-twitter Tiktok Youtube
    Shopping
    • Military & First Responders Discount
    • Shipping
    • Returns
    Company
    • About Us
    • FAQs
    • Contact Us
    Legal
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • F&S Music Fest Refund Info
    • Privacy and cookie settings
    Partners
    • Nashville Race Weekend Sweepstakes
    • Amazon
    • Best Home Furnishings
    • F&S x Gokey Collection
    • Moultrie
    • Old Wood Signs
    • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
    • Tractor Supply Co.
    • Yuengling
    • WearSPF
    • Whiskey JYPSI
    • Field & Stream Lodge Co.
    Disclaimers

    Articles may contain affiliate links that enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.
    Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Service.

    © 2026 Field & Stream All rights reserved.

    • Sitemap

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.