9mm Subsonic Ammo For Sale
Overview of 9mm Subsonic Ammo
Subsonic 9mm ammo is any 9x19mm load that leaves the muzzle below the speed of sound – roughly 1,125 feet per second at sea level. Standard pressure 115 grain loadings clear the barrel at 1,180+ fps, and 124 grain rounds typically run 1,150 fps or higher, so both produce the audible "crack" of a supersonic projectile cutting through the air. Drop to a 147 grain bullet pushed by a reduced powder charge and the round stays under that threshold, usually exiting between 950 and 1,050 fps from a 4-inch barrel.
The category exists for one core reason: noise control. Pair a supersonic round with a suppressor and the can dampens the muzzle blast, but the bullet itself still cracks as it flies, leaving you with a sound profile closer to a high-powered air rifle than the "movie quiet" most shooters expect. Subsonic ammunition eliminates that crack so the suppressor delivers its full noise reduction.
Why shooters choose subsonic 9mm
- Suppressor pairing. The most common reason. With a can mounted on a pistol or pistol-caliber carbine, a subsonic 9mm round is the only way to actually run "Hollywood quiet."
- Hearing protection in confined spaces. Less muzzle blast and concussion at indoor ranges, in vehicles, or during home-defense scenarios where ear pro isn't on.
- Pest and small-game dispatch. Stays quiet enough to avoid scattering game or alarming neighbors.
- Softer recoil impulse. Heavier projectiles at lower velocity produce a slower push rather than a sharp snap, which helps competition shooters running USPSA and IDPA stages chase faster splits.
- Defensive penetration. A 147 grain JHP at subsonic velocity delivers consistent penetration depth through heavy clothing and intermediate barriers, which is why 147 grain loads dominate law enforcement carry rotations.
Subsonic 9mm vs Standard 9mm at a Glance
| Aspect | Subsonic (147gr) | Standard (115gr) | +P (124gr) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical Muzzle Velocity | 950-1,050 fps | 1,180-1,250 fps | 1,150-1,250 fps |
| Sonic Crack | No | Yes | Yes |
| Suppressor Friendly | Yes | Partial (can muffles blast only) | Partial |
| Recoil Impulse | Slow push, rolling | Sharp snap | Sharper snap |
| Typical Use | Suppressed shooting, defense, competition | Range training | Duty, defensive carry |
What to look for when buying subsonic 9mm
Not every heavy 9mm round is engineered for subsonic terminal performance. Some hollow points that depend on velocity for reliable expansion (often designed around 1,200+ fps) may under-expand when fired below 1,050 fps. Loads explicitly engineered for the subsonic window – Federal HST 147gr, Speer Gold Dot 147gr, Hornady American Gunner 147gr Subsonic, Remington Golden Saber 147gr – have published expansion data at the lower velocity.
If a load isn't explicitly labeled "subsonic," the working rule: 147 grain factory loads from a 4-inch barrel run subsonic by default. For suppressed setups where the threshold matters, verify the manufacturer's published muzzle velocity before buying in volume.
Popular Subsonic 9mm Brands We Carry
- Federal 9mm Ammo – including the heavily carried Federal HST 9mm 147 grain
- Speer Gold Dot 9mm Ammo – the bonded 147 grain GDHP is a flagship law-enforcement defensive load
- Winchester 9mm Ammo
- Remington 9mm Ammo
- Fiocchi 9mm Ammo
- PMC 9mm Ammo
- Blazer Brass 9mm Ammo – 147gr FMJ for high-volume subsonic practice
Use the Bullet Weight filter on the left sidebar and select 147 grain to narrow the in-stock subsonic options across all manufacturers.
Related 9mm Selections
- 9mm 147 Grain Ammo – most factory 147 grain loads are subsonic, so this is the most direct overlap
- Bulk 9mm Ammo – for stocking subsonic training rounds at the lowest per-round cost
- 50 Rounds of 9mm Ammo
- 100 Rounds of 9mm Ammo
- 200 Rounds of 9mm Ammo
- 9mm Match Ammo – competition shooters often run heavy subsonic loads for flatter recoil
Best 9mm Guides for Subsonic Shooters
- Best 9mm Subsonic Ammo – tested picks across defensive and range categories
- Best Grain for 9mm – how 115, 124, and 147 grain compare in practice
- Best 9mm Home Defense Ammo – many of the top picks are 147 grain subsonic loads
For muzzle velocity, energy, and trajectory data on the specific subsonic loads you're considering, see our 9mm ballistics database.
Customer Reviews
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Brizzo said:
Good quality ammo. It worked well with my SD9VE. Smooth cycle. I don’t recommend this as you’re primary ammo at the range because it has a lot of recoil/snap. After a couple magazines I could feel my hand and wrist getting tired. Overall, I would buy it again.
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WESMAK said:
Speer is the best ammo I have used. A lot of it is made in the Great Northwest, so with the ammo shortage and everyone hard up for ANY ammo, I'm happy to be using ammo made in America as well. I also like this ammo's total metal jacket (TMJ) which limits lead exposure. Never had a FTF with Speer. Great Stuff!
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Just me said:
Will purchase again!
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Matt H said:
The price on this ammo is amazing, but it is dirty. I shot 250 rounds through a Glock 17 and needed to clean my weapon after 150 rounds. My daughter also bought some because I told her about the great deal. She was shooting a Sig P365 9mm, the Sig does not like the flat nose on this ammo. She shot 100 rounds and was having problems feeding before she finished 50 rounds. We cleaned her weapon, and still had the same problem. I had no feed issues with my Glock. I'm not real sure why Federal decided to go flat nose on this round when they have round nose on their 115 & 124 grain rounds. As good of a deal as this was I don't think I'll be purchasing anymore of this ammo.
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Ronjai said:
Had to use the higher grain bullet in my sub compact auto. The federal 147 grain bullet fed flawlessly and provided very accurate results.
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Karron said:
When it comes to ammo, Speer has always been my preference. Easy to clean, cycles well, packed safely, and not a single round was missing out of my entire order. I would highly recommend ordering when it is available
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marlow said:
good shooting
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John G said:
Seemed fine. Normally my wife and I use 115 grain 9mm for target shooting. We're preparing for a bowling pin shoot where heavier bullets were suggested. My P365 feels slightly less snappy with the heavier bullet. I've had good luck with PMC target ammo.
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Earl said:
Never had a misfire. Quality ammo.
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Marko said:
Ammo performed as it should.
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Gstreet said:
Good quality. Will get the job done
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Jillian said:
Great deal and great quality.
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Art said:
Nice ammo for the range. Consistent with no jams, and very affordable considering the price of ammo right now.
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Holiday said:
It does what it's supposed to do!
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Hozae said:
Great highly recommend these
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LDO said:
To date, shot 150 rounds with Springfield Armory XDE 9mm. Key takeaway: zero performance issues. Would recommend and will buy again when available.
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Chris D said:
Good target ammo. No issues. No jams or double feeds. Shot w Ruger P95