Magazines feed ammunition into your rifle and are critical for reliable function. While seemingly simple, magazine quality significantly affects feeding reliability. Choosing good magazines and understanding capacity options for your jurisdiction is important.
Magazine Types
STANAG/USGI Pattern: The standard metal magazine design. Modern iterations use improved followers and anti-tilt geometry. Affordable and proven. Popular brands include Okay Industries (USGI contractor), D&H, and Duramag.
Polymer: Lighter than metal with good durability. Magpul PMAGs are the industry standard. Gen M3 PMAGs are arguably the most reliable AR magazines available. Some polymer designs include windows to check round count.
Hybrid: Metal body with polymer follower and floorplate. Combines benefits of both. Lancer AWM magazines are popular examples.
Drum Magazines: High capacity (50-100 rounds) but heavy, bulky, and often less reliable than standard magazines. Specialized use cases only.
Capacity Considerations
Standard AR-15 magazine capacities:
- 5/10 rounds: Required in some states with capacity restrictions
- 20 rounds: Shorter for prone shooting, fits some cases better
- 30 rounds: Standard capacity for most uses
- 40+ rounds: Extended for competition or specialized needs
Check your state and local laws for capacity restrictions before purchasing.
Key Features
Anti-tilt followers: Prevent nose-diving on the last few rounds. Essential for reliability.
Stainless steel spring: Maintains tension better than music wire over time.
Dot matrix: Allows marking magazines with paint marker for organization.
Window: See remaining round count without removing magazine.
Over-insertion stop: Prevents slamming magazine too far into mag well.
Reliability Factors
- Feed lip geometry must be correct
- Spring tension must be adequate
- Follower must not tilt
- Body must not be dented or warped
Quality magazines from Magpul, Okay/USGI, Lancer, and Duramag rarely have issues. Cheap magazines are responsible for a large percentage of AR-15 malfunctions.
Maintenance
Magazines benefit from periodic cleaning and spring inspection. Replace springs if feeding becomes sluggish. Most quality magazines can be loaded to full capacity and stored indefinitely—spring wear comes from cycling, not storage.
Selection Guidelines
For defensive/duty use: Magpul Gen M3 PMAGs or quality USGI aluminum. Both are proven and affordable enough to stock in quantity. Buy once, buy quality, buy many—magazines are consumables that get dropped, lost, and worn.