Ruger SR9 Magazines
Factory Ruger OEM / ProMag • SR9 / SR9c Compact • 9mm • 10 / 15 / 17 Round
The Ruger SR9 — introduced October 2007 as Ruger's first serious entry into the striker-fired polymer service-pistol market — brought one of the lowest bore axes in the industry, an ambidextrous manual thumb safety, and 17-round service capacity into the Glock-dominated 9mm duty-pistol segment. Discontinued around 2017 when Ruger consolidated around the American Pistol and Security-9 families, but hundreds of thousands of SR9s remain in civilian ownership and require continuing factory- magazine support. Keep Shooting carries the complete SR9 magazine lineup: factory Ruger OEM 10-, 15-, and 17-round magazines including 2-pack bundles, plus ProMag 10-, 15-, and 17-round aftermarket alternatives.
About Ruger SR9 Magazines at Keep Shooting
Keep Shooting carries seven magazines for the Ruger SR9 and SR9c Compact — factory Ruger OEM 10-round (full-size and SR9c Compact variants), 17-round full-size, and a 2-pack bundle at meaningful savings, plus ProMag aftermarket magazines in 10-, 15-, and 17-round capacities. The SR9 is a discontinued platform (Ruger ceased production around 2017 when consolidating around the American Pistol and Security-9 families), but hundreds of thousands remain in civilian ownership and require continuing factory-magazine support. For the broader Ruger magazine lineup, see our parent Ruger Magazines category, or the Ruger brand page for the full Ruger catalog.
The Ruger SR9, introduced in October 2007, was Ruger's first serious entry into the striker-fired polymer service- pistol market that Glock had opened in 1982 with the G17 and that Smith & Wesson had joined with the M&P in 2005. Ruger had historically focused on revolvers (GP100, SP101, Redhawk, Single Six), rimfire rifles (10/22), and traditional-design handguns (P-series hammer-fired pistols) — the SR9 was the company's direct challenge to Glock's dominance of the modern 9mm duty- pistol segment. The SR9 Compact (SR9c) followed in 2010, and the SR40 (.40 S&W variant, November 2010) and SR45 (.45 ACP, 2013) rounded out the SR-series platform family.
The SR9's engineering distinguishing features set it apart from Glock in specific ways — the same architecture carried over to the SR40 and SR45 variants. One of the lowest bore axes in the polymer service-pistol market — the SR9's slide sits lower over the shooter's grip hand than any Glock, SIG P320, or M&P, producing less muzzle flip on recoil and faster sight recovery between shots. An ambidextrous manual thumb safety (unusual for a polymer striker-fired service pistol — Glock and M&P famously do not include manual safeties as standard). A magazine disconnect, loaded chamber indicator, and reversible backstrap for flat-vs-arched grip profile adjustment. The SR9 measured 7.55 inches long, 5.52 inches tall, 1.27 inches wide, and 26.5 ounces unloaded, with a 4.14-inch barrel and 17-round standard magazine — a two-round factory capacity advantage over the contemporary Glock 17's 17-round magazine, which the SR9 matched rather than exceeded (9mm standard service capacity was stable at 17 rounds across the industry by 2007).
The SR9c Compact (2010) was the concealed-carry variant — shortened slide and grip, 3.4-inch barrel, 10-round flush-fit magazine as the Compact-specific standard. Dimensions: 6.85 inches long, 4.61 inches tall, 23.4 ounces unloaded. The SR9c accepted either its dedicated 10-round flush-fit magazine or the full-size SR9's 17-round magazine (which fit and fed reliably, protruding below the Compact's shortened grip, typically used with a sleeve adapter). The SR9c's 10-round capacity was specifically engineered for the compact frame rather than being a compliance-state restriction — although the 10-round capacity made it ideal for capacity-restricted states as a side benefit.
Why was the SR-series discontinued? Ruger's transition away from the SR-series around 2017 was driven by two strategic decisions. First, the Ruger American Pistol (introduced January 2016) was positioned as Ruger's entry to the US Army's Modular Handgun System (MHS) program and represented an updated engineering architecture with modular grip inserts, ambidextrous controls, and a trigger geometry Ruger considered more competitive with the contemporary Glock Gen 5 and Sig P320. Second, the Ruger Security-9 (introduced December 2017) occupied the value-tier market segment at $379 MSRP — a price point the SR-series could not sustain while maintaining its more complex manual-safety and magazine-disconnect features. Ruger discontinued the SR-series around 2017, keeping the platforms on the catalog through remaining inventory cycles. New SR9 pistols are no longer in production.
The installed SR9 ownership base — hundreds of thousands of pistols across SR9 full-size and SR9c Compact — is the reason factory-magazine support continues. Ruger has maintained factory magazine production for the SR-series despite the pistol platform's discontinuation, consistent with Ruger's historical practice — factory magazines for the discontinued P-series (P85, P89, P95) pistols remained in production for decades after the pistols themselves exited the catalog. SR9 owners can expect continued factory-magazine availability as long as the installed base justifies production.
Factory Ruger OEM magazines for the SR9 family. The 17-round magazine ($38.48) is the full- size service-standard capacity — steel- reinforced polymer body, stainless spring, polymer follower, factory Ruger production from Prescott, Arizona. The 10-round magazine ($45.42) is the full-size compliance variant for capacity-restricted states. The SR9c Compact 10-round magazine ($39.53) is the dedicated Compact-specific flush-fit variant — sits flush with the SR9c's shortened grip rather than protruding as the full-size 10-round magazine would. The SR9 2-pack bundle ($66.73, Ruger SKU 90449) is the best- value factory option for shooters building up magazine inventory — approximately $33.37 per magazine vs. the $38.48 single-magazine price.
ProMag's aftermarket lineup is broader for the SR9 than for the SR40 — three capacity options at value-priced factory-equivalent pricing. ProMag's 17-round SR9 magazine ($25.81), 15-round magazine ($24.43), and 10-round magazine ($24.43) run approximately 60–67% of the factory Ruger OEM price point. The 15-round ProMag is a unique capacity option not available from Ruger factory — a flush-fit 15-round for the full-size SR9 for shooters who want slightly less capacity than the 17-round standard. ProMag (Ontario, California) has produced magazines across dozens of pistol and rifle platforms since 1984 — see our ProMag brand page for the full ProMag catalog.
Magazine compatibility rules. SR9 and SR9c magazines are SR-series 9mm specific and do NOT cross-migrate to other Ruger platforms. The SR40 (.40 S&W) uses different magazine geometry scaled for the fatter .40-caliber cartridge — SR9 magazines do NOT fit the SR40, and SR40 magazines do NOT fit the SR9 despite the shared frame architecture. The SR45 (.45 ACP) uses yet another magazine. The Security-9, the American Pistol, and the Max-9 all use entirely different magazine patterns. Within the SR-series 9mm family, the SR9 and SR9c share magazine wells — the full-size SR9 17-round magazine fits and feeds in the SR9c Compact (with protrusion below the Compact's shortened grip), and the SR9c dedicated flush-fit 10-round magazine fits in the SR9 full- size with reduced capacity. For the .40 S&W variant magazines, see our Ruger SR40 Magazines category; for the current-production Security-9 magazines, see our Security-9 Magazines category.
The SR9 civilian market today is the orphaned-platform ownership community — larger than the SR40's because 9mm demand never contracted the way .40 S&W did during the 2015–2016 federal return to 9mm. Long-term SR9 owners who bought the pistol between 2007 and 2017 and continue to carry / range / home-defense the platform form the largest buyer cohort for replacement magazines. Police-trade-in and secondary-market buyers purchased used SR9s at discounted prices post-discontinuation and often need replacement magazine inventory. Concealed-carry users who prefer the SR9's ambidextrous manual thumb safety over Glock's no-manual-safety architecture represent a committed CCW cohort. Competition shooters in USPSA Production division use the SR9 platform where the low bore axis advantage matters for double-tap recoil management. Duty-retired LEO owners whose agency issued SR9s in the 2008–2016 period continue to use the pistol as an off-duty carry or home-defense weapon.
Keep Shooting ships all SR9 magazines from our Pennsylvania warehouse with free shipping on orders over $49.95 and hassle-free returns. Magazine shipments comply with destination-state capacity restrictions — the 10-round SR9 magazines (including the SR9c Compact 10-round) ship to all 50 US states, but the 15- and 17-round magazines will not ship to California, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Colorado, Washington, Oregon, Illinois, Vermont, or Washington DC (state-level rules vary — verify before ordering). Whether you're a long-term SR9 owner replacing spring- fatigued duty magazines, a police-trade- in buyer rebuilding the magazine inventory of a used SR9 purchase, an SR9c concealed- carry user stocking factory flush-fit 10-round magazines for daily carry, a cost-conscious shooter buying the factory Ruger 2-pack at meaningful savings over single-magazine pricing, or a USPSA Production shooter running ProMag 17-round aftermarket magazines for stage reloads, every SR9 magazine in our catalog is verified to feed the SR-series 9mm platform reliably and is backed by its respective manufacturer's warranty.
Frequently Asked Questions — SR9 Mags
Keep Shooting carries a wide selection of SR9 Mags products from trusted brands. Browse our catalog to see the full range, and use the filters on the left to narrow by brand, price, or product type.
Yes! All orders over $49.95 qualify for free shipping, including SR9 Mags products. Orders typically ship within 1–2 business days.
Keep Shooting offers hassle-free returns on SR9 Mags products. If you're not completely satisfied, contact our customer service team for a return authorization. All products must be in original, unused condition.
If you need help choosing the right SR9 Mags product, our team is available to assist. Check individual product descriptions for detailed specifications, or contact us directly and we'll help you find the best fit for your needs.