Ruger Magazines
Every Ruger Platform • .22 LR / .380 / 9mm / .40 / .45 / .223 / 7.62×39 / .300 BLK • 80+ SKUs
Keep Shooting carries the complete Ruger magazine universe — 80+ SKUs across every Ruger pistol and rifle platform from Bill Ruger's 1949 Ruger Standard (the pistol that launched Sturm, Ruger & Co.) through the current-production LCP Max, Security-9, Max-9, Mark IV, 10/22, and Mini-14 / Mini-30 lineups. Factory Ruger OEM magazines plus ProMag, Mec-Gar, and United Defense aftermarket options. Covers every Ruger cartridge chambering — .22 LR, .380 ACP, 9mm Parabellum, .40 S&W, .45 ACP, .223 Remington / 5.56mm, 7.62×39, and .300 Blackout — across 76 years of Ruger manufacturing history.
About Ruger Magazines at Keep Shooting
Keep Shooting carries the complete Ruger magazine universe — 80+ SKUs across every Ruger pistol and rifle platform from the 1949 Ruger Standard through the current-production LCP Max, Security-9, Max-9, and Mark IV lineups. This is the parent hub for our dedicated Ruger magazine subcategory pages, each covering a specific platform's full magazine ecosystem (factory OEM plus ProMag, Mec-Gar, and United Defense aftermarket options). For the full Ruger firearm and accessory catalog, see our Ruger brand page.
Sturm, Ruger & Company was founded in 1949 in Southport, Connecticut by William B. Ruger and Alexander McCormick Sturm — Ruger the mechanical engineer who had reverse-engineered a Japanese Nambu Type 14 pistol into the original Ruger Standard, Sturm the Yale-educated artist and writer who contributed the company's $50,000 founding capitalization and designed the famous red-eagle / phoenix trademark. Today Ruger is the largest US firearms manufacturer by unit volume — headquartered in Southport, Connecticut with manufacturing facilities in Newport, New Hampshire; Prescott, Arizona; Mayodan, North Carolina; and Pine Tree, Arizona. The company produces 50+ product lines spanning rifles, handguns, revolvers, and shotguns, and the Ruger magazine ecosystem is correspondingly broad.
Cartridge-by-cartridge, the Ruger magazine universe.
9mm Parabellum — Ruger's most commercially important current chambering, covering three distinct pistol families. The Security-9 (2017) is Ruger's value-tier 9mm service pistol at $379 MSRP, using the Secure Action hammer-fired internal mechanism derived from the LCP II — see our Ruger Security-9 Magazines category (7 SKUs). The SR-series (SR9 / SR9c) is the discontinued but still-heavily-owned 2007–2017 striker-fired service-pistol platform with hundreds of thousands of pistols still in active civilian use — see our Ruger SR9 Magazines category (7 SKUs). The LC9 family (LC9 / LC9s / LC9s Pro / EC9s) is the single-stack pocket 9mm platform produced 2011–2021 (EC9s still in production) — see our Ruger LC9 Magazines category (3 SKUs). The Max-9 (2021) is the LC9 family's high- capacity staggered-column successor with 10+1 capacity in a pocket envelope.
.380 ACP — Ruger's pocket-pistol chambering. The original LCP (2008) was Ruger's first pocket .380 and the product that defined the modern pocket-carry market — see our Ruger LCP Magazines category. The LCP II (2016) was the major redesign introducing the Secure Action mechanism, available in .380 ACP and a .22 LR training variant (2020) — see our Ruger LCP II Magazines category (5 SKUs). The LCP Max (2021) brought 10+1 staggered-column capacity to the pocket-carry envelope — see our Ruger LCP Max Magazines category (4 SKUs). All three LCP generations use different magazines — LCP / LCP II / LCP Max are not cross-compatible.
.40 S&W — represented by the discontinued SR40 family (SR40 / SR40c, 2010–2017) with substantial civilian ownership base continuing today. See our Ruger SR40 Magazines category (5 SKUs).
.22 LR (rimfire pistols) — Ruger's deep rimfire heritage dating to Bill Ruger's 1949 reverse-engineering of a Japanese Nambu Type 14 into the original Ruger Standard. The Mark-series target pistol family has been in continuous production for 76 years across four generations: Mark I Magazines (1951–1982), Mark II Magazines (1982–2004), Mark III Magazines (2005–2016), and Mark IV Magazines (2016–present — the generation that finally solved 67 years of notoriously difficult disassembly with a one-button take-down). Mark III and Mark IV magazines are cross-compatible; Mark I and Mark II magazines are generation-specific. The SR22 (2012–present) is the compact polymer rimfire training companion — see our Ruger SR-22 Magazines category.
.22 LR (rimfire rifle) — the Ruger 10/22 (1964–present, 61 years of continuous production) is one of the most widely- owned rifles in the American market, the reference rimfire carbine for small-game hunting, plinking, and youth / first- rifle training. Factory 10-round BX-1 magazines, the iconic BX-25 extended 25-round magazine introduced in 2011, and the BX-15 compact variant all ship factory. ProMag 50-round drums and aftermarket extended magazines round out the 10/22 ecosystem. See our Ruger 10/22 Magazines category. The 10/22 Takedown and Charger pistol variants share 10/22 magazines.
.223 Remington / 5.56 NATO — the Ruger Mini-14 (1973–present, 52 years) is the "miniature M14" ranch rifle — gas- operated semi-auto with a rotating-bolt lock-up scaled down from the M14 battle rifle. The Ranch Rifle variant (1982) became the dominant production SKU. See our Ruger Mini-14 Magazines category. Mini-14 magazines have a historical reputation for being picky about aftermarket production — the 2008 "580 series" factory redesign and current ProMag production have substantially resolved earlier reliability problems.
7.62×39 and .300 Blackout — the Ruger Mini Thirty (1987) extended the Mini-14 platform to the Warsaw Pact 7.62×39 cartridge for shooters wanting the intermediate- cartridge performance of the AK family in the traditional Mini-14 form factor. See our Ruger Mini-30 Magazines category. A .300 Blackout Mini-14 variant was introduced in 2020 and uses dedicated magazines (covered in the Mini-14 category).
Aftermarket manufacturer ecosystem. The Ruger magazine aftermarket is deep across the major platforms. Factory Ruger OEM — production from Prescott, Arizona, the definitive reference magazine for every platform — is stocked across the complete Ruger lineup. ProMag (Ontario, California, since 1984) produces aftermarket magazines for the SR-series, Security-9, 10/22, Mini-14, Mark-series, and other platforms at meaningful savings over factory OEM — see our ProMag brand page. Mec-Gar (Gussago, Italy — the world's largest pistol-magazine manufacturer and factory OEM for Beretta, Sig, S&W, CZ, Springfield, and FN) is the primary commercial source for Mark II magazines since Ruger factory Mark II production wound down around 2010–2015 — see our Mec-Gar brand page. United Defense contributes 10-round Mini-14 compliance magazines for capacity-restricted states.
Choosing a Ruger magazine — buying framework. For daily concealed carry (LCP / LCP II / LCP Max / LC9 family / Security-9): factory Ruger OEM — the defensive-pistol application warrants the factory reliability premium. For range training and plinking (10/22 / Mark IV / SR22): factory OEM for primary range use, ProMag for budget secondary inventory, aftermarket drums and extended magazines for high-volume sessions. For bullseye competition (Mark IV Target / Mark III Target / Mark II Target): factory Ruger OEM is the match-grade standard; Mec-Gar is the Mark II specialty option. For hunting and ranch use (Mini-14 / Mini Thirty): factory Ruger 5-round compliance for states with semi-auto hunting limits, 20- or 30-round for general utility; ProMag 30-round for value-tier range practice. For capacity-restricted states: all 5-round hunting magazines and 10- round pistol magazines ship nationwide; 15+ round rifle magazines and 15+ round pistol magazines require verification for California / NY / NJ / MA and similar jurisdictions.
Magazine shipping compliance. Keep Shooting ships Ruger 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 — all 5-round, 7-round, 9-round, 10-round, and 12-round magazines (covering the LCP family, LC9 family, Security-9 Compact, Mark-series, SR22, and Mini-14 compliance variants) ship to all 50 US states. Magazines above 10 rounds (15-round and higher pistol magazines, 15–33-round rifle and carbine magazines, 25-round+ drums) 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 own a 1949-production Standard, a 1965 Mark I Target, a 1995 Mark II, a 2008 LCP, a 2014 SR9, a 2017 Security-9, a 2020 Mini-14 .300 BLK, a 2021 LCP Max, or any other Ruger platform across 76 years of Bill Ruger's continuous design legacy, the factory- compatible magazine inventory is here.
Frequently Asked Questions — Ruger Mags
Keep Shooting carries a wide selection of Ruger 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 Ruger Mags products. Orders typically ship within 1–2 business days.
Keep Shooting offers hassle-free returns on Ruger 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 Ruger 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.