
If you’ve joined the red dot revolution on pistols, welcome to a faster, clearer, and (let’s be honest) more forgiving way to shoot. Whether it’s a concealed carry gun, a home defense setup, or a weekend range toy, adding a red dot is one of the best upgrades you can make.
But—and it’s a big but—a red dot is only as good as its zero.
If you just slap it on and call it a day, you’re basically setting yourself up for failure. Getting a proper zero isn’t rocket science. It just takes a little understanding and a few adjustments to your red dot.
So… What’s the Best Distance to Zero a Red Dot Pistol?
Spoiler alert: It depends.
Here’s a quick look at the three most common choices:
- 10 Yards: It’s fast, easy, and great for concealed carry guns and home defense
- 15 Yards: Best overall balance between all three
- 25 Yards: Best for competition use and requires a hold-over at closer self-defense ranges
10-Yard Zero: The “Real World” Carry Gun Standard
Most self-defense shootings happen within 7–10 yards. At 10 yards, a properly zeroed dot means if you need to make a life-or-death shot, you can just press the trigger without second-guessing where to hold.
If you’re stretching it out to 25 yards, expect a little “holdover.” In simple terms, you might need to aim a hair higher if you’re trying to hit dead center at a distance. But at self-defense ranges? You’re golden.
Regardless, with a 10-yard zero, if you hold the center of the A-Zone, you’ll hit inside the A-Zone out to 25 yards.

15-Yard Zero: The “Do-It-All” Distance
If you’re running a gun for both carry and occasional competition or drills, 15 yards is arguably the sweet spot.
The bullet’s flight stays super flat out to about 70 yards. Translation? You won’t have to adjust much—if at all—when shooting at different distances. It’s forgiving, flexible, and keeps your brain power focused where it belongs: the target…or threat
25 Yard Zero
If you’re a competition shooter or you just like the idea of ringing steel plates at 50 yards and beyond with your carry pistol, the 25-yard zero is your friend.
Some serious USPSA and IDPA shooters set a 25-yard zero so they can nail longer shots without major dot adjustments. At close distances, though, they know they’ll have to hold a little high.
This isn’t ideal if you never plan to shoot past 10-15 yards. For pure concealed carry? It’s not ideal either.
How I Zero My Red Dots
Before I ever hit the range, I boresight my new red dot at home.
I use a 9mm bore laser that loads into the chamber like a normal round.
I pace off 10 yards in my house or garage, bring my pistol up in a normal shooting stance, and make my adjustments right there until the pistol red dot and the laser are stacked on top of each other.
It’s not a final zero, but it gets me damn close.
Confirm at 10 Yards
At the range, I use a standard cardboard IPSC target and put my focus on the a-zone.
Shooting offhand (I don’t fight using a bench rest), I fire slow, careful shots.
Once I can put three rounds into the center of the a-zone, I’m good. If they’re off, adjust, shoot again.
Verify at 15 and 25 Yards
Moving back to 15 yards, then 25 yards. Look for elevation and windage drift.
Tiny errors at 10 yards become big misses at 25 if you don’t catch them early.
Bonus
Once you’ve completed the zeroing process, a good drill to practice is the Achilles Heel Tactical DOPE Drill.
Final Thoughts: The Best Zero Is the One That Makes You Fast and Accurate
At the end of the day, there’s no one-size-fits-all answer (although I prefer 10 yards). What matters is consistency and confidence.
Pick a zero distance based on where you’ll actually fight or compete. Then zero and confirm at different distances.
The guy with a 10-yard zero who trains will beat the guy with a “perfect” 25-yard zero and no trigger time — every single day of the week.
About Scott Witner
Scott Witner is a former Marine Corps Infantryman with 2ndBn/8th Marines. He completed training in desert warfare at the Marine Air Ground Combat Center, Mountain Warfare and survival at the Mountain Warfare Training Center, the South Korean Mountain Warfare School in Pohang, and the Jungle Warfare school in the jungles of Okinawa, Japan. He now enjoys recreational shooting, trail running, hiking, functional fitness, and working on his truck. Scott resides in Northeastern Ohio.
Most defensive pistol actions happen within 10yds or less, why would you “zero” your red dot for out to 25yds, unless you’re looking to be in a gunfight…
I liked and agree with almost everything in this article except the “most occur 7-10 yards” my understanding is that we don’t have a reference for this claim, if so I would be grateful for it please! What we CAN say is that the closer the threat, the more at risk we are (less time/greater lethality) so our ability to legally justify the use of deadly force increases thus a closer zero makes sense. However we have seen shootings where distances like 40 yards happen so knowing your long range “dope” is important and his advise to verify longer range… Read more »
My 10mm G40 is at 30yds for hunting. Still messing with it to see what works best to go from PB to 100yds.
Mine is zeroed at about 15 yards, and it still allows torso hits on a full size IDPA target (steel plate) at 50. If I do my part the “weapon system” does its part.
AND… It’s a bloody pistol! I won’t be worrying about head shots at that distance!
In a true self defense situation, it’s highly unlikely that the distance of the zero is relevant…
After 50 plus years of shooting and carrying handguns for self-defense, competition, hunting and other purposes.
A 25 yards zero has always worked.