Suppressed Home Defense – Is Silence Brass Colored?

Springfield Echelon 9mm handgun equipped with a SilencerCo Spectre 9 Suppressor and a Shield RMSc red dot.
Springfield Echelon 9mm handgun equipped with a SilencerCo Spectre 9 Suppressor and a Shield RMSc red dot.

The Big Beautiful Bill has been passed and signed, and it’s a massive bill. I won’t delve too deeply into it for this article, as most of its numerous pages and piles of deficit spending are irrelevant to the subject of suppressors. The portion that matters to us is the reduction of tax stamp fees from $200 to $0 for short-barreled rifles, suppressors, short-barreled shotguns, and AOWs. The NFA is still in place, and the registration and paperwork aspect still exist.

Are suppressors part of your home defense kit?

Off the bat, suppressors will sell like hot cakes. SBRs are easy to make and form 1, but suppressors are a different beast. I imagine many people will purchase suppressors in the coming years. With increased sales, we’ll see increased commonality. As such, the use of suppressors will explode for competition, range use, and even home defense.
It’s the latter we’ll be discussing. Today, we are going to see if silence is truly golden, or maybe it’s brass colored. Let’s dig into using suppressors for home defense and examine the pros and cons of a suppressed home defense weapon.

The Downsides of Using a Suppressor for Home Defense

Let’s rip off the Band-Aid and discuss the downsides to using suppressors for home defense.

They Aren’t Cheap

Good cans, especially those designed for centerfire weapons, are not cheap. Even a cheap suppressor for a rimfire rifle is a couple of hundred dollars. Suppressors might be the most expensive accessory you can slap on your weapon. Price varies a fair bit, but the Velos 556K sitting on the end of my Colt EPR doubles its cost.

Even without a stamp cost the price of a suppressor can be high

With that said, at least the $200 tax stamp will be thrown into the trash. That will trim the cost of ownership a fair bit.

Regulation

While you don’t have to pay for the stamp, you still have to deal with the NFA and its regulations. The NFA can feel like wrestling a Balrog at times. Some states outright ban suppressors, even if you follow all federal laws and regulations. That’s an annoying obstacle that won’t be changed overnight.

If you hate paperwork, you’ll hate suppressors

You’ll still have to do the paperwork, submit fingerprints, alert your local CLEO, and send the ATF a selfie. It’s a hassle, and I imagine wait times will skyrocket once more when the tax stamp officially gets set to $0.

They Add Bulk

From a practical and tactical perspective, suppressors add bulk to a gun. They make it longer, which sucks for home defense and close-range use. Longer guns are tougher to maneuver indoors, and home defense is defined by the home.

Might as well be an M16

That’s always a problem, but since short-barrel rifles will be tax-stamp-free, maybe it won’t be such a big deal after all. Suppressors add weight, and front-heavy guns can feel burdensome, especially if they have to be wielded with one hand. It’s a minor issue, but one you have to address when wielding suppressors.

Accessory Issues

Suppressors can clash with your accessories. On rifles, a suppressor can create a shadow in the middle of your weapon-mounted light. This can be mitigated with the right mounts and lights, but then we are spending even more money.

Look at that suppressor shadow

On handguns, we also deal with a shadow in the middle of the light, and some suppressors might make it difficult to mount a light and ensure reliable function. You don’t want the suppressor to touch the light, and with the wrong combo, that can happen.

Additionally, on handguns, you might need suppressor-height sights or a red dot. Again, more cost is added to the platform.

(Possible) Reliability Issues

Suppressors can do some funky stuff with guns. With rifles and shotguns, it can affect semi-automatic gas mechanisms and create additional back pressure. It’s rare that this causes issues, but it’s entirely possible.

Most handguns will require a Nielsen device to function

Handguns are a different beast altogether. Most will work okay when you use a proper Nielsen device. Others don’t suppress well and can malfunction even with a Nielsen device. Like anything, you need to go to the range and shoot your combo of gun and suppressor to see if they work well together.

The Upsides Of A Home Defense Suppressor

Of course, it’s not all bad; there are tons of benefits to using a suppressor for home defense.

Reduces Noise

This is the big duh in the room. Guns are loud, very loud, and suppressors reduce that noise. They don’t eliminate that noise, but suppressors reduce it significantly. For you, that means hearing preservation. Your ears might still ring, especially with supersonic ammo, but some preservation is better than none.

147 grain 9mms in a PCC with a can make for a very quiet gun

Reducing noise also makes it easier to increase communication. If you’re talking to police on the phone, or simply telling a family member what to do, you can a bit easier without losing your hearing. Communication with police who may have just arrived on the scene is also crucial. Cutting noise makes a big difference.

Goodnight Muzzle Flash

Most suppressors are going to reduce and even eliminate muzzle flash. If you’re using a short-barreled rifle, especially a 5.56 short-barreled rifle, you will deal with muzzle flash. Muzzle flash isn’t always an issue, but if something goes bump in the dark, then it can be an issue. You don’t want excessive muzzle flash in the dark.

Most cans will eliminate muzzle flash

Excessive muzzle flash can create bright spots in your vision and reduce your situational awareness. Much like hearing, being able to see can be invaluable for home defense. Some flow-through suppressors won’t eliminate muzzle flash, but they can redirect it forward and prevent you from having a first-hand view of it.

Easier to Control

Suppressors are the ultimate muzzle device. They reduce noise, but also eliminate muzzle flash, and can decrease muzzle rise and recoil. Suppressors add weight to the end of the barrel, adding weight at the end helps prevent muzzle rise, which makes rapid-fire shots easier.

Less recoil and muzzle rise is a nice treat

Suppressors are made up of a series of baffles, and those baffles act a bit like a muzzle brake. This reduces recoil and makes the gun more controllable. Suppressors do everything every other muzzle device can do, but they do it all at once.

My Take?

You didn’t ask, but it’s the internet, so you’ll get my take. I like suppressors for home defense. I think they are convenient, and when you fight the right combination of suppressor and gun, you can have an effective firearm for home defense that won’t have you hollering “What?” in the near future.

I’m excited to see what the future holds for suppressors and to see what happens when that tax stamp cost hits $0.

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About Travis Pike

Travis Pike is a former Marine Machine Gunner, a lifelong firearms enthusiast, and now a regular guy who likes to shoot, write, and find ways to combine the two. He holds an NRA certification as a Basic Pistol Instructor and is the world’s Okayest firearm’s instructor.

Travis Pike


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Cappy

Hearing loss may not seem like a big deal when you’re younger and your ears still work. But I can tell you from personal experience it’s really inconvenient as you get up in years. And it’s a darned sight more expensive and less efficient to address than simply buying a suppressor. We need to discard the NFA and restore the 2-A to it’s intended non-infringed meaning.

PistolGrip44

Until they remove it entirely from the NFA…. Should be able to be shipped to home address w/o any paper trail. Or, better yet, home built.

“Shall NOT be Infringed!”

Whatstheuseanyway

I don’t see the flashlight shadow to be a problem unless spiderman has gone rogue and is clinging to your ceiling or if you’re using the signature gangsta grip.

Wild Bill

This good news just in: “WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, a coalition of four leading gun rights organizations comprised of the American Suppressor Association (ASA), Firearms Policy Coalition, National Rifle Association (NRA), and Second Amendment Foundation (SAF), announced the filing of Brown v. ATF a joint federal lawsuit in the Eastern District of Missouri challenging the constitutionality of the National Firearms Act (NFA). In 1937, the Supreme Court ruled that the NFA was primarily a revenue-generating measure and the registration requirements of the statute served to verify who had paid the required tax. With the tax rate of $0 as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill, the… Read more »

MP71

Just throwing a can on a gas operated rifles can cause issues that may ultimately affect the reliability of the gun. The higher back pressure will over gas the gun and increase bolt carrier speed, which will accelerate wear of the BCG and cause a harsher recoil impulse.
You’ll also have lots of nasty gas that you don’t want to breathe blowing back in your face.
If you’re going to run a suppressor, you should also figure in the cost of an adjustable gas block and heavier recoil springs and or buffers

Considerthis

People also need to understand that hearing damage is cumulative. Yeah, you can go out and blast away without protection and your ears will ring for a while, and eventually they stop ringing. Just because the ringing has stopped can fool you, even though the ringing has stopped the damage has been done and it does not heal up. Each succeeding event piles up and your hearing continues to get worse. Eventually just communicating with a check out person, the cop that pulled you over, or family get togethers become quite a challenge. When we are young we may feel… Read more »

ItzGene

You forgot something in your drawback segment.If you use a suppressor for a self defense situation in your home it will automatically trigger a more rigorous police investigation but it also means an automatic ATF investigation. Even if your use is clean you will be under the microscope for a longer period of time and should it go before a grand jury you’re in for an expensive life event. No one wants to take into consideration the considerable downside of using a suppressor, it’s not so sexy. The area where the suppressor use occurs plays a big part in how… Read more »

swmft

get rid of nfa and incorporate silencer into gun home defense made practical

IsidoroMani26

Didn’t mention the biggest negative in my mind: The impression it’s going to make on the jury in the aftermath of a defensive shooting. We already know they’re A LOT more likely to convict if you use an AR instead of Adam-12’s wood-stocked shotgun or .38 revolver, imagine the prosecutor’s glee when he gets to spin wannabe assassin yarns and terrorize the jury by waving a gun with a silencer in front of them.

Pa John

Temporary poor man’s workaround: I keep a pair of electronic ear muffs (look just like big ol’ stereo headphones that completely cover your ears) conveniently located on a shelf right by where I sleep. I’ve actually PRACTICED grabbing them and putting them on in the dark, turning up the on/off volume knobs on each side as quickly as possible. Takes me all of about 3 seconds of well practiced moves, so I quietly estimate more like 5 seconds or so to include a little slack for being woken up in the middle of the night and maybe not reacting as… Read more »