How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You
Courtesy Jessica Kalam
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If you’re not hitting with your shotgun as much as you’d like, odds are it’s because you’re using a gun that doesn’t really fit you. Gun-to-shooter fit affects accuracy and results more in a shotgun than any other kind of firearm. The problem is, most shooters don’t know the factors that go into a good fit, or how to make a gun they already own fit them better.

A shotgun that fits you as it should works better because it mounts naturally in your shoulder pocket, doesn’t beat you up with recoil and lets you look out over the barrel without head tilt or neck strain. In short, when your shotgun fits you, it naturally shoots where you look. That means more downed birds and broken clays.

The problem is, most shotguns are made for the “average” adult male. That means someone about 5’10” and roughly 180 lbs. The reality is, only a small percentage of us fit that description. If you’re shorter, taller, have longer arms, a rounder face…whatever…most off-the-shelf shotguns won’t fit you as well as they could or should.

How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You
courtesy browning.com

There are a number of factors that affect gun fitting. The primary ones are:

Length of pull – The distance between the back of the butt pad to the trigger. This one’s critical to a good fit as a gun that’s too short or too long results in a bad cheek position, negatively affecting your sight picture and won’t stay in your shoulder pocket as you swing with your target.

Drop at comb — The distance between the shotgun’s rib height and the highest point at the front of the stock closest to the receiver. Too low and your load will fly under your target. Too high and your shot string will consistently be over the bird.

Drop at heel — The distance between the shotgun’s rib height and the top of the stock at the rear. The right drop at heel ensures a good, consistent mount and keeps the stock firmly in your shoulder pocket, minimizing felt recoil.

Pitch — The angle of the gun when the butt is mounted in your shoulder pocket. Depending on how you’re built, your shotgun could be tilted to the left or right. There are adjustable butt pads that let you angle the pad to keep the left or right in order to keep the gun vertical while maintaining solid contact with your shoulder and easing recoil.

How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You

Cast on or cast off — Any amount a stock is angled either toward (on) or away (off) from the shooter versus the center of the shotgun. Depending on how you’re built, you may need to adjust the angle of the stock from the shotgun’s natural center line to get a straight, consistent sight picture with your dominant eye down the rib of the gun when you mount it.

 

Sadly, most of us can’t afford a custom-fitted shotgun. But that doesn’t mean you can’t make your scattergun fit you a lot better than it does. The good news is that a lot of shotgun makers include tools to adjust your shotgun’s stock to better fit your unique physique right out of the box.

How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You
courtesy hatsan.com.tr

Some include spacers in front of the recoil pad to adjust the length of pull (LOP) for your arm length.

How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You
courtesy skbshotguns.com

There are also shims to fine tune drop, as well as cast on or cast off, to help you get the correct gun mount. 

How To Make Sure Your Shotgun Fits You
courtesy skbshotguns.com

Some models will come with an adjustable comb for your cheekbone and/or butt plate to let you get the perfect shotgun stock length, comb height, pitch and even cast. There are also good gunsmiths out there who can install these in a gun you already own. For a price, of course. A good gun fitter can help you get a specialty fit for games like sporting clays, skeet, trap, or other shotgun-shooting clay target games.

Boyds At-One Adjustable Stock Remington 870
The Boyds At-One Stock Courtesy Charge Media Partners and Youtube.com

Finally, if you can’t or don’t want to alter your stock, there are aftermarket options like this Boyds At-One stock. They let shotgunners replace their existing stocks and give you a number of easy adjustment options to significantly improve your performance. In many ways, it’s like a custom “try-gun,” a shotgun fitting device that allows the gun fitter to adjust the stock to align the shooter’s eye with the top of the gun without having to adjust shims or spacers on an over-under or side-by-side shotgun.

So before giving up or wasting a lot of time and lead on missed birds this fall, make sure your shotgun fits you they way it should. Then, just like getting to Carnegie Hall, all you’ll have to do is practice.

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12 COMMENTS

  1. Yep, shotgunm fit is a thing. The factory Ithaca37 old models fit me about the best, that an the H&R Pardner, LOL.

  2. If it weren’t for those stupid muzzle brakes (on a shotgun?) it could be my quail gun. Right down to the Prince of Wales grip.

  3. This is an issue for me. My Mossberg 590 doesn’t feel right. It feels “too long”. I’m thinking of getting the magpul aftermarket adjustable stock.

    • Strongly endorse. The SGA has a sharp 40 degree drop at the grip before transitioning back to a horizontal orientation. For me at least it “just feels right”. I suspect that this quasi pistol grip helps mitigate felt recoil as your hand is oriented closer to vertical.

  4. Good info Dan but it doesn’t tell us a thing about how to know if it fits or how to proceed. More direction please

  5. OK, here’s what people need to know about when a shotgun fits you. Gun fit in a shotgun does two things for you: align your eye with the rib of the shotgun, and align the recoil with your shoulder in the best possible way to handle recoil.

    Unlike a rifle, where you have a rear sight or an optic, on a shotgun you have at most only a front bead at the far end of the barrel. The “rear sight” on a shotgun is your eye. In order for you to get consistent hits, you need to be able to achieve the same position of your eye relative to the rib every time you mount the gun. When you throw a shotgun up to your shoulder, and you lay your cheek on the comb, you need your eye to align to the rib the same way, every single time. This requirement of eye alignment will be changed with the drop of the comb and partly the length of pull, as well as cast-off (or cast-on for lefties).

    Then, you need the hand holding the grip to be far enough in front of your nose so that under recoil, you don’t hit yourself in the nose. Typically, this tends to be found to be a distance of at least about 3/4 of an inch from the base knuckle of your thumb as you’re gripping the gun to your nose. That gives you an idea of what length of pull you need. Please note that your length of pull might change depending on what you’re wearing – if you’re dressed for winter hunting, you might need a shorter length of pull in the stock, because your jacket effectively increases the length of pull on you.

    Then with respect to cast-off and toe-out, that’s determined by the width of one’s face and the size of one’s pectoral or breast development (male and female, respectively). Toe-out can be especially important in reducing the perceived recoil in that it can reposition the pointy toe of the stock out of your pectoral or breast tissue.

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