
Quick Answer Box
- The Bergara B-14 HMR (~$950–$1,100) offers the best accuracy-to-value ratio in this category.
- The Tikka T3x TAC A1 (~$1,100–$1,300) is the best overall precision rifle under $1,500 — adjustable stock, excellent accuracy, AICS magazine.
- 6.5 Creedmoor is the dominant caliber choice for precision shooting at this price point — low recoil, flat trajectory, outstanding factory ammo selection.
- “Sub-MOA” means shooting 1-inch or smaller groups at 100 yards — most rifles in this category deliver it; verify with your specific gun and ammo.
- Budget $500–$1,000 for optics — a precision rifle without quality glass is like a race car with flat tires.
Introduction
The precision rifle segment under $1,500 has gotten remarkably good in recent years — you can buy a rifle in this range that legitimately competes with guns costing twice as much. These aren’t “good for the price” rifles — they’re genuinely excellent precision instruments.
What Does “Precision Rifle” Actually Mean?
For this guide, “precision rifle” means a bolt-action designed for long-range accuracy — typically capable of sub-MOA groups (1 inch or smaller at 100 yards) with quality ammunition, built around an AICS-pattern detachable box magazine for consistent feeding, with an adjustable or semi-adjustable stock for proper fit, and a heavier barrel contour for heat resistance and rigidity.
Top 5 Precision Rifles Under $1,500: Comparison Table
| Rifle | Caliber Options | Magazine | Stock | Approx. Price | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tikka T3x TAC A1 | 6.5 CM, .308, .260 Rem | AICS 10-rd | Adjustable | $1,100–$1,300 | Best overall |
| Bergara B-14 HMR | 6.5 CM, .308, .300 WM | AICS 5-rd | HMR Molded | $950–$1,100 | Best value |
| Ruger Precision Rifle | 6.5 CM, .308, 6mm CM | AICS/SR25 | Folding | $1,099 | Best versatility |
| Savage 110 Precision | 6.5 CM, .308, .338 LM | AICS 10-rd | MDT LSS | $1,100 | Best trigger |
| Mossberg MVP Precision | 5.56, .308 | AR-style 20/30-rd | MDT | $949 | AR-mag compatibility |
Tikka T3x TAC A1 (~$1,100–$1,300) — Best Overall
The Tikka T3x TAC A1 is what precision shooters most commonly recommend under $1,500. Tikka is the Finnish precision division of Sako — their T3x action is one of the smoothest bolt actions at any price. The TAC A1 adds a fully adjustable chassis stock (LOP, comb height, spacer system), AICS 10-round magazines, and a cold-hammer-forged stainless barrel. Accuracy: 0.5–0.75 MOA with match-grade 6.5 Creedmoor is common.
Bergara B-14 HMR (~$950–$1,100) — Best Value
The Bergara B-14 HMR pairs the excellent B-14 action with a polymer/fiberglass HMR stock with AICS magazine compatibility. Bergara’s Spanish button-rifled barrels produce exceptional consistency. Sub-0.75 MOA with factory 6.5 Creedmoor match ammo is common. At $950–$1,100, it undercuts the Tikka by $150–$200 with comparable accuracy. See also our best budget rifles guide.
Ruger Precision Rifle (~$1,099) — Best Versatility
The RPR launched in 2015 and transformed the market. Its multi-caliber capability — 6mm CM, 6.5 CM, .308, .243 — lets you swap barrels. The folding stock and AR-style grip make it ergonomically familiar to AR-15 users. Check out our AR-15 buyer’s guide for the platform comparison.
Savage 110 Precision (~$1,100) — AccuTrigger Champion
Savage’s AccuTrigger (1.5–6 lbs, user-adjustable without a gunsmith) pairs with an MDT LSS Gen 2 chassis and heavy fluted barrel. Sub-0.5 MOA groups in 6.5 Creedmoor with quality ammo are common. The MDT chassis alone would cost $400–$500 separately.
Caliber Selection: Why 6.5 Creedmoor Dominates
- Ballistic coefficient: 0.490–0.650+ BC for match bullets — stays supersonic past 1,400 yards
- Less recoil than .308 — faster follow-up shots, easier cold-bore confirmation
- Factory ammo: Hornady ELD Match 140gr (~$1.80/round) delivers sub-MOA without handloading
- Barrel life: ~3,000–4,000 rounds per barrel
6.5 Creedmoor vs. .308 Winchester — full comparison
FAQ
What’s the best precision rifle under $1,500 for PRS? The Tikka T3x TAC A1 and Bergara B-14 HMR are the most popular Production-class choices. The TAC A1’s adjustable chassis gives it a slight edge for fit.
Do I need to handload to shoot sub-MOA? No — Hornady ELD Match and Federal Gold Medal Match deliver sub-MOA results in quality precision rifles straight from the box.
6.5 Creedmoor or .308 for a beginner? 6.5 Creedmoor — less recoil, flatter trajectory, excellent factory ammo. .308 is a solid second caliber if you have existing components.
Conclusion
The Bergara B-14 HMR wins on pure value — exceptional accuracy that leaves budget for quality glass. Step up to the Tikka T3x TAC A1 if you want the best overall. Either way, pair it with a first focal plane scope in the $500–$700 range and Hornady ELD Match 140gr to see what long-range accuracy actually looks like.
