22 ARC: The Complete Reloading Guide

Discover the 22 ARC, a cutting-edge cartridge for AR-15 enthusiasts, offering remarkable velocity, accuracy, and low recoil for hunting and precision shooting.

Top Rated
Geissele GS2 2-Stage AR Trigger
Sportsmansguide.com
Geissele GS2 2-Stage AR Trigger
Must-Have
Mec Reloading Sizemaster Press 28 Gauge
Ammunitiondepot.com
Mec Reloading Sizemaster Press 28 Gauge
Trending Now
CMMG Dissent 22 ARC Compact AR15 Rifle
Ammunitiondepot.com
CMMG Dissent 22 ARC Compact AR15 Rifle
Hot Pick
Proof Research AR-Style 6mm ARC Barrel
Ammunitiondepot.com
Proof Research AR-Style 6mm ARC Barrel

Published: December 2025 | Last updated: April 2026

Disclaimer: The 22 ARC has two separate SAAMI pressure specifications – 52,000 PSI for gas-operated semi-automatic rifles and 62,000 PSI for bolt-action rifles. These specifications are not interchangeable. Always use load data matched to your specific platform. Begin 10% below published maximums for your platform and work up carefully while monitoring for pressure signs.


The 22 ARC arrived in 2024 as Hornady’s answer to a specific question: what if you could get 22-250 Remington ballistics from an AR-15 platform, with the heavy-bullet capability and wind resistance that makes a round genuinely useful at 600 yards? The cartridge is built on a necked-down 6mm ARC case, uses the same rebated rim that allows standard AR-15 magazines and bolts to function without modification, and is designed from the ground up around 70-90 grain .224-inch bullets with ballistic coefficients that the 223 Remington cannot realistically stabilize.

Top Rated
Hornady A22 ARC Reloading Brass Cases
Precision-crafted for superior reloading
Enhance your reloading experience with Hornady A22 ARC Brass Cases. They ensure excellent uniformity and consistency in every shot.

The results are as good as advertised. A 80-grain ELD Match bullet leaving a 22-inch AR-15 barrel at 3,100 FPS drifts 30-35% less in wind at 600 yards than a 77-grain SMK from a 223 Remington at similar velocity. It stays supersonic past 1,200 yards. It hits noticeably harder at distance than anything the 223 Remington can do with similar bullets. For a precision shooter, predator hunter, or varmint specialist who wants the AR-15 platform and needs genuine long-range capability, the 22 ARC is a meaningful step forward.

The reloading picture requires care because of the dual pressure specification – the most operationally important characteristic of this cartridge for handloaders.


The Dual Pressure Specification – Critical Safety Information

The 22 ARC is the only commonly encountered commercial rifle cartridge with two distinct SAAMI maximum average pressure specifications based on platform type:

  • Gas-operated semi-automatic (AR-15 style): 52,000 PSI maximum
  • Bolt-action rifles: 62,000 PSI maximum

This distinction exists because gas-operated actions extract cases at higher residual pressure than bolt-actions – the case must release from the chamber while the bolt is still moving rearward, and that happens slightly earlier in the pressure curve than a bolt-action’s manual extraction. Running a 62,000 PSI bolt-gun load in a gas gun creates a dangerous situation where the brass is being pulled from the chamber at pressure levels that can cause case head separation, stuck cases, or component failure.

Top Rated
Geissele GS2 2-Stage AR Trigger
Transform your shooting experience
The Geissele GS2 Trigger enhances accuracy and control for AR-15 and AR-10 platforms with its smooth operation.

The practical rule is absolute: know your platform, use matching data, and never run bolt-action data in a semi-automatic. Published data from Hornady and other sources labels loads clearly for gas-gun vs bolt-action use. If a manual or data sheet does not specify the platform, treat the data as applicable to bolt-actions only and develop new data from 10% below published gas-gun starting loads for your semi-automatic.

When in doubt about a specific load’s platform compatibility, email Hornady’s technical line or contact the data source directly. This is not an area for guessing.


Technical Characteristics

CharacteristicValue
Bullet Diameter0.224 inches
Case Length1.490 inches
Overall Cartridge Length2.260 inches (SAAMI max)
Rim Diameter0.378 inches (rebated – same as 6mm ARC)
Case Capacity~33-34 grains H2O
Case TypeRebated rim, bottleneck
Parent Case6mm ARC (necked down)
Max Avg Pressure – Gas Gun52,000 PSI (SAAMI)
Max Avg Pressure – Bolt Action62,000 PSI (SAAMI)
Typical Bullet Weight55-95 gr
Muzzle Velocity (62 gr, gas gun)~3,300 FPS (24-in barrel)
Muzzle Velocity (80 gr, gas gun)~3,000-3,100 FPS (22-in barrel)
Muzzle Velocity (88-90 gr, bolt)~2,950-3,000 FPS (24-in barrel)

The rebated rim is what makes the 22 ARC work in an AR-15 without modification – it has the same rim diameter as the 6mm ARC, which matches the standard AR-15 bolt face. No bolt swap, no magazine modification. This is the cartridge’s central practical advantage over alternatives like the 224 Valkyrie, which requires a different bolt and specific magazines.

Must-Have
Mec Reloading Sizemaster Press 28 Gauge
Perfect for dedicated shooting enthusiasts
This precision-engineered reloading press offers unmatched efficiency and ease for reloading 28 gauge ammunition.

Twist Rate

The 22 ARC’s design rationale centers on heavy, high-BC .224-inch bullets in the 75-95 grain range. These bullets are physically long for their diameter, and they require a fast twist rate to maintain gyroscopic stability. Hornady’s standard recommendation is 1:7, and this is not a conservative suggestion – it is a functional requirement for the cartridge’s primary use case.

Twist RateOptimal Bullet WeightPlatform Notes
1:775-95 grHornady’s standard recommendation; required for 88-95 gr bullets
1:762-75 grOver-stabilizes lighter bullets but produces no accuracy penalty at these velocities
1:860-85 grAdequate for most loads; marginal with 88+ gr bullets
1:890-95 grNot reliably stabilized; avoid these bullet weights with 1:8

A 1:8 twist handles 80-grain bullets adequately and produces good accuracy with the Hornady ELD-M 80-grain – the most common competition load. However, the very heaviest bullets in the 88-95 grain range that give the 22 ARC its maximum downrange performance genuinely need the 1:7 twist. If you are building or selecting a barrel with the intent of running 88-grain Berger Hybrid Target or 90-grain Sierra MatchKing bullets, specify 1:7. If you are primarily loading 62-80 grain varmint and hunting bullets, 1:8 is adequate.

Trending Now
CMMG Dissent 22 ARC Compact AR15 Rifle
Outstanding performance in a compact design
Experience impressive ballistic performance with the CMMG Dissent 22 ARC Rifle, delivering consistent power in a compact form.

Barrel length choices:

  • 16 inches: Minimum practical length for gas-gun function with the slower powders suited to this case; velocity penalties are meaningful (~100 FPS vs 20-inch)
  • 18 inches: Good balance of velocity and handling for hunting AR builds; loses ~50 FPS vs 20-inch
  • 20-22 inches: Optimal for most gas-gun applications; full powder burn, good velocity
  • 24 inches: Best for bolt-action precision builds; maximum velocity and best ES/SD numbers

Recoil

The 22 ARC’s recoil in an AR-15 is genuinely mild – approximately 7-7.5 ft-lbs with an 80-grain bullet at 3,100 FPS. The gas operation of the AR-15 spreads the felt impulse over a longer period than a bolt-action, making it feel lighter still. Shooters who move to the 22 ARC from a 223 Remington will notice slightly more push but nothing that disrupts sight picture or slows follow-up shots.

CartridgeRecoil (ft-lbs)PlatformNotes
223 Remington3.5-4.0AR-15The baseline; almost no felt recoil
22 ARC7.0-7.5AR-15Light; no disruption to sight picture
224 Valkyrie8.5-9.0AR-15Slightly more; requires bolt/mag change
22-250 Remington4.5-5.0Bolt-actionVery light but bolt-action only
6mm ARC8.5-9.0AR-15More recoil; heavier bullets, more energy

The comparison with the 224 Valkyrie is the most direct. The 22 ARC produces similar or slightly less recoil while delivering meaningfully higher velocity with 75-85 grain bullets, and does so without requiring a different bolt or special magazines. For an existing AR-15 owner who wants long-range 22-caliber performance, the barrel-swap simplicity of the 22 ARC is a genuine practical advantage.

Hot Pick
Proof Research AR-Style 6mm ARC Barrel
Designed for precision and durability
Elevate your shooting with the Proof Research 6mm ARC Stainless Barrel, featuring a sleek design and engineered for accuracy.

Ballistics and Field Performance

Trajectory

The ballistic data below uses the 80-grain Hornady ELD-M at 3,050 FPS from a 22-inch gas-gun barrel – the most common competition and hunting configuration. This bullet’s G7 BC of approximately 0.260 is what drives the wind-resistance advantage over lighter, lower-BC .224-inch bullets.

Distance (yards)Velocity (FPS)Energy (ft-lbs)Drop (inches)
Muzzle3,0501,651-1.5
502,9571,551+0.5
1002,8661,458+1.3
1502,7771,370+1.0
2002,6901,2850.0
3002,5201,128-5.5
4002,356985-16.8
5002,196857-35.2
6002,041740-62.0
8001,742539-147.8
1,0001,464381-303.0

80-grain ELD-M, G1 BC 0.535 / G7 BC 0.260, 3,050 FPS muzzle velocity. 59°F, sea level, 1.5-inch sight height, 200-yard zero.

Trending Now
Hornady Match ELD Match 22 ARC 20 Rounds
Precision ammunition for match shooters
Delivering high accuracy, Hornady Match ELD Match cartridges are ideal for competitive shooting and precision challenges.

How It Compares at Distance

The meaningful comparison is against the 223 Remington with a quality 77-grain bullet – the heaviest bullet the standard 223 Remington 1:8 twist handles reliably.

Range22 ARC 80 gr (3,050 FPS)223 Rem 77 gr (2,750 FPS)Advantage
Velocity @500 yds2,196 FPS1,970 FPSARC +226 FPS
Energy @500 yds857 ft-lbs664 ft-lbsARC +193 ft-lbs
Wind @500 yds (10 MPH)~9.5 in~12.0 inARC ~2.5 in less
Wind @800 yds (10 MPH)~26 in~35 inARC ~9 in less
Supersonic to~1,250 yds~900 ydsARC +350 yds

At 500 yards the 22 ARC with an 80-grain bullet is delivering 29% more energy than a 223 Remington with a 77-grain bullet – a gap that has real consequences for terminal performance on coyotes and medium varmints. At 800 yards, the wind drift advantage is enough to make a meaningful difference in hit probability in field conditions.

For further comparisons, see 22 ARC vs 224 Valkyrie vs 22 Nosler and 22 ARC vs 6mm ARC.


Reloading the 22 ARC

Primers

The 22 ARC uses small rifle primers. Standard small rifle primers are appropriate for most gas-gun loads at 52,000 PSI. Small rifle magnum primers are warranted for bolt-action loads at higher charges and in cold-weather conditions.

PrimerTypeApplication
CCI 400Small RifleStandard gas-gun loads; reliable and consistent
CCI BR-4Small Rifle Bench RestPrecision gas-gun and bolt-action loads; best SD
Federal 205Small RifleGood accuracy; consistent; widely available
Federal GM205MSmall Rifle MatchPremium precision option; competition loads
Remington 7-1/2Small Rifle Bench RestTraditional accuracy primer; good consistency
Winchester WSRSmall RifleReliable; good for general hunting loads
CCI 450Small Rifle MagnumBolt-action max loads; cold weather semi-auto use
Federal GM205MARSmall Rifle Match ARAR-optimized primer; harder cup for semi-auto use

The Federal GM205MAR is worth specific mention for semi-automatic use. Its harder primer cup is specifically designed for AR-platform firing pins, which can have enough energy to cause slam-fires with very soft primers. In any semi-automatic, verify that your primer of choice does not produce slam-fire symptoms – hard bolt closure should not detonate the round.

For bolt-action precision loads, the CCI BR-4 or Federal GM205M produces the tightest velocity standard deviations and is the appropriate choice for 62,000 PSI loads.

Cases

The 22 ARC case is still relatively new, and brass availability from independent suppliers is growing. Hornady is the primary source and produces consistent, reliable cases. Alpha Munitions and Peterson offer premium alternatives with tighter dimensional tolerances for precision work.

BrandNotes
HornadyPrimary source; good consistency; widely available; standard for most loads
Alpha MunitionsPremium option; tight tolerances; excellent for precision bolt-action development
PetersonPremium American option; growing availability; excellent consistency

The 22 ARC case is short – 1.490 inches – and the rebated rim requires attention during sizing. Full-length size after every firing for gas-gun loads to ensure reliable feeding and extraction. For bolt-action precision loads, minimum shoulder bump sizing is appropriate to extend case life.

Trim to 1.490 inches after each firing. The short case stretches proportionally less than longer cases, but maintaining correct trim length keeps neck tension consistent. Anneal every 4-5 firings to extend case life and maintain consistent neck tension.

Check primer pockets after each firing in gas-gun loads. Semi-automatic extraction at higher residual pressure can loosen primer pockets faster than bolt-action firing cycles. Cases that no longer hold primers firmly should be retired.

For best results, sort brass by headstamp and lot number and keep gas-gun and bolt-action batches completely separate. Mixing the two introduces variables that undermine load development.

Bullets

The 22 ARC’s raison d’être is heavy, high-BC .224-inch bullets that the 223 Remington cannot stabilize or does not have the case volume to drive at competitive velocities. The bullet selection below reflects that focus, though lighter options are included for varmint and high-volume use.

BulletWeightTypeTwist ReqApplicationNotes
Hornady V-MAX55 grPolymer Tip Varmint1:8+Prairie dogs, high-volume varmintMax velocity; not the ARC’s strength
Hornady ELD-VT62 grPolymer Tip Varmint1:8+Varmint; factory V-Match load bulletGood entry-level varmint load
Hornady ELD-M75 grPolymer Tip Match1:8Competition, long-range targetHigh BC; good for gas-gun precision
Sierra MatchKing77 grHPBT1:8Competition, targetClassic high-BC .224 match bullet
Hornady ELD-X80 grPolymer Tip Hunting1:7-1:8Predators, medium gameBest hunting bullet for 22 ARC
Hornady ELD-M80 grPolymer Tip Match1:7-1:8Competition, long-range targetHigh BC; dominant competition bullet
Sierra MatchKing80 grHPBT1:7-1:8Competition, benchrestProven accuracy; excellent BC
Berger Hybrid Target85.5 grHPBT Hybrid1:7PRS, F-Class, long-range targetVery high BC; top competition bullet
Hornady ELD-M88 grPolymer Tip Match1:7Long-range competitionHighest BC in practical ARC range
Sierra MatchKing90 grHPBT1:7Benchrest, long-range targetMaximum BC; requires 1:7
Hornady CX70 grMonolithic1:7-1:8Lead-free hunting; tough gameFull weight retention; California legal

The Hornady ELD-M 80-grain is the dominant competition bullet and a practical default for most gas-gun precision loads. It balances velocity (achievable at 3,050-3,100 FPS in a 22-inch gas gun) with a high enough BC to make the 22 ARC’s wind-resistance advantage work at 500-800 yards. Most published competition data centers on this bullet.

For hunting use, the Hornady ELD-X 80-grain is the appropriate choice over a match bullet. Match bullets are not designed for terminal hunting expansion – they are optimized for accuracy and may not expand reliably at reduced impact velocities. The ELD-X’s Heat Shield tip and controlled-expansion design handles the range of velocities from close-range predator work to 500-yard shots where the bullet is arriving below 2,400 FPS.

For California and other lead-free zones, the Hornady CX 70-grain is the recommended option. Monolithic bullets in the .224-inch bore produce higher chamber pressure than lead-core bullets of the same weight in this small case – start from CX-specific load data at 10% below maximum, not from lead-core starting loads.

Powders

The 22 ARC’s small case (33-34 grains H2O capacity) and focus on 70-90 grain bullets puts it in the medium burn rate neighborhood. The case is too small for the very slow powders suited to the 6.5 PRC or similar, and the 1:7 twist and heavier bullets mean faster powders like Hodgdon H322 that work well with 55-grain 223 Remington loads are generally too fast here. The sweet spot is Hodgdon CFE 223, Hodgdon Varget, Alliant Reloder 15, and Vihtavuori N530.

Important: All charge weights below are separated by platform. Do not use bolt-action data in a semi-automatic AR-15.

PowderPlatformBullet WeightStart ChargeMax ChargeApprox VelocityNotes
Hodgdon CFE 223Gas gun75-80 gr24.5 gr27.5 gr~3,050 FPSTop gas-gun choice; copper fouling eraser; excellent metering
Hodgdon CFE 223Gas gun62-70 gr26.0 gr29.0 gr~3,250 FPSGood with lighter varmint bullets
Hodgdon CFE 223Bolt80-88 gr26.0 gr29.5 gr~3,100 FPSSame powder, higher ceiling for bolt
Hodgdon VargetGas gun75-80 gr23.5 gr26.5 gr~3,020 FPSTemperature stable; consistent across conditions
Hodgdon VargetGas gun62-70 gr25.0 gr28.0 gr~3,220 FPSGood for lighter hunting bullets
Hodgdon VargetBolt80-88 gr25.0 gr28.5 gr~3,080 FPSTemperature stable; excellent for precision bolt loads
Alliant Reloder 15Gas gun80-90 gr23.0 gr26.0 gr~3,000 FPSGood with heavier bullets; consistent
Alliant Reloder 15Bolt85-95 gr24.5 gr27.5 gr~3,050 FPSBest choice for 88-95 gr heavy match bullets
Vihtavuori N530Gas gun75-85 gr23.0 gr26.0 gr~3,020 FPSPremium consistency; excellent SD for competition
Vihtavuori N530Bolt80-90 gr24.5 gr28.0 gr~3,100 FPSTop precision bolt load option
Winchester StaBall MatchGas gun70-85 gr24.0 gr27.0 gr~3,050 FPSTemperature stable ball powder; excellent metering
Winchester StaBall MatchBolt80-90 gr25.0 gr28.5 gr~3,100 FPSGood bolt-action precision option
Hodgdon BenchmarkGas gun62-75 gr24.0 gr27.0 gr~3,200 FPSAccurate; good for lighter bullets
Ramshot TACGas gun70-85 gr23.5 gr26.5 gr~3,020 FPSBall powder; consistent metering; reliable gas-gun function
Shooters World AR PlusGas gun60-80 gr24.0 gr27.0 gr~3,100 FPSClean burning; good for AR function; cost effective
Alliant Power Pro 2000-MRGas gun75-90 gr23.5 gr26.5 gr~3,000 FPSGood with heavier bullets; progressive metering
Accurate 1680Gas gun75-90 gr20.0 gr23.0 gr~2,600 FPSSubsonic and reduced loads only; not for standard use

All charge weights are reference figures. Verify against current Hornady, Hodgdon, Alliant, or Vihtavuori data for your specific platform (gas gun or bolt action) before loading. Never exceed published platform-specific maximums.

Hodgdon CFE 223 is the most practical starting point for gas-gun 22 ARC loads. Its copper fouling eraser additive is a meaningful benefit in a high-volume shooting context – the 223 Remington comparison is instructive here, as AR-15 shooters who run thousands of rounds per year know that copper fouling management is a real maintenance concern in small-bore cartridges at high velocity. CFE 223’s reduced fouling means cleaner barrel performance over a long session.

Hodgdon Varget is the temperature-stable choice for hunters and competitors who develop loads in one climate and use them in another. Its broad published data and proven accuracy track record in .224-inch cartridges make it a reliable alternative to CFE 223.

Vihtavuori N530 is the premium precision powder for 22 ARC loads where standard deviation is the priority. Combined with premium brass and consistent primers, N530 loads produce tight velocity spreads that translate directly to tight groups at 600+ yards.

For bolt-action 22 ARC builds running 88-95 grain heavy match bullets at the 62,000 PSI ceiling, Alliant Reloder 15 is the recommended starting powder. Its slightly slower burn rate suits the heavier bullets better than CFE 223 or Benchmark, producing more complete combustion and more consistent velocities at the top of the pressure window.

Accurate 1680 is listed specifically for reduced and subsonic loads – not for standard performance loads. It is the choice for a suppressed 22 ARC build where subsonic heavy-bullet loads are the goal. Do not use it expecting standard velocities; the numbers in that row reflect its intended application.

Top Rated
Hornady 109gr ELD Match Bullets .243
Exceptional accuracy for long-range shooting
These Hornady 109gr ELD Match Bullets ensure superior aerodynamic performance and consistency for precision shooting.

Practical Hunting Applications

Predators and Coyotes

The 22 ARC with an 80-grain Hornady ELD-X at 3,050 FPS is one of the most capable coyote cartridges available from an AR-15 platform. At 500 yards it is delivering approximately 857 ft-lbs – more than adequate for clean kills on coyotes with good bullet placement. Wind drift at that distance is approximately 9-10 inches in a 10 MPH crosswind, which requires compensation but is less drift than the 223 Remington in the same conditions.

The gas-gun platform allows quick follow-up shots when multiple coyotes are called in simultaneously – a scenario where the AR-15’s semi-automatic function offers a real field advantage over bolt-action predator rifles.

For pelt hunters, the Hornady ELD-X is preferable to explosive varmint bullets at 22 ARC velocities. The controlled-expansion design produces a cleaner entrance wound and avoids the extensive pelt damage that a 3,100 FPS impact from an Hornady V-MAX would cause.

Prairie Dogs and Ground Squirrels

With 62-75 grain varmint bullets at 3,200-3,400 FPS, the 22 ARC is a capable prairie dog and ground squirrel cartridge. The gas-gun platform allows rapid engagement of multiple targets, and the flat trajectory with a 200-yard zero keeps holdover minimal inside 250 yards.

The practical constraint is the same one that applies to all high-velocity .22-caliber cartridges in sustained varmint shooting: barrel heat and throat erosion. Let the barrel cool between strings, clean thoroughly after each session, and understand that high-volume prairie dog shooting accumulates meaningful throat wear. The 22 ARC’s published barrel life estimate of 3,000-5,000 rounds assumes reasonable use – sustained prairie dog sessions that run 300+ rounds in a day will consume barrel life faster than that estimate suggests.

Medium Game

In jurisdictions where .22-caliber centerfires are legal for deer or antelope, the 22 ARC with a 80-grain Hornady ELD-X or 70-grain Hornady CX is a functional option at ranges inside 300 yards. The energy at 300 yards with an 80-grain load is approximately 1,128 ft-lbs, which is above the threshold for clean kills on deer-sized game with precise shot placement. This is not a primary deer rifle recommendation – the 6mm ARC or 6.5 Creedmoor is more appropriate for dedicated deer hunting with an AR platform – but for mixed-use builds in areas where it is legal, the 22 ARC with the right bullet is capable.


22 ARC vs 6mm ARC: Choosing Between the ARC Family

The natural question for any AR-15 owner considering the 22 ARC is how it compares to the 6mm ARC – the parent case and the cartridge that established the ARC platform.

Must-Have
Allen Big Game Suede Rifle Sling
Stylish and functional shooting accessory
Enjoy comfort and stability with the Allen Big Game Suede Rifle Sling, designed for a secure grip during extended hunts.
Factor22 ARC6mm ARCAdvantage
Muzzle Velocity (light)3,300+ FPS (62 gr)2,750 FPS (75 gr)22 ARC
Wind @600 yds (10 MPH)~15 in (80 gr)~13 in (108 gr)6mm ARC
Energy @500 yds~857 ft-lbs (80 gr)~1,200 ft-lbs (108 gr)6mm ARC
Practical Deer Range~250 yds~400 yds6mm ARC
Varmint PerformanceExcellentGood22 ARC
Barrel Life3,000-5,000 rds3,000-4,000 rdsSimilar

If your primary use is varmints and predators with occasional medium game, the 22 ARC is the better tool. If you are primarily a deer hunter who also shoots predators, the 6mm ARC is a more complete solution. Both use the same bolt and magazines in an AR-15.

For more detail, see 22 ARC vs 6mm ARC.


Conclusion

The 22 ARC delivers on its core promise: genuine long-range .22-caliber performance from a standard AR-15 without a bolt swap, without special magazines, and without the recoil that makes extended sessions unpleasant. For a precision shooter or predator hunter who wants the AR-15 platform and needs to reach past 400 yards reliably, it is a meaningful improvement over the 223 Remington.

The dual pressure specification is the one thing every 22 ARC reloader must internalize before loading the first round. Semi-automatic data and bolt-action data are not interchangeable, and the difference between 52,000 PSI and 62,000 PSI is real. Read your data source carefully, match the data to your platform, and the 22 ARC is a straightforward and rewarding cartridge to reload for.

For related reading, see the 22 ARC handloading technical guide, developing a custom 22 ARC load, best bullets for 22 ARC, 22 ARC vs 224 Valkyrie vs 22 Nosler, and 22 ARC ballistics.


Disclaimer: All load data in this article is for reference purposes only. Gas-gun (52,000 PSI) and bolt-action (62,000 PSI) data are not interchangeable – always use data matched to your platform. Verify all charges against current published reloading manuals before loading. Never exceed published platform-specific maximum charges. Begin 10% below listed maximums and work up while monitoring for pressure signs.


Editorial note: This article was originally published in December 2025 and revised in April 2026. The revision expanded the dual pressure specification warning into a dedicated section making the gas-gun vs bolt-action data separation explicit as the primary safety concern for handloaders, added a complete powder table with 17 powders separated by platform and bullet weight with charge weight ranges, expanded bullet selection with twist rate requirements for each weight, added a trajectory table with 200-yard zero from muzzle to 1,000 yards, added a direct performance comparison table against the 223 Remington at 500 and 800 yards, a 22 ARC vs 6mm ARC comparison table for buyers deciding between the two ARC cartridges, platform-specific primer guidance including slam-fire concerns in semi-automatics, and expanded hunting application guidance.