Published: October 2025 | Last updated: April 2026
Disclaimer: All load data referenced in this article is drawn from published reloading manuals. Always begin 10% below the listed maximum charge and work up in small increments while watching for pressure signs. Never exceed published maximums. The 6.5×47 Lapua uses small rifle primers – do not substitute large rifle primers regardless of what fits the pocket.
The 6.5×47 Lapua occupies a specific and well-defined niche in the precision shooting world. It was developed in 2005 through a collaboration between Lapua and the Swiss and Finnish national shooting teams with a clear purpose: build a cartridge that wins 300-meter competitions and scales credibly to 1,000 meters without the recoil and barrel wear that come with larger 6.5mm cases. It succeeded on both counts, and in the process became one of the most respected cartridges among PRS and benchrest competitors who handload.
The 6.5×47 Lapua is not a mainstream hunting cartridge and was never meant to be, though it handles medium game competently. It is not an alternative to the 6.5 Creedmoor for hunters who want affordable factory ammunition and wide rifle selection. What it is, specifically, is a purpose-built precision cartridge with exceptional brass quality, outstanding barrel life for the velocity it produces, and a case design that works efficiently in short-action custom builds. For the reloader who is serious about precision – PRS, benchrest, F-Class, or long-range target work – it is one of the better options available.
This guide covers the cartridge’s technical foundation, how it compares to its closest competitors, complete reloading data including charge weights, and what it actually does in the field and on the range.
Technical Characteristics
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Bullet Diameter | 0.264 inches (6.5mm) |
| Case Length | 1.850 inches |
| Overall Cartridge Length | 2.825 inches |
| Case Capacity | ~45 grains H2O |
| Primer Size | Small Rifle |
| Max Avg Pressure (SAAMI) | 60,916 PSI |
| Typical Bullet Weight | 108-147 gr |
| Muzzle Velocity (123 gr) | 2,790 FPS |
| Muzzle Velocity (139-140 gr) | 2,650-2,720 FPS |
| Muzzle Energy (140 gr) | ~2,180 ft-lbs |
The small rifle primer is the 6.5×47 Lapua’s most distinctive technical feature and one of the main reasons it was purpose-built rather than adapted from an existing case. Small primers provide more consistent ignition in the case’s modest volume – there is less primer-to-propellant energy variation than with large rifle primers, and that consistency translates directly into lower velocity standard deviations. The penalty is that some shooters experience ignition reliability issues in extreme cold, which is worth addressing in primer selection.
The case capacity of approximately 45 grains of water sits between the 6mm BR and the 6.5 Creedmoor. It is efficient rather than cavernous, which is part of why powder charges are modest and barrel life is excellent.
Twist Rate and Barrel Setup
The 6.5×47 Lapua is almost exclusively used in custom and semi-custom bolt-action builds. Tikka T3 and Sako TRG factory offerings exist, but the cartridge’s primary market is precision shooters who are building rifles for competition – which means barrel choice is a deliberate decision rather than an inherited one.
| Twist Rate | Optimal Bullet Weight | Recommended Barrel Length | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1:8 | 130-147 gr | 24-28 in | Required for heaviest 147 gr bullets; handles all standard weights |
| 1:8.5 | 123-140 gr | 22-26 in | The sweet spot for most match use; excellent with 130-140 gr |
| 1:9 | 108-130 gr | 20-24 in | Adequate for lighter bullets; marginal with 140+ gr at 6.5×47 velocities |
For most precision shooters building a 6.5×47 Lapua rifle today, a 1:8.5 twist barrel in 24-26 inches is the standard configuration. It stabilizes the 130-140 grain bullets that dominate precision competition and allows the shooter to run heavier 147-grain bullets if needed. A 1:8 twist is required if you intend to shoot the Hornady ELD-M 147-grain reliably.
Barrel life is one of the 6.5×47 Lapua’s genuine competitive advantages. Where a 6.5 Creedmoor barrel typically shows accuracy degradation at 2,500-3,000 rounds, and a 6.5 PRC barrel may be past its best at 1,500-2,000 rounds, the 6.5×47 Lapua routinely delivers 4,000+ rounds of accurate shooting. The modest powder charge and moderate operating velocity are the reason. For a competitive shooter who burns through a lot of rounds in practice and matches, that barrel life advantage has real economic and practical value.
Recoil
The 6.5×47 Lapua is one of the softer-shooting 6.5mm cartridges available, and that is a deliberate design outcome rather than a coincidence. At approximately 9 ft-lbs of recoil in an 8-pound rifle with a 140-grain bullet, it generates less felt recoil than the 6.5 Creedmoor and is noticeably lighter than the 6.5 PRC.
| Cartridge | Recoil (ft-lbs) | Rifle Weight (lbs) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 243 Winchester | 7 | 8.0 | Very light; excellent for extended sessions |
| 6mm Creedmoor | 7-8 | 8.0 | Comparable to 243; popular in PRS |
| 6.5×47 Lapua | 9 | 8.0 | Light; long sessions without fatigue |
| 6.5 Creedmoor | 11 | 8.0 | Standard; manageable but step up from 6.5×47 |
| 6.5 PRC | 14-15 | 8.5 | Noticeably sharper; more fatigue in long matches |
In a sport where shooters fire dozens or hundreds of rounds in a training session, the 2 ft-lbs difference between the 6.5×47 Lapua and the 6.5 Creedmoor is cumulative. By the end of a full day at a PRS match – where you might fire 60-80 rounds across multiple stages – lighter recoil means better spotter calls, better reading of your own impacts, and less physical wear. This is not a trivial consideration for serious competitors.
Ballistics and Field Performance
Trajectory
The 6.5×47 Lapua’s ballistic performance is built on the 6.5mm bullet selection – high ballistic coefficients across the weight range that are simply not available in most other bore diameters at this velocity level. A 140-grain Berger Hybrid Target with a G7 BC of 0.315 carries velocity and resists wind drift in a way that larger, faster cartridges with lower-BC bullets cannot match at distance.
The table below uses a 200-yard zero – the site standard – and the 140-grain load at 2,700 FPS that represents the most common match configuration.
| Distance (yards) | Velocity (FPS) | Energy (ft-lbs) | Drop (inches) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muzzle | 2,700 | 2,267 | -1.5 |
| 50 | 2,626 | 2,147 | +0.4 |
| 100 | 2,554 | 2,029 | +1.2 |
| 150 | 2,483 | 1,918 | +1.0 |
| 200 | 2,413 | 1,812 | 0.0 |
| 300 | 2,278 | 1,616 | -5.8 |
| 400 | 2,147 | 1,435 | -17.1 |
| 500 | 2,020 | 1,270 | -34.5 |
| 600 | 1,898 | 1,121 | -59.1 |
| 800 | 1,663 | 860 | -131.8 |
| 1,000 | 1,448 | 652 | -256.4 |
140-grain match bullet, G1 BC 0.615 / G7 BC 0.315, 2,700 FPS muzzle velocity. 59°F, sea level, 1.5-inch sight height, 200-yard zero.
At 1,000 yards the 6.5×47 Lapua with a 140-grain high-BC bullet is still delivering over 650 ft-lbs of energy and remaining supersonic – a necessary condition for accurate long-range shooting. The wind drift picture is equally favorable: in a 10 MPH full-value crosswind, a 140-grain match bullet from the 6.5×47 Lapua drifts roughly 50 inches at 1,000 yards, which is competitive with the 6.5 Creedmoor and meaningfully better than lower-BC alternatives at similar velocities.
Comparison with Close Competitors
| Cartridge | Bullet (gr) | MV (FPS) | ME (ft-lbs) | Wind Drift @1000 yds (10 MPH) | Barrel Life |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6mm Creedmoor | 105-108 | 2,950-3,000 | 2,035 | ~45-48 in | 2,000-2,500 rds |
| 6.5×47 Lapua | 140 | 2,700 | 2,267 | ~50 in | 4,000+ rds |
| 6.5 Creedmoor | 140 | 2,700-2,800 | 2,267-2,435 | ~50-52 in | 2,500-3,000 rds |
| 6.5×55 Swedish | 140 | 2,700-2,750 | 2,267 | ~50-52 in | 3,000-3,500 rds |
| 6.5 PRC | 140 | 2,900-2,950 | 2,613 | ~44-47 in | 1,500-2,000 rds |
The ballistic performance numbers between the 6.5×47 Lapua and the 6.5 Creedmoor are close enough that no practical shooting situation would distinguish them in the field. The real differences are elsewhere: the 6.5×47 Lapua uses less powder, produces less recoil, and delivers meaningfully longer barrel life. The 6.5 Creedmoor has much broader factory ammunition availability and a wider rifle selection. For a reloader building a dedicated precision rig, the 6.5×47 Lapua is the more efficient choice. For a hunter who wants to buy factory ammunition and pick from a wide range of production rifles, the 6.5 Creedmoor is the more practical one.
Reloading the 6.5×47 Lapua
The 6.5×47 Lapua rewards careful, methodical reloading. The case design is precise and the brass – particularly Lapua-manufactured cases – is consistent enough that quality handloads can achieve velocity standard deviations in the single digits with attention to technique. Neck-turning is not required for most precision work, but it is practiced by some benchrest shooters using minimum-dimension chambers. For PRS and F-Class use, careful brass preparation including uniform primer pocket depth and consistent case trimming is more impactful than neck-turning.
Primers
The small rifle primer is mandatory. Do not attempt to use large rifle primers in the 6.5×47 Lapua – the pocket diameter is not compatible. The most important primer choice here is between standard and magnum small rifle primers, and the decision depends on powder choice and operating temperature.
| Primer | Type | Application |
|---|---|---|
| CCI 450 | Small Rifle Magnum | Standard competition choice; consistent ignition across temperatures |
| Federal GM205M | Small Rifle Match | Premium choice for lowest SD; excellent with slower powders |
| CCI BR-4 | Small Rifle Bench Rest | Excellent standard deviation; preferred in controlled-environment benchrest |
| Federal 205 | Small Rifle Standard | Works well in moderate temperatures; less reliable below freezing |
| Remington 7-1/2 | Small Rifle Bench Rest | Good consistency; popular choice in precision loading |
| Winchester WSR | Small Rifle | Widely available; consistent; adequate for hunting loads |
The CCI 450 magnum small rifle primer has become the standard choice for many 6.5×47 Lapua loads specifically because it provides reliable ignition with the slower-burning powders like Hodgdon H4350 and Vihtavuori N150 that produce the best performance in this case. The Federal GM205M is worth trying if you are pursuing the lowest possible standard deviation in a controlled competition environment – it has a very consistent cup thickness and produces notably tight SD numbers with the right powder pairing.
One practical note: the small rifle primer’s ignition reliability in cold temperatures is a legitimate concern that some sources raise. In practice, using a magnum small rifle primer like the CCI 450 addresses this without requiring any other change to the load. Hunters using the 6.5×47 Lapua in cold weather should default to the magnum primer.
Cases
Lapua brass is the foundation of the 6.5×47 Lapua’s reputation for precision. The consistency of Lapua case dimensions – neck thickness, primer pocket depth, case wall concentricity – is measurably better than most other commercial brass and is a significant contributor to the low standard deviations that careful handloaders achieve with this cartridge. Buy Lapua brass, prepare it carefully, and expect 8-10+ loadings per case with normal care.
| Brand | Notes |
|---|---|
| Lapua | The standard; exceptional consistency; worth the premium; 8-10+ loadings typical |
| Peterson | Premium American-made option; comparable quality to Lapua; growing availability |
| Norma | Less common; good quality; adequate for precision work |
There is no practical reason to use anything other than Lapua or Peterson brass in this cartridge. The cost difference between Lapua brass and cheaper alternatives is real, but given that the 6.5×47 Lapua is essentially a precision shooter’s cartridge – not a high-volume plinking round – the brass cost per round is justified by the consistency it provides.
Brass preparation before first loading: clean, uniform primer pockets, check and trim to 1.850 inches, lightly chamfer and deburr the case mouth. For competition brass, some shooters neck-turn to achieve uniform neck thickness, but this is only warranted in minimum-dimension match chambers and is not necessary for the vast majority of precision loads.
Bullets
The 6.5×47 Lapua’s case was designed around the 6.5mm bullet’s outstanding high-BC performance. The sweet spot is 123-140 grains for most match work, where the combination of velocity and ballistic coefficient produces the flattest trajectories and least wind drift. The Lapua Scenar and Lapua Scenar-L are the cartridge’s natural siblings and produce excellent results. The Berger Hybrid Target 140-grain is arguably the most popular competition bullet in this cartridge today.
| Bullet | Weight | Type | Best Application | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berger Hybrid Target | 140 gr | HPBT Hybrid | PRS, F-Class, long-range target | High BC; excellent accuracy; the dominant competition choice |
| Lapua Scenar-L | 136 gr | OTM | Benchrest, precision target | Exceptional consistency; optimized for 6.5×47 Lapua |
| Lapua Scenar | 123 gr | OTM | 300m competition, target | Classic pairing with this cartridge; excellent SD |
| Sierra MatchKing | 139 gr | HPBT | Match shooting, F-Class | Proven accuracy record; excellent value |
| Sierra Tipped MatchKing | 130 gr | Tipped HPBT | Long-range target, hunting | Better BC than standard SMK; versatile |
| Hornady ELD-M | 147 gr | Polymer Tip Match | Long-range competition, ELR | Requires 1:8 twist; highest BC option; |
| Hornady ELD-X | 143 gr | Polymer Tip Hunting | Hunting to 500 yds | Best hunting option; excellent terminal performance |
| Berger VLD Hunting | 140 gr | VLD | Hunting at range | Good BC; controlled expansion on game |
| Nosler RDF | 130 gr | HPBT | Target, PRS | Very high BC for weight; consistent |
For hunting applications, the Hornady ELD-X 143-grain is the most practical choice. It combines a meaningful ballistic coefficient with the terminal performance required for clean kills on deer-sized game to 400-500 yards. The polymer tip and bonded construction produce reliable expansion across a wide velocity range, which matters at the longer distances where the 6.5×47 Lapua’s modest velocity has bled off somewhat.
Powders
The 6.5×47 Lapua’s case volume and pressure ceiling put it in the medium-slow burn rate territory for optimal performance. The powders that produce the best results in this cartridge cluster around the Hodgdon H4350 and Vihtavuori N150 burn rate neighborhood, with the Vihtavuori N540 and Alliant Reloder 16 also producing excellent results.
| Powder | Bullet Weight | Start Charge | Max Charge | Approx Max Velocity | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hodgdon H4350 | 130-140 gr | 36.0 gr | 40.5 gr | ~2,720 FPS | Temperature stable; the most popular choice; consistent across conditions |
| Hodgdon H4350 | 123 gr | 37.5 gr | 42.0 gr | ~2,830 FPS | Works well with lighter bullets; predictable |
| Vihtavuori N150 | 130-140 gr | 36.5 gr | 41.0 gr | ~2,730 FPS | Very consistent; excellent SD numbers; preferred by Lapua competition shooters |
| Vihtavuori N140 | 108-123 gr | 36.0 gr | 40.5 gr | ~2,900 FPS | Best with lighter bullets; excellent accuracy |
| Vihtavuori N540 | 123-140 gr | 36.0 gr | 40.5 gr | ~2,700 FPS | Ball powder; excellent metering; consistent SD |
| Alliant Reloder 16 | 130-140 gr | 37.0 gr | 41.5 gr | ~2,720 FPS | Temperature stable; growing popularity in precision community |
| Alliant Reloder 15 | 123-140 gr | 35.5 gr | 40.0 gr | ~2,700 FPS | Good all-around choice; widely available |
| IMR 4064 | 123-140 gr | 34.5 gr | 38.5 gr | ~2,660 FPS | Classic choice; accurate; slightly lower velocity |
| IMR 4166 Enduron | 130-147 gr | 36.0 gr | 40.0 gr | ~2,700 FPS | Temperature stable Enduron series; good for field use |
| IMR 4451 Enduron | 140-147 gr | 37.0 gr | 41.5 gr | ~2,700 FPS | Slower Enduron; better suited for heaviest bullets |
| Hodgdon Varget | 108-123 gr | 34.0 gr | 38.0 gr | ~2,850 FPS | Best with lighter bullets; excellent temperature stability |
| Hodgdon H4895 | 108-123 gr | 33.5 gr | 37.5 gr | ~2,820 FPS | Faster burn; light bullet loads; reduced charges possible |
| Accurate 4350 | 130-140 gr | 35.5 gr | 40.0 gr | ~2,690 FPS | Good option for 140-grain loads; consistent |
All charge weights are reference figures. Verify against current published data from Hodgdon, Vihtavuori, Alliant, or a current reloading manual before loading. Begin 10% below listed maximums and work up carefully.
Hodgdon H4350 is the most practical starting point for most reloaders because of its broad availability, well-documented load data, and excellent temperature stability. A 6.5×47 Lapua load built on H4350 with a 140-grain Berger Hybrid Target or Sierra MatchKing will produce excellent results in any climate.
Vihtavuori N150 deserves special mention because of its historical relationship with this cartridge – Lapua’s competition engineers worked with Vihtavuori powders during the cartridge’s development, and the N150 and N140 data in Vihtavuori’s own manuals is among the most thoroughly tested data available for the 6.5×47 Lapua. If you are pursuing the lowest possible standard deviation in a controlled environment, the Vihtavuori powders are worth the time to develop data for.
Alliant Reloder 16 is an increasingly popular choice among PRS competitors who want H4350-level temperature stability with slightly better performance. It has found a following in the 6.5×47 Lapua community because its burn rate aligns well with the case volume and its temperature characteristics make it reliable across the wide conditions a competition shooter encounters across a season.
Practical Applications
Precision Competition (PRS, F-Class, Benchrest)
This is the 6.5×47 Lapua’s home territory. Its combination of low recoil, high-BC bullet compatibility, and outstanding barrel life makes it well-suited for the volume shooting that precision competition demands. A PRS competitor might fire 1,500-2,000 rounds in a season of matches and practice; the 6.5×47 Lapua can run that volume with a single barrel where a 6.5 PRC barrel might be past its best accuracy by mid-season. The difference is not trivial when a match barrel costs $400-800 to purchase and fit.
In F-Class competition, the 6.5×47 Lapua competes directly with the 6mm BR and the 6.5 Creedmoor. Its ballistic numbers at 1,000 yards are competitive with any of them when loaded with 140-grain high-BC bullets, and its case consistency – built on Lapua brass – is as good as anything available.
Long-Range Hunting
The 6.5×47 Lapua is adequate for hunting medium-sized game to 400-500 yards when loaded with quality expanding bullets. The Hornady ELD-X 143-grain is the recommended hunting bullet. At 500 yards, a 140-grain load at 2,700 FPS is delivering approximately 1,270 ft-lbs – above the 1,000 ft-lb threshold commonly applied to deer-sized game. At 600 yards that figure drops below 1,100 ft-lbs, which remains workable for ethical kills on deer with precise shot placement.
The practical hunting limitation is factory ammunition availability. Unlike the 6.5 Creedmoor, the 6.5×47 Lapua cannot be restocked at a rural sporting goods store mid-hunt. Hunters using this cartridge are committed to handloading, and they should bring adequate ammunition for the trip because resupply is not realistic.
Caliber Comparison for Reloaders Deciding
| Factor | 6.5×47 Lapua | 6.5 Creedmoor | 6.5 PRC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ballistics @1000 yds | Competitive | Competitive | Slight advantage |
| Recoil | Lightest | Moderate | Heaviest |
| Barrel Life | 4,000+ rds | 2,500-3,000 rds | 1,500-2,000 rds |
| Factory Ammo | Limited | Excellent | Good |
| Rifle Selection | Custom/semi-custom | Broad | Growing |
| Brass Cost | High (Lapua) | Moderate | Moderate |
| Brass Consistency | Outstanding | Good | Good |
| Best For | Precision competition | All-around hunting/competition | Long-range hunting |
For further comparison, see the 6.5 Creedmoor complete guide and the 6.5 PRC complete guide.
Conclusion
The 6.5×47 Lapua is not the right cartridge for everyone, and it makes no pretense of being one. It was built by precision shooters, for precision shooters, and it excels in that role. The combination of outstanding Lapua brass, small rifle primer consistency, competitive ballistics at 1,000 yards, and barrel life that outlasts comparable 6.5mm cartridges by a meaningful margin makes it one of the best tools available for the serious handloader who competes in precision rifle disciplines.
For hunters, the story is more nuanced. It works – the 6.5mm bullet selection is excellent and the terminal performance of loads built around the Hornady ELD-X or Berger VLD Hunting is more than adequate for deer-sized game to moderate range. But the limited factory ammunition availability and the narrower rifle selection mean that most hunters are better served by the 6.5 Creedmoor unless they are already committed to handloading and building custom rifles.
For the reloader who fits that description – who is building a dedicated precision rifle, handloads seriously, and wants a cartridge that delivers exceptional consistency with industry-leading barrel life – the 6.5×47 Lapua is a genuinely rewarding choice.
For related reading, see the 6.5×47 Lapua ballistics guide, 6.5 Creedmoor complete guide, and 6mm BR complete guide.
Disclaimer: All load data in this article is for reference purposes only. Verify all charges against current published reloading manuals before loading. Never exceed published maximum charges. Always begin 10% below listed maximums and work up while monitoring for pressure signs.
Editorial note: This article was originally published in October 2025 and revised in April 2026. The revision replaced the original summary-level content with full technical specifications including case capacity and SAAMI pressure, a complete reloading section with powder charge weight ranges for 12 powders across bullet weights, expanded primer guidance with specific small-rifle magnum recommendations for cold-weather ignition, detailed bullet selection table with competition and hunting applications, a trajectory table with 200-yard zero from muzzle to 1,000 yards, a multi-factor comparison table against 6.5 Creedmoor and 6.5 PRC for reloaders deciding between cartridges.



