Best .22 LR Suppressors 2026: Rimfire Cans for Pistols, Rifles & 10/22 header image
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May 30, 2026
Best .22 LR Suppressors 2026: Rimfire Cans for Pistols, Rifles & 10/22

Rimfire cans ranked for the Ruger 10/22, Mark IV, Taurus TX22, and FN 502: quietest, lightest, easiest to clean, and best budget pick, all user-serviceable.

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Best .22 LR Suppressors 2026: Rimfire Cans for Pistols, Rifles & 10/22

The best .22 LR suppressor for most shooters is the SilencerCo Sparrow 22 ($349). Its stainless monocore is the easiest rimfire core to scrub clean, it is the longest-selling .22 can on the market, and nothing in its class is cheaper. If you are hanging a can off a pistol, the 4.1 oz titanium Banish 22 is the lightweight pick; if you want the quietest possible setup, the modular SilencerCo Switchback 22 at full length wins. Every can here is user-serviceable, because .22 LR is the dirtiest cartridge you can suppress and a sealed can would lead up and seize. The federal tax on suppressors dropped to $0 in 2026, so this is the cheapest year on record to buy one.

By AB|Last reviewed May 2026

The Best .22 LR Suppressors at a Glance

Seven rimfire cans ranked by three things that actually matter on a .22: how quiet it is, how much it weighs on the host, and how easy it is to take apart and scrub the lead out. The stainless picks (Sparrow 22, Oculus 22) clean fastest; the titanium picks (Banish 22, Flow 22 Ti) carry lightest on a pistol. There is no wrong answer in this group, only the right trade for your host.

The Best .22 LR Suppressors Ranked

Seven rimfire cans ranked by sound, weight, and how easy each one is to take apart and scrub clean. Every pick is either user-serviceable or uses a flow-through design that minimizes fouling, because a sealed conventional .22 can would lead up and seize.

1

SilencerCo Sparrow 22

Best overall value and the easiest .22 can to clean.

$349
Shop at Silencer Central
Best OverallEasiest to Clean$349
  • +Stainless monocore is the easiest rimfire core to brush clean of lead and carbon
  • +Most proven, longest-selling .22 suppressor design
  • +$349 is the lowest price among top-tier rimfire cans
  • All-stainless build is heavier (6.5 oz) than titanium rivals like the Banish 22
  • Fixed length, no short pistol configuration
Price: $349Weight: 6.5 ozLength: 5.08 inMaterial: 17-4 / 316 stainless monocore
2

Silencer Central Banish 22

Lightest pick and the best balance on a .22 pistol.

$549
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LightestBest for PistolsDirect-to-Door
  • +Lightest top-tier rimfire can at 4.1 oz, ideal on pistols
  • +All-titanium construction with full-auto rating
  • +User-serviceable from both ends for thorough lead cleanup
  • Single fixed length, no short pistol configuration (that is the Banish 22K)
  • $549 street is pricier than the stainless SilencerCo Sparrow 22
Price: $549Weight: 4.1 ozLength: 5.375 inMaterial: 100% titanium, 8 baffles
3

SilencerCo Switchback 22

Most configurable, with the quietest full-length setup.

$579
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Most ConfigurableQuietest at Full Length$579
  • +Four configurations trade length for suppression, from 2.8 in pistol to 5.75 in rifle
  • +Reversible baffles optimize the can for pistol or rifle gas dynamics
  • +Full-length config is among the quietest rimfire cans tested
  • $579 MSRP is the highest in this group
  • Most parts to track and reconfigure of any can here
Price: $579Weight: 3.7 to 6.9 oz (by config)Length: 2.8 to 5.75 in (4 configs)Material: Titanium tube, 17-4 SS baffles
4

Dead Air Mask HD

Most durable, built to take abuse on a hard-run rifle.

$399.99
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Most DurableFull-Auto Rated5.7x28 Capable
  • +Full-auto rated with no barrel-length restriction, survives a hard-run 10/22
  • +Titanium tube keeps it at 6.6 oz despite the heavy-duty baffle stack
  • +Disassembles to individual baffles with the included tool for easy lead removal
  • Heavier than titanium-baffle competitors like the Banish 22
  • $489 MSRP sits at the top of the rimfire price band
Price: $489Weight: 6.6 ozLength: 5.1 inMaterial: Grade 9 Ti tube, 17-4 PH SS baffles
5

HUXWRX Flow 22 Ti

Lowest back-pressure, keeps the host and shooter cleanest.

$488.37
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Lowest Back-PressureFlow-Through3.9 oz
  • +3.9 oz Grade 5 titanium keeps a pistol or 10/22 nose-light
  • +Flow-through core vents gas forward, cutting blowback and keeping the host cleaner
  • +Rated 22LR through 5.7x28, so it crosses over to PS90 and Five-seveN hosts
  • Flow-through designs trade a few dB of suppression for lower back-pressure
  • DMLS titanium core is not user-serviceable if a baffle cracks
Price: $499Weight: 3.9 ozLength: 5.53 inMaterial: Grade 5 titanium DMLS flow-through core
6

Rugged Oculus 22

Best modular value with a transferable lifetime warranty.

$556-$434
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Modular ValueBelt-Fed RatedLifetime Warranty
  • +ADAPT modular tech swaps between 5.25 in standard and 3.25 in short in seconds
  • +All-stainless baffles are simple to clean and belt-fed rated on .22 LR
  • +Keyed baffles index back to zero after cleaning
  • All-stainless build is heavier (6.9 oz standard) than titanium rivals
  • Short configuration sacrifices suppression for length
Price: $556 MSRP (~$434 street)Weight: 4.3 oz short / 6.9 oz standardLength: 3.25 in short / 5.25 in standardMaterial: 100% 17-4 stainless
7

Yankee Hill Machine YHM Phantom 22

Best budget rimfire can without giving up serviceability.

$440-$420
Shop at Silencer Central
Best Budget~$420Integrated Takedown Tool
  • +4 oz keeps a pistol or 10/22 nose-light, as light as titanium rivals
  • +Streets in the low $400s, the value pick of the group
  • +Takedown tool built into the rear cap so it is never lost
  • Aluminum tube is less abuse-tolerant under sustained heat than all-steel cans
  • Not as quiet at the muzzle as a full-length modular can
Price: $440 MSRP (~$420 street)Weight: 4 ozLength: 5.5 inMaterial: 7075/6061 aluminum, 17-4 SS baffles

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Sort the .22 cans yourself

Still deciding? Sort by weight, thread pitch, or price to match the trade you care about most.

SilencerCo Sparrow 22
Weight6.5 oz
Thread1/2x28
Price$349
Yankee Hill Machine YHM Phantom 22
Weight4 oz
Thread1/2x28
Price$440 MSRP (~$420 street)
Rugged Oculus 22
Weight4.3 oz short / 6.9 oz standard
Thread1/2x28
Price$556 MSRP (~$434 street)
Dead Air Mask HD
Dead Air Mask HD
Weight6.6 oz
Thread1/2x28
Price$489
HUXWRX Flow 22 Ti
HUXWRX Flow 22 Ti
Weight3.9 oz
Thread1/2x28
Price$499
Banish 22
Weight4.1 oz
Thread1/2x28
Price$549
SilencerCo Switchback 22
Weight3.7 to 6.9 oz (by config)
Thread1/2x28
Price$579

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Why Every .22 Suppressor Must Be User-Serviceable

.22 LR is the dirtiest cartridge you can suppress, so every quality rimfire can is built to come apart for cleaning. The bullets are unjacketed lead fired over dirty, waxy powder, and all of that fouling collects inside the can as lead flakes and heavy carbon. A 5.56 or .30-caliber suppressor fires jacketed bullets over cleaner powder and can be welded shut for life; a .22 can built that way would pack solid with lead and seize inside a few thousand rounds.

That is why this list is built entirely around serviceable designs. A stainless monocore like the Sparrow 22 drops out in one piece and brushes clean in minutes. Baffle-stack cans like the Banish 22, Dead Air Mask HD, and Rugged Oculus 22 strip down to individual baffles for a deeper scrub. The one exception is the HUXWRX Flow 22 Ti, whose printed flow-through core is not user-serviceable; it sidesteps the problem by venting gas forward so far less fouling washes back into the can in the first place. Plan to clean a .22 can roughly every 300 to 500 rounds. For the full step-by-step on solvents, soak times, and the ultrasonic debate, see our suppressor cleaning guide.

Pistol vs Rifle Hosts and Thread Pitch

Almost every threaded .22 host uses 1/2x28, the same thread as the suppressors on this list, so most setups thread on directly with no adapter. The Ruger Mark IV, threaded 10/22 barrels, and the Taurus TX22 all ship 1/2x28. The exceptions are some older Ruger Mark series pistols and a handful of host barrels that use a different pitch and need a thread adapter, so confirm the threads on your barrel before you order a can.

The bigger decision is weight versus suppression, and it splits cleanly along pistol versus rifle. On a pistol, the can hangs off the muzzle as dead weight that tips the gun nose-down and wrecks the balance, so the best suppressor for a Mark IV, TX22, or FN 502 is the lightest one you can get: the 4.1 oz Banish 22, the 3.9 oz Flow 22 Ti, or the 4 oz YHM Phantom 22. On a rifle like the 10/22, the stock carries the weight and you barely notice an extra two ounces, so you should chase the quietest can instead and a heavier stainless or full-length modular design is the right call. If you are still choosing the host itself, our best .22 LR pistols guide covers which models ship suppressor-ready from the factory.

Best Suppressor for Each .22 Host

Match the can to the gun. A heavy rifle host wants the quietest can; a pistol wants the lightest. Here is the right pick for the five most common suppressed .22 hosts.

Ruger 10/22
SilencerCo Switchback 22 (long) or Sparrow 22

A rifle host carries weight easily, so prioritize suppression over ounces. The Switchback 22 in its 5.75 in configuration and the Sparrow 22 are the quietest options here. You need a threaded barrel first; the factory carbine barrel is not threaded.

Ruger Mark IV
Banish 22

The 4.1 oz all-titanium Banish 22 keeps the pistol balanced where a heavier stainless can would tip the muzzle down. Lightweight is the whole game on a target pistol.

Taurus TX22
Banish 22 or YHM Phantom 22

Both are 4 oz or lighter, so the polymer-framed TX22 stays nose-light. The Phantom 22 is the budget route at roughly $420; the Banish is the premium titanium pick.

FN 502
Dead Air Mask HD or Rugged Oculus 22

The hammer-fired 502 runs dirty, so favor a can you can fully strip and scrub. Both disassemble to individual baffles and shrug off a heavy round count.

S&W M&P 22
YHM Phantom 22

A plinker pistol does not need a $549 can. The 4 oz Phantom is user-serviceable, streets in the low $400s, and keeps the M&P 22 light.

Running a 10/22 is the most common suppressed .22 build, and the one catch is the barrel: the factory carbine barrel is not threaded, so a can needs a threaded replacement barrel first. Our Ruger 10/22 upgrades guide walks through threaded-barrel options. For the Mark IV, the best Ruger Mark IV accessories guide covers the rest of the build around the suppressor.

How to Clean a .22 Suppressor

Cleaning a .22 can is a 20-minute job: unscrew it, pull out the monocore or baffle stack, knock loose the lead flakes, and brush the carbon off with solvent. Clean roughly every 300 to 500 rounds. Let lead build up too long and the can gets heavier, louder, and harder to take apart, and on a stainless monocore the core can effectively cement itself in place.

Most owners brush by hand with a nylon or brass brush and a copper/lead solvent, which is plenty for routine maintenance. For caked-on lead, an ultrasonic cleaner with a dedicated solution does the deep work without scrubbing, and it is the better choice for the multi-baffle cans here like the Dead Air Mask HD and Rugged Oculus 22. Avoid the old aluminum-attacking dip solutions on any can with aluminum parts, which rules them out for the aluminum-tube YHM Phantom 22. The full procedure, the tools worth owning, and the rimfire-versus-centerfire differences are in our suppressor cleaning guide.

How to Buy a .22 Suppressor in 2026 (NFA Process)

Buying a .22 can in 2026 is cheaper and faster than it has ever been. The federal NFA making and transfer tax dropped to $0 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, so there is no $200 stamp anymore. You still file an ATF Form 4, pass a NICS background check, submit fingerprints and a photo, and register the suppressor; the tax going away did not deregulate the process, it just removed the fee.

eForm 4 approvals are running on the order of days to a couple of weeks, not the year-long waits you will still see quoted in older guides. Suppressors are legal to own in 42 states; ownership is banned or restricted in California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island, so confirm your state before ordering. Silencer Central is the simplest path for most buyers: they handle the paperwork, include a free trust, and ship the can to your door once it is approved. For the complete walkthrough of the Form 4 process, trusts versus individual filing, and current eForm timelines, start at our suppressor buying guide.

Spec Out a Suppressor-Ready .22

Suppressors only appear in the builder once your host exposes a muzzle thread, so drop a threaded-barrel 10/22 into the rifle builder and see which of these cans the tag filter clears for your build. Want to browse every rimfire can and compare specs side by side first? The full lineup lives in the catalog.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best .22 suppressor?
The SilencerCo Sparrow 22 ($349) is the best overall value. Its stainless monocore is the easiest rimfire core to brush clean, and it is the most proven .22 can ever made. If you want the lightest option for a pistol, the 4.1 oz titanium Banish 22 is the pick.
What is the quietest .22 suppressor?
Full-length modular cans suppress the most. The SilencerCo Switchback 22 in its 5.75 in configuration and the SilencerCo Sparrow 22 are among the quietest, metering subsonic .22 LR in the low 110s of decibels. More internal volume and length means a quieter shot.
Do you need a $200 tax stamp for a .22 suppressor?
No. The federal NFA making and transfer tax on suppressors is $0 as of 2026 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. You still file an ATF Form 4, pass a NICS background check, submit fingerprints and a photo, and register the suppressor, but there is no $200 tax.
How long does it take to get a .22 suppressor approved?
ATF eForm 4 approvals are running on the order of a few days to a couple of weeks in 2026, not the year-long waits of the past. Filing through a trust or as an individual both use the same eForm pipeline; you still submit fingerprints and a photo.
Why do .22 suppressors need to be cleaned when centerfire cans do not?
.22 LR fires unjacketed lead bullets over dirty powder, which deposits heavy lead and carbon fouling inside the can. That is why every quality rimfire suppressor is user-serviceable and disassembles for cleaning. Clean a .22 can roughly every 300 to 500 rounds; a sealed centerfire can would seize shut with that fouling.
What thread pitch do .22 suppressors use?
1/2x28 is the standard thread pitch for .22 LR suppressors and threaded .22 hosts like the Ruger Mark IV, 10/22 threaded barrels, and Taurus TX22. Some older Ruger Mark series pistols and a few host barrels need a thread adapter, so confirm your barrel's threads before buying.
What is the best suppressor for a Ruger 10/22?
You need a threaded barrel first. For maximum suppression on a 10/22, run a full-length can like the SilencerCo Switchback 22 (long config) or the SilencerCo Sparrow 22. The Dead Air Mask HD is the durability pick if you run the rifle hard.
What is the best suppressor for a Ruger Mark IV?
The Banish 22 is the best Mark IV can. Its 4.1 oz all-titanium build keeps the pistol balanced where a heavier stainless can would make it muzzle-heavy. Lightweight matters far more on a pistol than on a rifle.