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8.6 Blackout fires a .338 bullet, so it needs a .338-bore-rated can. Here are eight suppressors ranked for the cartridge, from dedicated 8.6 cans to multi-caliber and budget options.
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The best 8.6 Blackout suppressor for most builds is the Diligent Defense DTF-LTI ($810), a purpose-built .338/8.6 can whose bore is sized to the cartridge instead of a multi-caliber compromise, in a 10.4 oz Grade-5 titanium body. Want the most compact dedicated option? The Q Short Chop ($800) runs 9.6 oz with quick-attach mounting. Need magnum headroom? The Dead Air Nomax 33 ($1,000) is rated to .33XC, so it swallows full .338 Lapua and 8.6 with headroom to spare. The one rule that governs every pick: 8.6 Blackout fires a .338-inch bullet, so it needs a .338-bore-rated can. A .30-caliber (7.62) suppressor cannot pass the bullet. The federal NFA tax dropped to $0 on January 1, 2026, so this is the cheapest year on record to stamp one.
New to the cartridge? Our 8.6 Blackout explainer covers the cartridge, hosts, barrel twist, and subsonic ammo, and the 300 Blackout guide explains how subsonic suppressed cartridges compare before you commit to the heavier .338 bore.
Sling, light, backup sights, and QD mounts, the upgrades most builders add first.
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Every can below is rated for a .338 bore or larger, so it safely passes the 8.6 Blackout bullet. Placement weighs how well each one fits the 8.6 build: bore efficiency (dedicated .338 versus wider multi-caliber), weight, mounting flexibility for the two thread pitches 8.6 barrels use, magnum headroom, and price. The dedicated, purpose-built .338 cans rank above the multi-caliber workhorses for this specific cartridge, even though the workhorses earn their keep across a whole safe. Prices are street estimates checked July 2026 and move with dealer and feed pricing.
Eight .338-caliber-bore suppressors ranked for 8.6 Blackout, from the purpose-built Diligent Defense DTF-LTI and Q Short Chop to the magnum-rated Dead Air Nomax 33 and multi-caliber SilencerCo cans. Every pick passes the .338 bullet, which a .30-caliber can cannot.
Best overall / best dedicated 8.6 Blackout can
Best compact purpose-built can with quick-attach mounting
Best magnum crossover (.33XC / .338 Lapua rated)
Best lightweight multi-caliber can (5.56 through .338)
Best value .338-capable can
Best big-bore multi-caliber (9mm through .45-70 and .338)
Best budget path into a .338 stamp
Best serviceable direct-thread .338 can
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The biggest decision in an 8.6 Blackout can is whether you buy a dedicated .338 suppressor or a multi-caliber one. A dedicated .338 bore is sized exactly to the cartridge, so it wastes no diameter and runs lighter and quieter for the same suppression; the Diligent Defense DTF-LTI (10.4 oz) and Q Short Chop (9.6 oz) win here. A multi-caliber can with a .36 or .46 bore, like the SilencerCo Omega 36M or Hybrid 46M, sacrifices a few decibels on 8.6 but covers 5.56, .308, and pistol calibers on the same stamp. If the can will live on one 8.6 rifle, buy dedicated. If one stamp has to serve a whole safe, buy the biggest bore you can tolerate.
| Your build | Priority | Pick | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8.6-dedicated build (the can lives on it) | Lightest, quietest | Diligent Defense DTF-LTI / Q Short Chop | A .338-only bore wastes no diameter on smaller calibers, so a purpose-built can runs lighter and tighter for the same suppression. The DTF-LTI is 10.4 oz; the Short Chop is 9.6 oz. |
| 8.6 plus .338 Lapua / .33XC magnums | Magnum headroom | Dead Air Nomax 33 | A can rated to full-power .33-caliber magnums doubles as a long-range and hunting suppressor. The Nomax 33 is rated to .33XC, so it carries 8.6 Blackout and .338 Lapua on one stamp with headroom to spare. |
| One stamp across many calibers | Caliber span | SilencerCo Omega 36M / Hybrid 46M | A modular .36 or .46 bore covers 5.56, .308, and pistol calibers alongside .338. The Omega 36M is the lighter pick; the Hybrid 46M adds .45-70 and .458 SOCOM. |
| Lowest price into a .338 stamp | Budget | YHM Bad Larry .338 / Otter Creek Universe 36 | The Bad Larry is the cheapest .338-rated can, with HUB threads plus an included 5/8x24 adapter; the Universe 36 is the cheapest true .338-capable multi-caliber tube at $750. |
Cross-shopping the lighter .30-caliber sibling category for a shorter suppressed carbine? Our best 300 Blackout suppressors guide ranks the .30-cal cans, and you can drop an 8.6 host into the rifle builder to see which cans tag-match your barrel thread.
New .338 can reviews, subsonic pairing data, and suppressed host guides delivered when they publish.
8.6 Blackout barrels ship in two thread pitches, 5/8x24 and M18x1.5, so the first thing to confirm before buying a can is which one your barrel wears. Several dedicated 8.6 cans account for this directly: the Diligent Defense DTF-LTI mounts on Bravo or a 1-3/8x24 HUB with an M18x1.5 direct-thread option, and a HUB adapter covers a 5/8x24 host, while the Q Short Chop runs its XL Cherry Bomb quick-attach system in both 5/8x24 and M18x1.5.
Direct thread screws the can straight onto the barrel. It is the lightest, shortest, and most repeatable mount because no QD interface adds length or tolerance. The BANISH 338 is direct-thread only and fully user-serviceable, which is ideal for a dedicated 8.6 rifle that the can lives on. The trade is swap speed: moving a direct-thread can between rifles means unscrewing it under heat.
The HUB standard (1.375x24 rear threads) lets you swap mounts across brands instead of being locked to one. The Otter Creek Universe 36 rides any 1.375x24 HUB adapter, the YHM Bad Larry .338 has 1.375x24 HUB mounting threads and ships with a 5/8x24 direct-thread adapter in the box, and the Dead Air Nomax 33 uses HUB / Xemax adapters or a 5/8x24 direct thread. If you own several suppressed hosts, a HUB or adapter-friendly can saves money on muzzle devices.
Quick-attach systems mount the can over a brand-specific muzzle device for fast on and off. The Q Short Chop uses the XL Cherry Bomb / XL Rearend system and ships with the muzzle device, so it snaps on and off a Q-hosted barrel. QD is the right call if you move one can across several rifles; the cost is lock-in to that brand's muzzle devices.
The process is faster and cheaper than it has ever been. The $200 stamp is gone, individual approvals run in days instead of months, and the only 8.6-specific wrinkle is matching the can's mount to your barrel thread. Four steps to legal possession, and our how to buy a suppressor walkthrough covers the Form 4 in full:
Silencer Central, Silencer Shop, and Capitol Armory all run streamlined kiosk and online processes for .338-class cans. Silencer Central ships to your door once approved and includes a free trust, which is the simplest first-stamp path and the house for the BANISH 338.
eForm 4 is the clean default in 2026. Fingerprints (electronic at most dealers), a digital photo, and CLEO notification are all still required. The federal NFA registration step has not gone away; only the tax did.
The federal making and transfer tax on suppressors dropped to $0 on January 1, 2026 under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. You still pass a NICS background check and pay the dealer transfer fee, but the old $200 tax is gone for suppressors, SBRs, SBSs, and AOWs.
Individual eForm 4 approvals are running days to a couple of weeks, not months. Confirm your 8.6 barrel's thread before the can arrives: 8.6 barrels ship in both 5/8x24 and M18x1.5, and the mount you buy has to match.
Choosing between cans on features rather than caliber fit? Our suppressor buying guide breaks down the $0 NFA tax, eForm waits, and how to weigh titanium versus stainless, direct thread versus QD, and dedicated versus modular.
Civilian suppressor ownership is prohibited in California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island. Confirm your state's status with the American Suppressor Association before ordering, since the $0 federal tax did not change state law.
The full cartridge, host, barrel-twist, and subsonic ammo breakdown for 8.6 Blackout.
The lighter .30-caliber sibling category for shorter suppressed carbines.
How subsonic suppressed cartridges compare on ballistics, barrel length, and cost of ownership.
$0 NFA tax, eForm waits, and how to pick a can across materials, mounts, and calibers.
The step-by-step ATF Form 4 walkthrough for a first NFA stamp.

Avid shooter with 10+ years of experience including competition shooting, and an associate member of the Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA). Built 10+ AR-pattern rifles and several handgun platforms for home defense, competition, and suppressed night shooting.
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