From high seat to hill, driven day to woodland – one of these six bolt-action rifles will fit, whether you want a composite workhorse or heirloom walnut
Six of the best bolt-action rifles, from an £880 Ruger to a bespoke EJ Churchill
Whether you’re looking for a workhorse with a composite stock that you can crawl through bogs with, or something with hand engraving and exhibition-grade walnut that’s heirloom worthy, we have compiled the most noteworthy bolt-action rifles from the world’s best-known makers.
The six here were selected on editorial research and expert knowledge rather than a head-to-head test, and they are deliberately spread across the price range – from £880 to just under £10,000 – so there is something for a first centrefire and something for a lifetime purchase. All prices are RRP at the time of publication and may have changed since.
Start with what the rifle has to do. A hill or mountain rifle needs to be light and weatherproof, so look for a composite or carbon stock and a coated or Cerakoted action; a high-seat or driven rifle can afford weight in exchange for balance and a quiet, quick action. Then check four things: the bolt throw (60 degrees clears a low-mounted scope and speeds follow-up shots, 90 degrees does not), whether the muzzle is threaded for a moderator, whether the trigger adjusts to a weight you can actually shoot, and whether the stock fits you or can be made to. Barrel, bolt head and magazine that swap for a calibre change are worth paying for if you want one rifle to cover several jobs. Everything below is threaded for a moderator as standard or as an option.

The Sauer 505 in ErgoLux trim is a German turn-bolt built on a full-steel receiver machined from solid bar, with a push-feed bolt carrying two rows of three locking lugs and a fast 60 degree throw. Barrel, bolt head and magazine are user-changeable, so a single rifle covers a broad calibre spread from .222 Rem through .308 Win and .30-06 to .375 H&H. The cold-hammer-forged barrel runs 20 to 24in depending on calibre and is threaded M15x1 for a moderator, while the adjustable Quattro trigger presets to 350, 750, 1,000 or 1,250g. Manual cocking arms it silently only for the shot. The detachable magazine holds three rounds as standard, with a five-round option, and the walnut ErgoLux stock, in grades 2 to 10, is a showpiece at around 7.6lb.

Browning’s X-Bolt 2 Alpen Vari-Tech is a production rifle aimed squarely at hostile weather, with every metal component wearing a protective Cerakote finish and a fluted barrel threaded for a moderator or muzzle brake. The updated X-Bolt 2 action runs a three-lug bolt with a short 60 degree throw and a free-floating barrel double-bedded front and rear for accuracy. The star is the Vari-Tech composite stock, which adjusts for length of pull from 327 to 373mm via spacers, comb height and grip angle, so fit is genuinely tailored. The refined DLX trigger sets between 800g and 1.3kg, breaking crisply and cleanly. It feeds from Browning’s rotary detachable magazine and comes in the usual deer and mountain chamberings. A mid-weight build, the rifle balances well in the hand.

Benelli’s Lupo Alpha is an Italian bolt-action rifle that Benelli bills as the world’s lightest metal-chassis rifle at just 2.6kg, achieved through a technopolymer stock whose hollow, bird-bone-inspired structure marries strength to lightness. Steel barrel components bed directly to an alloy chassis receiver for shot-to-shot consistency, and the Crio System barrel wears Benelli’s corrosion-proof BE.S.T. coating with a threaded muzzle ready to accept most centrefire moderators. The fluted three-lug bolt throws just 60 degrees for quick follow-up shots, feeding from a five-round detachable box, and the trigger adjusts from 650 to 1,650g. Every Lupo carries a three-shot sub-MOA guarantee. It is offered in .308 Win with a 20in barrel and .223 Rem with a 20in barrel.

Churchill’s Hellfire is a bespoke, British-built rifle built around a titanium action, an aerospace-grade carbon-fibre barrel and a carbon-fibre stock, with steel used only where strength demands it. The result is an exceptionally light, weatherproof rifle that combines the carrying comfort of a stalking rifle with the precision of a target rifle. It feeds from a detachable box magazine and is available in popular chamberings including 6.5 Creedmoor, .308 Winchester and 7×57 Mauser. It is typically threaded for a moderator, making it perfectly suited to UK stalking. The trigger and stock are tailored to the client, and every rifle carries a 1/3 MOA accuracy guarantee.

Blaser’s R8 Ultimate Silence is a German-made, straight-pull rifle whose defining feature is a full-length reflex suppressor built integrally around the barrel, giving the profile of a bull barrel while cutting the report by around 28dB. The straight-pull action, locking through a 13-segment radial collet, cycles fast, and the barrel, bolt head and magazine insert swap to change calibre – offered from .308 Win and .30-06 through 9.3×62 to the .300 magnums. A silent manual cocking slider arms the striker only for the shot, so the rifle is carried safe. The detachable magazine is integral to the trigger unit, holding four rounds (three in magnums), and the adjustable Ultimate stock tunes the comb and length of pull. At roughly 8.3lb it is the heaviest rifle here, though well balanced.

Ruger’s American Generation II is the value pick here, an American-made turn-bolt that packs plenty of rifle into its modest price. A one-piece stainless bolt with three locking lugs and a 70 degree throw sits in Ruger’s Power Bedding block, which positively locates the receiver and free-floats the cold-hammer-forged, spiral-fluted barrel. The 20in barrel comes threaded with a factory radial muzzle brake, and a three-position tang safety locks the bolt for carrying. The Marksman trigger adjusts from 3 to 5lb, and the rifle feeds from an AICS-pattern detachable magazine holding three rounds, beneath a factory-fitted one-piece Picatinny rail. The synthetic splatter-textured stock keeps weight to around 2.9kg. Chamberings span a broad spread from .223 Rem and .243 Win to 6.5 Creedmoor and .308 Win.
| Rifle | Price (RRP) | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Ruger American Generation II | £880 | The value pick and an ideal first centrefire |
| Browning X-Bolt 2 Alpen Vari-Tech | £1,539 | All-weather hill work with a stock that adjusts to fit |
| Benelli Lupo Alpha | £1,956.99 | The lightest carry at 2.6kg for long days on foot |
| Sauer 505 ErgoLux | £4,334 | One rifle for every job, in showpiece walnut |
| Blaser R8 Ultimate Silence | £7,166 | Quiet hunting without ear defenders |
| EJ Churchill Hellfire Titanium Carbon | From £9,950 | A bespoke, British-built rifle tailored to you |
It depends on the ground. For woodland and high-seat stalking, the Sauer 505 ErgoLux and Blaser R8 Ultimate Silence both cock manually and silently, and the Blaser’s integral moderator cuts the report by around 28dB. For hill stalking where carry weight decides the day, the Benelli Lupo Alpha at 2.6kg and the carbon-stocked EJ Churchill Hellfire are the lightest here. On a budget, the Ruger American Generation II at £880 is a dependable sub-MOA deer rifle.
The Ruger American Generation II at £880 inc VAT. It is an American-made turn-bolt with a three-lug stainless bolt, Ruger’s Power Bedding block, a threaded 20in spiral-fluted barrel with a factory muzzle brake and an adjustable Marksman trigger, making it the value pick and a sensible first centrefire.
A 60 degree throw lifts the bolt handle through a shorter arc than a traditional 90 degree action, so it clears a low-mounted scope more easily and lets you cycle a follow-up shot faster without breaking your cheek weld. The Sauer 505, Browning X-Bolt 2 and Benelli Lupo Alpha all use a 60 degree throw; the Ruger American Generation II uses 70 degrees, and the Blaser R8 is a straight-pull, so it does not rotate at all.
On two of them, yes. The Sauer 505 and the Blaser R8 Ultimate Silence both have user-changeable barrels, bolt heads and magazines, so one rifle covers a broad calibre spread – the Sauer from .222 Rem to .375 H&H, the Blaser from .308 Win to the .300 magnums. The others are fixed-barrel rifles, so a calibre change means a new rifle.
Yes. Every rifle here is threaded for a moderator as standard or as an option, and the Blaser R8 Ultimate Silence has a full-length reflex suppressor built integrally around the barrel. Sound moderators have been removed from Section 1 firearms licensing, so you no longer need them listed on your certificate.
The Benelli Lupo Alpha, at a claimed 2.6kg, which Benelli bills as the world’s lightest metal-chassis rifle. The Ruger American Generation II is close behind at around 2.9kg, and the EJ Churchill Hellfire is exceptionally light thanks to its titanium action and carbon-fibre barrel and stock. The heaviest here is the Blaser R8 Ultimate Silence at roughly 8.3lb, the penalty for its integral suppressor.
Get the latest news delivered direct to your door
Discover the ultimate companion for fieldsports enthusiasts with Shooting Times & Country Magazine, the UK’s leading weekly publication that has been at the forefront of shooting culture since 1882. Subscribers gain access to expert tips, comprehensive gear reviews, seasonal advice and a vibrant community of like-minded shooters.
Save on shop price when you subscribe with weekly issues featuring in-depth articles on gundog training, exclusive member offers and access to the digital back issue library. A Shooting Times & Country subscription is more than a magazine, don’t just read about the countryside; immerse yourself in its most authoritative and engaging publication.