The .22 Creedmoor has its roots in the modern trend of necking larger, efficient cases down to .22 caliber to take advantage of long, high-ballistic-coefficient bullets. Developed from the widely adopted 6.5 Creedmoor case, the .22 Creedmoor became popular among precision shooters and handloaders who wanted a .22-caliber round with greater case capacity and more consistent performance than traditional .223/5.56 platforms. Early interest came from wildcat and match communities looking for a round that combined long-range potential and tunability; manufacturers and component makers responded by offering factory brass, bullets, and rifles chambered for .22 Creedmoor, which helped move it from niche to mainstream among reloaders focused on precision and consistency.
Applications for the .22 Creedmoor center on precision long-range shooting, PRS-style and benchrest matches, and dedicated varmint/medium-game hunting where a flat trajectory and high retained energy are desired. Because it is a centerfire bottleneck cartridge using .224-inch bullets, it supports long, heavy projectiles with high ballistic coefficients that deliver lower wind drift and better supersonic range than lighter .22 calibers. Reloaders appreciate the cartridge for its versatility: with the right components and rifle setup the .22 Creedmoor can be tuned for extreme accuracy out to extended ranges, while still offering manageable recoil for rapid follow-up and better optical zeroing consistency during match stages.
When it comes to game, the .22 Creedmoor is mainly used for varmints, predators, and smaller-to-medium-sized ungulates when ethical shot placement is observed. Typical target species include prairie dogs, groundhogs, coyotes, and foxes at long ranges, and—when paired with appropriate bullets designed for controlled expansion—antelope, hogs, or deer within practical hunting distances. Many shooters choose the .22 Creedmoor specifically because it delivers flatter trajectories and higher retained energy at range compared with lighter .22 cartridges, enabling cleaner, more ethical hits on these species when bullets and ranges are chosen responsibly.
Typical bullet weights for the .22 Creedmoor span a broad range, reflecting its capacity to stabilize heavier, high-BC projectiles. Common bullets fall roughly between the 40-grain varmint profile up to 90-grain class match bullets, with a practical sweet spot for long-range precision often found in the 60–85-grain range. Other notable caliber characteristics for reloaders include a .224-inch bullet diameter, bottlenecked case geometry derived from the 6.5 Creedmoor, use of large rifle primers, and greater case capacity than standard .223/5.56 cartridges. Reloaders working with .22 Creedmoor should pay attention to neck tension, consistent brass preparation, seating depth for high-BC bullets, and barrel twist selection to stabilize heavier projectiles; these variables are key to unlocking the cartridge’s long-range accuracy potential without venturing into unsafe or recipe-specific guidance.
Suitable Powders
Bullet Weight (gr) -> | 0-50 | 50-75 | 75-100 | 100-150 | 150-200 | 200-300 | >300 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
👍 ... suitable powder
👍👍 ... suitable AND popular powder among our reloading community (clasification might evolve as more community members share their loads )
Caliber Specifications
Standard / Datasheet
Primer Size
Large Rifle (LR)
Case Capacity
50 Grains of Water
Bullet / Barrel Diameter
0.224'' | 5.69 mm
Max. Case Length
1.92'' | 48.77 mm
Max. Cartridge Length
2.6'' | 66.04 mm
Max. Standardized Pressure:
64977 psi | 4480 bar
XXL ID
CID_67
.22 Creedmoor load data is available with the following bullets:
(most popular first)
















