The internet loves extremes. According to some people, .308 Winchester is obsolete, while others insist you need a 26-inch barrel or you're wasting your time. Neither is true. One of the biggest reasons .308 has survived for so long is its remarkable adaptability across a wide range of barrel lengths. In fact, few cartridges handle short barrels as well as .308. As a precision rifle instructor who spends much of the week testing rifles, training shooters, and exploring real-world applications, I’ve pushed .308 from very short barrels all the way to distance. I’ve taken a 12.5-inch bolt-action .308 shooting Federal Gold Medal Match 175-grain SMKs to 1,000 yards and done the same with a 16-inch FN SCAR 17. Both performed far better than most shooters would expect. Those tests are available on my YouTube channel, Silencer Analytics. After years of experimentation, I’ve found there are four barrel lengths that make the most sense for .308.

The first is the 12.5-inch barrel, the setup many shooters assume shouldn’t work. I took a Savage Model 10, cut it down to 12.5 inches, dropped it into an MDT chassis, and tested it with Federal Gold Medal Match 175-grain SMKs. Despite averaging roughly 2,450 fps, the rifle maintained bullet stability to 1,000 yards, with wind becoming the primary challenge rather than projectile stability. A barrel this short makes sense for shooters seeking maximum compactness, suppressor use, maneuverability, or a highly portable hunting or truck gun. The tradeoff is increased blast, recoil, and wind sensitivity, but the capability remains surprisingly impressive.
For most shooters, however, the 16-inch barrel is the sweet spot. If I could only pick one .308 barrel length, this would likely be it. A 16-inch rifle balances compact size, suppressor compatibility, velocity, and practical field performance exceptionally well. The FN SCAR 17 demonstrates this perfectly, and my own testing has repeatedly shown that a 16-inch .308 can still perform effectively at 1,000 yards. It remains easy to handle, suppresses well, retains useful energy, and maintains excellent reliability. Unlike many modern cartridges that suffer dramatically when shortened, .308 remains highly capable at 16 inches, which helps explain its continued popularity in battle rifles, DMRs, and compact precision platforms.

Moving up to 20 inches brings us to what many consider the traditional precision rifle length. This configuration offers improved velocity, softer recoil characteristics, better ballistic consistency, and enhanced wind performance without becoming excessively long. Many shooters also find that 20-inch barrels strike an excellent balance when paired with suppressors, providing predictable harmonics and reliable long-range performance. Whether for precision shooting, hunting, or designated marksman applications, a 20-inch .308 remains one of the most balanced options available, particularly when firing common match loads in the 168- to 185-grain range.

Finally, there are the traditional 24- to 26-inch barrels. While some dismiss long barrels as outdated, they still provide legitimate advantages. Additional barrel length delivers more velocity, slightly flatter trajectories, better retained energy, and more forgiving wind performance. If your rifle spends most of its life on a square range, in prone shooting, or in a precision-focused role, the longer barrel still makes plenty of sense. The downside is mobility. Once a suppressor, heavy optic, bipod, and long chassis are added, these rifles become large and cumbersome. For hunting, movement-intensive shooting, or practical field use, they can quickly become less convenient.

What makes .308 so interesting is that it remains useful across nearly every barrel length. Very few cartridges can claim that level of versatility. A 12.5-inch .308 can still reach 1,000 yards. A 16-inch gas gun can remain highly effective. And 20- to 26-inch rifles continue to deliver the traditional precision advantages shooters have trusted for decades. That adaptability is one of the biggest reasons .308 Winchester refuses to disappear.
Rob Orgel enlisted in the USMC in 2004 as an Infantry Rifleman (0311), serving with 3rd Bn 1st Marines in Iraq, including roles as a point man in OIF-3 & team leader in OIF-6. Later, he joined the 1st Marine Regiment, achieved the rank of Sergeant in 2010, & continued service in Afghanistan. Upon returning, he became a Combat Instructor at the School of Infantry West. Transitioning to private military contracting with Securing Our Country (SOC), he instructed at the American Embassy in Iraq. In 2018, Rob became Chief Instructor at GPS Defense Sniper School, revamping their program. Now, as owner & lead instructor at Emergency Response Tactical, he focuses on training novice to advanced shooters on the range over 300 days a year. Rob also hosts the Silencer Analytics channel on YouTube.