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are rip rounds legal

Are RIP Rounds Legal?

Ask A Prepper Staff by Ask A Prepper Staff
August 1, 2025
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Let’s talk about the ammo that makes politicians sweat and the media foam at the mouth: RIP rounds. You’ve probably heard of them—maybe in a gun forum, maybe whispered by a buddy at the range. Officially, they’re called Radically Invasive Projectiles, but most folks just call them what they are: bullets that don’t mess around.

So what are these rounds, what do they do, and—here’s the kicker—are they even legal?

Let’s break it down, because the truth doesn’t come stamped on a box.

What Are RIP Rounds?

Developed by G2 Research, RIP rounds are a type of fragmenting hollow-point ammunition. Think of them like the Swiss Army knife of bullets—they enter, explode, and shred.

How? Each round has a solid copper base and eight sharp, claw-like “trocars” that break off upon impact. These shards fan out inside the target, creating devastating internal trauma. The base continues to penetrate, while the fragments scatter.

This isn’t your granddad’s lead slug. This is science, fear, and marketing wrapped into one round.

Why People Love Them (and Why You Might Too)

Maximum Damage

RIP rounds are designed to create multiple wound channels. In a life-or-death scenario, that means more stopping power, faster.

Reduced Overpenetration

The fragments disperse quickly, making it less likely to punch through walls or hit unintended targets—a key concern in home defense.

Cool Factor

Let’s not pretend we’re above it. These rounds look wild, sound badass, and make anyone feel like they’re loading up for the apocalypse.

Lightweight and Fast

Made from copper, not lead. That means they’re lighter, fly faster, and won’t poison your range bag over time.

The Downsides You’re Not Supposed to Talk About

Price Tag That’ll Make You Blink

Expect to pay $1.50–$2.00+ per round. This ain’t bulk ammo for backyard plinking.

Overhyped Marketing

“Radically Invasive”? That sounds more like a bad Tinder date than a ballistics spec. Some experts argue it’s just glorified fragmenting hollow-point ammo. Flashy, but not revolutionary.

Questionable Ballistics

While they sound deadly, actual testing shows mixed results. Inconsistent penetration, unreliable fragmentation—it’s a gamble.

Legal Confusion

They look dangerous. They sound dangerous. That means lawmakers get twitchy.

So… Are RIP Rounds Legal?

Short Answer: Yes—mostly.

In most U.S. states, RIP rounds are perfectly legal to own and carry. They’re not classified as armor-piercing, explosive, or incendiary, so federal law doesn’t ban them.

But—and it’s a big but—some states and cities have their own ideas.

Where RIP Rounds May Get You in Trouble

❌ New Jersey

Let’s start with the worst offender. In NJ, you can’t own hollow-point ammo outside of your home or certain exemptions. RIP rounds? Hollow-points on steroids. That’s a no-go.

❌ San Francisco, CA

The city passed a law banning “enhanced lethality ammunition.” RIP rounds? Banned under that umbrella.

⚠️ New York

Hollow-points aren’t outright banned, but if you’re caught with them in the wrong place, expect headaches and handcuffs.

⚠️ Illinois

Not explicitly banned, but local ordinances—especially around Chicago—treat certain exotic ammo with suspicion.

⚠️ Massachusetts

You’ll need a license to carry ammo, and certain “non-traditional” rounds could raise red flags. RIPs aren’t banned, but don’t expect leniency.

Where RIP Rounds Are Legal (And Nobody Blinks)

  • Texas (Naturally.)
  • Arizona
  • Florida
  • Nevada
  • Georgia (Where G2 Research is based)
  • Most of the Midwest and South

If you live in a free state, you can buy these online, toss them in your mag, and sleep soundly. Just don’t fly with them unless you enjoy TSA cavity searches.

Final Thoughts: Should You Use RIP Rounds?

Here’s the truth: RIP rounds are legal in most places, but that doesn’t mean they’re always the smartest choice. If you want something cool in your safe or need psychological warfare in a home invasion scenario, they deliver.

But if you’re betting your life on a gimmick, do your homework. Real-world reliability beats flashy ammo every time.

Just know this: if things hit the fan and your state bans the only ammo that works when it counts? That’s not public safety. That’s control.

So check your local laws, train smart, and never assume legality = accessibility.

You may also like: 

15 Best Prepper Guns

DIY Automatic Backyard Traps and Alarms Against Looters and Intruders (Video)

AR-15 Upgrades You Should Think About

Top 13 Survival Uses For Fired Ammo

5 Ammo Stockpiling Mistakes You Are Probably Making Right Now

 

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Comments 3

  1. Bruiser in Houston says:
    7 months ago

    These bullets are an updated version of the SXT, a “serrated hollowpoint” round that was popular at gun shows back in the ’90s. AND the SXT was coated in teflon, to make it extra scary to leftists.

    I think I still have a box or two in my safe.

    Did you like this comment?
    Reply
  2. The Southern Nationalist says:
    7 months ago

    Another version of the old “Talon” hollow point from back years ago.

    Did you like this comment?
    Reply
  3. Joey Tribuani says:
    4 months ago

    RIP rounds are definitely controversial. Good overview, worth noting legality varies by jurisdiction and they raise serious safety and ethical concerns.

    Did you like this comment?
    Reply

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