Loadout Match
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.17 HMR Drop Chart

The flat-shooting rimfire — a tiny, fast 17 gr bullet that stays remarkably flat for a rimfire, the varmint favorite out to ~200 yards.

Updated

Load
Barrel

Rimfire velocity peaks around 16–20″ and then flattens, so barrel length barely changes the chart.

Zero
Units

17 gr V-MAX · 2,550 fps · G1 BC 0.125 · 100-yard zero · 2″ optic height · sea level.

RangeDrop (in)Hold (MOA)Hold (MIL)Velocity
25 yd−0.93.31.02,374 fps
50 yd−0.10.20.12,204 fps
75 yd+0.22,042 fps
100 yd01,887 fps
150 yd−2.41.50.41,603 fps
200 yd−8.23.91.11,360 fps

Stays supersonic to roughly 200 yards — past that the bullet goes transonic and groups usually open up.

Estimate — confirm at the range. These figures are computed for the selected load and zero at sea level. Your real drop depends on your exact ammo and lot, altitude, temperature, and conditions. Use this to get in the ballpark and to pick the right optic — then verify your actual holdovers on paper or steel before you trust them.

What this means for your optic

By the time you're holding several MOA or MIL of holdover, a plain dot stops being enough. That's where a reticle with marked holds (a BDC or MIL/MOA grid), an exposed turret you can dial, and a first-focal-plane scope earn their keep. Pick a rifle below to see the optics that fit it — and how they mount.