I control the inventory for firearms sales where I work. Since I like to play with numbers I have done up our year end sales and put together some statistics. A couple of notes to be considered. We only sell non-restricted firearms and do not carry Milsurp's of any description. Our target market is primarily Duck, Deer and Varmint/Pest hunters. I looked at total sales (in number of units) by Brand/Mfg, then broke it down into Center Fire Rifles (bolt, semi, pump, lever combined), Shotguns (semi, pump, single combined), Rimfires (again, all action types) and Muzzle Loaders. For "math geeks" I truncated the numbers so they may not add up to exactly 100%. So for those who often have questions about "who buys what", here is some (pretty raw) data covering to total unit sales from my little piece of Eastern Ontario.
Top Selling Brands by % of total unit sales:
Savage - 19.8%
Mossberg - 14.4%
Remington - 13.5%
Traditions - 13.5%
Henry - 11.7%
Weatherby - 9.9%
Ruger - 8.1%
Browning - 3.6%
Marlin - 1.8%
Winchester - 1.8%
Rossi - 0.9%
Thompson Center - 0.9%
Center Fire rifles accounted for 33.3% of "all gun sales" (measured in number of units, not dollars), followed by Shotguns @ 28.8%, then Rimfires @ 24.3% and finally Muzzle loaders @ 13.5%
In CF Rifle sales Savage remained on top with 35.1% of all rifle sales. Rounding out the top three spots were Mossberg and Remington tied @ 13.5% and finally Weatherby @ 10.8%. Of note NOT A SINGLE Rem 700 was sold all year. My experierce was when a guy/gal handled the Rem 783 (at about 400 bucks) and then the 700 SPS (at about 800 bucks) they just didn't see 400 bucks MORE rifle to justify the step up. The Savage Axis was still "king of the pile" accounting for 29.7% of all CF rifles that went out the door. (my "main market" can probably be described as "price concious"). To put it another way, 1 in 3 of everyone who came to the gun counter came for a CF Rifle and 1 in 3 who bought something left with an Axis.
In the Shotgun Market (28.8% of all gun sales) Mossberg just edged out Remington by 34.3% to 31.2% (again total unit sales) with variations of the Model 500 a little ahead of variations of the Model 870's (the two best sellers). Solidly in third was Weatherby with 21.9% of all shotgun sales. Browning and Winchester shotguns accounted for just under 1% of shotgun sales in comparison. To be fair, we sold out of 870 Wingmaster's very early in 2015 and could not source them from anywhere regardless of what you were willing to pay. That may have hurt Reminton's year end shotgun numbers in my (numbers).
Rimfires accounted for 24.3% of all unit sales. Henry came in top of the pile accounting for 37.0% of all rimfire rifle sales. Ruger (various 10/22 configurations) tied with Savage @ 29.6% each, locking up the 2nd place tie for total rimfires out the door.
I believe, due primarily to the poor rifle season for deer in my area, our Muzzle loader (and crossbow) sales were very "heavy" this year. Muzzle loaders, all Traditions models, accounted for 13.5% of all firearms sales in 2015 - we couldn't keep these on the shelf in the weeks leading up to the December Muzzleloading season in Ontario. Despite carrying CVA, Knight and Thompson Center models as well, the "market" was for the "cheapest" model on the shelf which leads me to believe there will be a rather healthy "used market" before too long - these were most probably "hail Mary" purchases not bought by serious "front stuff hunters".
So the AVERAGE GUY who bought a CF Rifle, Shotgun and Rimfire in 2015 from me walked out the door with a Savage Axis (308 or 30.06 most often), a 12 ga 500/535 Mossberg and a 22lr Henry Lever Action. And if he/she came back for a Black Powder gun, they picked up a Traditions Buckstalker in 50 cal.
That's what they were buying "from me" in 2015.
Top Selling Brands by % of total unit sales:
Savage - 19.8%
Mossberg - 14.4%
Remington - 13.5%
Traditions - 13.5%
Henry - 11.7%
Weatherby - 9.9%
Ruger - 8.1%
Browning - 3.6%
Marlin - 1.8%
Winchester - 1.8%
Rossi - 0.9%
Thompson Center - 0.9%
Center Fire rifles accounted for 33.3% of "all gun sales" (measured in number of units, not dollars), followed by Shotguns @ 28.8%, then Rimfires @ 24.3% and finally Muzzle loaders @ 13.5%
In CF Rifle sales Savage remained on top with 35.1% of all rifle sales. Rounding out the top three spots were Mossberg and Remington tied @ 13.5% and finally Weatherby @ 10.8%. Of note NOT A SINGLE Rem 700 was sold all year. My experierce was when a guy/gal handled the Rem 783 (at about 400 bucks) and then the 700 SPS (at about 800 bucks) they just didn't see 400 bucks MORE rifle to justify the step up. The Savage Axis was still "king of the pile" accounting for 29.7% of all CF rifles that went out the door. (my "main market" can probably be described as "price concious"). To put it another way, 1 in 3 of everyone who came to the gun counter came for a CF Rifle and 1 in 3 who bought something left with an Axis.
In the Shotgun Market (28.8% of all gun sales) Mossberg just edged out Remington by 34.3% to 31.2% (again total unit sales) with variations of the Model 500 a little ahead of variations of the Model 870's (the two best sellers). Solidly in third was Weatherby with 21.9% of all shotgun sales. Browning and Winchester shotguns accounted for just under 1% of shotgun sales in comparison. To be fair, we sold out of 870 Wingmaster's very early in 2015 and could not source them from anywhere regardless of what you were willing to pay. That may have hurt Reminton's year end shotgun numbers in my (numbers).
Rimfires accounted for 24.3% of all unit sales. Henry came in top of the pile accounting for 37.0% of all rimfire rifle sales. Ruger (various 10/22 configurations) tied with Savage @ 29.6% each, locking up the 2nd place tie for total rimfires out the door.
I believe, due primarily to the poor rifle season for deer in my area, our Muzzle loader (and crossbow) sales were very "heavy" this year. Muzzle loaders, all Traditions models, accounted for 13.5% of all firearms sales in 2015 - we couldn't keep these on the shelf in the weeks leading up to the December Muzzleloading season in Ontario. Despite carrying CVA, Knight and Thompson Center models as well, the "market" was for the "cheapest" model on the shelf which leads me to believe there will be a rather healthy "used market" before too long - these were most probably "hail Mary" purchases not bought by serious "front stuff hunters".
So the AVERAGE GUY who bought a CF Rifle, Shotgun and Rimfire in 2015 from me walked out the door with a Savage Axis (308 or 30.06 most often), a 12 ga 500/535 Mossberg and a 22lr Henry Lever Action. And if he/she came back for a Black Powder gun, they picked up a Traditions Buckstalker in 50 cal.
That's what they were buying "from me" in 2015.




















































