Every left-handed rifle on the market, in one place.
Left-hand rifle info is scattered across dozens of catalogs. Lefty Firearms pulls it together — 1,697 verified variants across 31 manufacturers — so you can search, filter, compare, and buy with confidence.
Comprehensive
True left-hand and ambidextrous rifles from 31 brands — current and discontinued.
Source-backed
Every spec cites an official manufacturer page with a last-verified date.
Shop anywhere
Compare specs side by side and jump to multiple retailers for each rifle.
Featured models

Tikka
T3x Lite Stainless
19 variants · Bolt action

Ruger
American Rifle Generation II Ranch
6 variants · Bolt action

Bergara
B-14 HMR
5 variants · Bolt action

Browning
X-Bolt 2 Hunter Left Hand
9 variants · Bolt action

Christensen Arms
Ridgeline FFT Left Handed
21 variants · Bolt action

Savage Arms
110 Carbon Hunter
6 variants · Bolt action
Frequently asked questions
What is a left-handed rifle?
A left-handed rifle is a rifle whose action is mirrored for left-handed shooters: the bolt handle is on the left side and spent cases eject to the left, away from a left-handed shooter's face. This lets a southpaw run the bolt with their right hand while keeping the rifle shouldered on the left, and keeps hot brass and gas clear of their line of sight.
Are left-handed rifles worth it?
Yes — for a dedicated left-handed shooter, a true left-hand action is worth it because it cycles faster from position, keeps ejection away from your face, and is more comfortable over long shooting sessions. Left-handed rifles also tend to hold their value well because they are harder to find. If you only shoot occasionally, an ambidextrous design or a right-handed rifle with ambi controls can be a lower-cost alternative.
Can a left-handed person shoot a right-handed rifle?
Yes, a left-handed person can shoot a right-handed rifle, but it is not ideal. The main drawbacks are that the bolt is awkward to operate with the left hand and the ejection port sits on the same side as your face, sending brass and gas toward you. Lever-action, pump, semi-automatic, break-open, and single-shot rifles are far more ambidextrous and are good options for lefties who cannot find a true left-hand bolt action.
Which manufacturers make left-handed rifles?
Major manufacturers that make left-handed rifles include Ruger, Savage Arms, Tikka, Bergara, Browning, Winchester, Weatherby, CZ, Christensen Arms, Sako, Mossberg, Nosler, and Fierce Arms. Savage Arms offers one of the widest ranges of affordable left-handed models, while Tikka, Sako, and Bergara are popular for accuracy. Lefty Firearms tracks every current left-handed and ambidextrous rifle from these brands in one searchable catalog.
What is the difference between left-hand, ambidextrous, and left-hand-friendly rifles?
A true left-hand rifle mirrors the action — bolt on the left, ejection to the left. An ambidextrous rifle works for either hand, with symmetric controls or a bolt and ejection that can be switched sides (common on straight-pull rifles). A left-hand-friendly rifle still has a right-hand action but a design — like a centered stock, tang safety, or top-loading gate — that makes it usable by a lefty, which is typical of lever-action and single-shot rifles.
Are left-handed rifles more expensive than right-handed rifles?
New left-handed rifles usually cost the same as their right-handed equivalents — manufacturers list them at the same MSRP. However, the selection is smaller and they can be harder to find in stock. On the used market, left-handed rifles often sell for slightly less because demand is lower, which can make a used left-hand rifle a good value.
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