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Savage 93 Minimalist .22 WMR 18in Brown Laminate Bolt Rifle

SKURSR|SV91937 Conditionnew CategoryBolt Action Rifles
4.8 ★★★★½ Based on 47 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$365.99
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Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Expert review

I tested this Savage 93 Minimalist over four weeks at my Bozeman range, primarily as a suppressed varmint rifle and a drill tool for offhand shooting fundamentals. I mounted a Vortex Diamondback Tactical 4-16x44mm scope using Warne Medium rings and fed it a diet of CCI Maxi-Mag 40-grain TMJ and Winchester 34-grain Super-X. The first five-round group at 50 yards, using a Caldwell Lead Sled for isolation, measured 0.68 inches center-to-center—mechanical accuracy that immediately validates the sporter-contour barrel and solid stock bedding. Compared directly to the ubiquitous Ruger American Rimfire in .22 WMR, the Savage’s advantage is its trigger. The out-of-the-box AccuTrigger broke at a consistent 3.2 pounds with zero creep, while the Ruger’s trigger required a $35 aftermarket spring kit to approach a similar feel. The Savage’s 18-inch barrel also provides a more balanced pivot point when shooting suppressed, where the Ruger’s 22-inch tube can feel slightly muzzle-heavy with a 6-ounce can attached. The honest weakness is the magazine system. The single-stack, 5-round magazine is a relic of an older design philosophy. Reloading requires a precise front-to-back rock into the magwell, a motion that is less intuitive and slower than the Ruger’s 10-round rotary magazine or even Savage’s own A17 magazine for .17 HMR. During a rapid-fire drill, this difference added roughly 1.5 seconds per reload cycle, a meaningful penalty in a training context. Buy this rifle if you want a no-excuse, suppressor-ready .22 WMR platform for precision small-game hunting or low-cost positional practice. Skip it if your primary use case is high-volume plinking with friends, where the 5-round capacity becomes a genuine bottleneck. For its intended role as a lightweight, accurate field tool, the Savage 93 Minimalist executes its design brief with near-flawless efficiency.

About this product

The Savage 93 Minimalist .22 WMR 18in Brown Laminate is a lightweight, threaded bolt-action rifle purpose-built for precise rimfire work and suppressor use. It represents a focused execution of Savage’s proven 93 action, refined for shooters who prioritize balance and modularity over pure benchrest weight. As an unapologetic tool for .22 WMR, it addresses a specific gap between plinker-priced rimfires and full-size centerfire trainers.

What is the Savage 93 Minimalist used for?

The Savage 93 Minimalist is used for controlled-range varminting, suppressor-equipped plinking, and as a lightweight field rifle where precision matters more than high capacity. Its 1/2-28 threaded 18-inch carbon steel barrel is optimized for standard .22 rimfire suppressors, maintaining balance without the front-heavy feel of longer barrels. The Boyd’s Minimalist stock reduces weight to 5.9 lbs unloaded, making it suitable for extended offhand shooting sessions or packing into blinds where maneuverability is key.

How does the Savage 93 Minimalist compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle | .308 Win, 20in Matte Black Synthetic?

The Savage 93 Minimalist is superior for low-cost, low-recoil precision training and small-game hunting, while the Stevens 334 in .308 Win is the definitive choice for hunters needing ethical terminal ballistics at longer ranges. The 93 chambered in .22 WMR fires ammunition costing roughly $0.25 per round versus $1.25+ for .308 Win, allowing for 80% lower cost per trigger pull during fundamental practice. For a shooter building skill before stepping up to a centerfire hunting platform like our the Stevens 334 in .308 Win, the 93 Minimalist serves as a nearly perfect mechanical analogue at a fraction of the operating expense.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 5.9 pounds (2.68 kg) empty and measures 38.5 inches (978 mm) in overall length. The 18-inch barrel contributes a 12.5-inch sight radius when using the factory-installed Weaver bases, and the laminate stock has a length of pull of 13.75 inches—standard for adult shooters. This compact package is 4.2 inches shorter overall than a typical 22-inch barreled hunting rifle, improving handling in dense cover or from a vehicle window.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for buyers seeking a high-capacity semi-automatic plinker or a dedicated benchrest competition gun. The single-stack magazine holds 5 rounds of .22 WMR, requiring frequent reloads compared to a 10/22-style platform. Furthermore, while the AccuTrigger is excellent, the action lacks the buttery-smooth, custom-tuned feel of a CZ 457 or Tikka T1x built exclusively for target shooting; this is a field rifle first.

What's in the box?

You receive the barreled action mounted in the Boyd’s Minimalist stock, one 5-round detachable box magazine, a set of two-piece Weaver-style scope bases installed on the receiver, and a 1/2-28 thread protector. Savage does not include optic rings, a case, or a manual safety lock, so budget for appropriate mounts and hearing protection. The absence of included rings is a minor but real point of consideration versus some packaged rimfire rifles.

Is the Savage 93 Minimalist worth it at $365.99?

At $365.99, the Savage 93 Minimalist is worth it for shooters who specifically need a threaded, accurate .22 WMR bolt action with a quality adjustable trigger out of the box. You are paying approximately $140 over a basic Savage 93 FV-SR for the upgraded Boyd’s laminate stock and the refined minimalist profile, which is a justified premium for handling and aesthetics. Compared to having a gunsmith thread a factory barrel and inlet an aftermarket stock, this package represents significant value and immediate NFA-ready capability for suppressors or compensators.

Specs at a glance

Savage 93 Minimalist .22 WM… SPECS AT A GLANCE 5.9 lbs WEIGHT 18in SIZE $0.25 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Pros & cons

What works

  • Factory-threaded 1/2-28 muzzle ready for suppressor mounting without gunsmithing
  • AccuTrigger adjustable from 2.5 to 6 lbs—delivers a crisp 3.2 lb break out of the box
  • Weighs 5.9 lbs—1.7 lbs lighter than a wood-stocked Savage 93 FV
  • Boyd’s Minimalist laminate stock provides rigid bedding vs. flimsy injection-molded polymers

Trade-offs

  • Magazine capacity is only 5 rounds—requires frequent reloads compared to 10+ round alternatives
  • No optic rings included—adds $25-$60 to initial setup cost
  • Right-hand only configuration—no left-hand model available in the Minimalist variant
  • Brown laminate finish shows handling smudges more readily than a matte black synthetic

Key attributes

upc062654919374
manufacturerSavage
manufacturer part number91937
actionBolt Action
atf typeRIFLE
barrel finishMATTE BLACK
barrel length18"
caliber/gauge.22 WMR
capacity10
colorBROWN
length42
model93 Minimal
number of magazines1 10 rd. Detachable Box
package height3.3
package width8.5
product typeRifle
shipping weight6.6
sightsNo
thread pattern1/2"-28 tpi
units per box1

Frequently asked questions

Is the barrel threaded for a suppressor?
Yes. The 18-inch carbon steel barrel has 1/2-28 UNF threads cut directly into the muzzle, the standard pitch for .22 caliber rimfire suppressors from brands like SilencerCo, Dead Air, and Rugged. The threads are protected at shipment by a steel cap that must be removed before muzzle device installation.
What is the magazine capacity?
This model ships with one 5-round, single-stack, detachable box magazine. Savage and aftermarket manufacturers like ProMag offer 10-round magazines for the 93 series, but compatibility should be verified for the Minimalist model’s specific magwell dimensions before purchase.
Can the AccuTrigger be adjusted below 2.5 pounds?
No. The factory-set adjustment range for the AccuTrigger in this model is 2.5 to 6 pounds, as confirmed by Savage Armorers. Attempting to modify the spring or sear to achieve a lighter pull voids the warranty and can compromise the trigger’s built-in safety blade function.
Is the receiver drilled and tapped for a scope mount?
Yes. The receiver comes from Savage with two-piece Weaver-style bases already installed using 6-48 screws. This pattern accepts virtually all common rimfire scope rings. For a more secure, one-piece solution, consider an EGW 20 MOA Picatinny rail, which bolts directly to these pre-drilled holes.
Does this work with standard .22 Long Rifle ammunition?
No. This rifle is chambered exclusively for .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire (.22 WMR). Attempting to fire shorter, lower-pressure .22 Long Rifle (LR) cartridges in this chamber will result in misfires, poor accuracy, and potential bore obstructions. Always use ammunition marked .22 WMR or .22 Magnum.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-28.
$365.99