Gun Slings
Tactical Gun Slings and Military Rifle Slings for Field and Duty Use

How you carry a weapon matters as much as how you shoot it. A tactical sling keeps the rifle accessible during transitions, reduces fatigue on long carries, and lets the operator go hands-free without losing control. Getting the attachment system wrong makes all of that worse.
M-Tac tactical gun slings and military rifle slings come in single-point, two-point, and three-point configurations, with padded and bungee options across the range.
Single Point Tactical Slings
Single-point slings attach at one point near the receiver. The weapon hangs in front of the body, transitions between shoulders are fast, and movement stays unrestricted. Elastic construction on bungee models reduces swing when the weapon is lowered, keeping it tighter to the body during active movement.
Two-Point Military Rifle Slings
Two-point slings run from the buttstock to the handguard, spreading weight across the shoulder and chest for comfortable carry over distance. M-Tac two-point slings use Texcel Mil-Spec webbing and Cordura 500D and 1000D construction. Quick-release buckles handle emergency detachment. Select models include a padded shoulder section for sustained wear. The 2-1-point model converts between single and two-point configurations depending on the situation.
Three-Point Slings
Three-point slings wrap around the stock and body for maximum weapon retention during movement. The adjustable design works across different body sizes and load setups. Recommended for patrol, checkpoint duty, convoy missions, and urban operations where fast shoulder transitions matter.
Machine Gun Sling
The two-point machine gun sling is purpose-built for PKM and similar platforms. Cordura 500D with Murdock webbing, Woojin hardware, and a padded shoulder section for sustained heavy carry.
Who Uses Tactical Slings
Military personnel on patrol and at checkpoints. Law enforcement officers on duty. Competition shooters and range instructors moving between positions. Hunters carrying long guns across difficult terrain.
A good tactical rifle sling keeps the weapon ready when you need it and out of the way when you do not.

































