A typical biathlon rifle costs several thousand dollars, with a pretty wide range depending on whether it’s entry-level or World Cup grade.

Quick Scoop: Price Range

  • Entry-level biathlon‑capable .22 rifles set up for training can start around 400–700 USD before biathlon‑specific stocks, harnesses, and sights are added.
  • More complete “race‑ready” training setups with better stock, biathlon sights, and magazine holders often land in the 1,200–2,000 USD range.
  • True biathlon rifles from dedicated manufacturers (like Anschutz Fortner‑type rifles used in high‑level competition) are usually in the 2,500–6,000+ USD range when bought new, depending on model and configuration.
  • Used race rifles from top brands often still cost around 2,000–3,500 USD , because they hold value very well.

In other words, if you’re just getting into the sport and want something functional, you might be looking at roughly 1–2k USD for a practical biathlon setup, while the full “Olympic‑style” rifle many pros use is closer to 4–6k USD or more when new.

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Level / Type Typical Cost (USD) What You Get
Basic .22 with peep sights ~450–700 Rifle suitable for basic biathlon practice, not fully optimized race stock/harness.
Entry “race-ready” setup ~1,200–2,000 Better stock, biathlon sights, magazine holders, sling/harness; good for clubs and beginners.
Club/Intermediate race rifles ~2,000–3,500 (often used) Dedicated biathlon actions, proper stock and accessories, often older but still high quality.
New top-end competition rifle ~4,000–6,000+ Current‑generation biathlon rifle like Anschutz 1827 F, with premium features and longevity.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.