I typically have a pistol with a TLR-1 light mounted on it, as my go-to, bump-in-the-night gun. But, I also have a Mossy 500 loaded in the closet, also with a mounted light (though the pistol is always the first thing I grab).
If, for some insane reason, you were to decide to "clear" the house with an intruder present, I think the pistol is the better option, for several reasons.
First, it's smaller and lighter, so it's able to utilized more quickly, in multiple directions. It's also going to be less vulnerable to being grabbed and wrestled away. It also has more rounds, and fires them more quickly.
All that being said, you'd kind of be an idiot to wake from a dead sleep, and go creeping through the house in search of one or more intruders, that are likely armed.
Obviously, the wisest course of action is to call 911, and hunker down in the bedroom, in which case the shotgun becomes the better choice (with the pistol kept very close at hand in case of a jam).
Another obvious positive for the shotgun is that lead pellets present a bit less of an over-penetration risk, which is a consideration in a urban environment.
If, for some insane reason, you were to decide to "clear" the house with an intruder present, I think the pistol is the better option, for several reasons.
First, it's smaller and lighter, so it's able to utilized more quickly, in multiple directions. It's also going to be less vulnerable to being grabbed and wrestled away. It also has more rounds, and fires them more quickly.
All that being said, you'd kind of be an idiot to wake from a dead sleep, and go creeping through the house in search of one or more intruders, that are likely armed.
Obviously, the wisest course of action is to call 911, and hunker down in the bedroom, in which case the shotgun becomes the better choice (with the pistol kept very close at hand in case of a jam).
Another obvious positive for the shotgun is that lead pellets present a bit less of an over-penetration risk, which is a consideration in a urban environment.