Why Can’t I Find .22 LR Ammunition?!?!?

Is anyone finding ammo getting a bit easier to find? My local Walmart has shelves stocked up to levels not seen since pre SH all except 22lr. I still see that sell off fast. I ran into Bass Pro Sat and they had maybe 200 boxes of Win 333s for 17.99 a box. I got one my Wife got one. I did not need them but grabbed them anyway. I have been buying sales on Magazines and ammo and stocking up. I do not want to get caught with my pants down like the Winter of 2013. Its easy to get complacent when prices are low.
 
There is no .22 CCI ammo in my area. I checked at two gun stores in Templeton and Atascadero, Ca. Both were out. They said when they get a shipment, though, that they were rationing one 50 round box per customer. Templeton = $10/box, Atascadero = $16.95/box. Crazy......
 
Picked up a 525 rd pack of Golden at Dunham's this morning for $22. Seems they are getting some 22 each week now.

I've accumulated about 1200 rounds at < 5¢ per so I might start shooting 22 again.

11¢ 22 is easy to find here.
 
You guys aren't looking hard enough. Try Gunbroker, AmmoBot, GunBot, etc...There's plenty of .22LR out there for between .13 and .15 cents per round.

That seems high. Mine are averaging at $.065 each round.
 
Even if I have to do without I refuse to pay more than $25/brick of .22 ammo. (5 cents a round)

Supply and demand works both ways. If enough of us refuse to pay more than 5 cents a round the prices will come down. I know we will never see $10/brick again but I think under $20 is possible if we do our part.
 
And the beat goes on....

I've got enough 22LR to last me and my son and our circle of friends for a good looooooong time.

Bought a large portion of it during the panic.

How you ask?

I used the Walmart app, then I got up early and stood in line at Walmart, I used Gunbot, I used Brass Badger, I used Ammo Seek, I used my local shooting forum, I used my local FB shooting page, I placed adds on Craigslist and traded for ammo, etc...

I confronted the issue and got creative!

Stop complaining about not having 22LR! Figure out a way to become one of those who have ammo!

Congratulations, but not all of us have that much time on our hands.
 
Congratulations, but not all of us have that much time on our hands.

In the amount of time you took to read the thread, quote Dezfan, and respond, you could have used at least one of those tools, and possibly found yourself some ammo...
 
Even if I have to do without I refuse to pay more than $25/brick of .22 ammo. (5 cents a round)

Supply and demand works both ways. If enough of us refuse to pay more than 5 cents a round the prices will come down. I know we will never see $10/brick again but I think under $20 is possible if we do our part.

Those days are over. I thought I was overpaying for CCI Blazer at Cabela's until I saw it at Walmart. It was cheaper at Walmart, by $.01 per 500 rounds... I'm buying at $.065 per round. I'm not going to let $.015 per round keep me from enjoying my hobby.

Even the cheapest stuff is running $.045 per round, which puts you above $20 for 500 rounds.
 
Congratulations, but not all of us have that much time on our hands.

Thanks. I'm just as busy as the next guy, I just made getting ammo a priority.

As such, I haven't "hunted" 22LR since April of last year.

That doesn't mean that I haven't picked up more 22LR since then, I just haven't had to actively search it out.

Spending the time I did actively procuring ammo has since freed me from the chase that has become the norm.

The way I it, I actually saved time. I have ammo to shoot, ammo to share w/ my family & friends, and I'm not having to continually spend time trying to find ammo.
 
I would be disappointed... $.10 per round for Golden Bullet is way too high. In the bulk boxes, they are about $.04 per round... that plastic case is awfully expensive!

I picked uptwo of these at academy about 5 weeks ago--for $7.50 per 100. Not too bad I guess?
 
I don't hoard, and I don't resell, but I guess you could say I'm part of the problem. If I have to pay 4-5 cents over the mythical 5 cents that people used to pay for ammo that only exists for the lucky few who can stumble upon it, I will and here's why. I can do it without making multiple trips to wherever, hoping to find whatever, in whatever limited quantities they decided to sell me. I can decide what to buy, where to buy, and in a lot of cases how much I want to buy, usually without paying tax. If I don't like what's available for the price I want to pay, I move on, without actually moving. To me, convenience, time, and gas is worth that much if not more. On top of that, those few more cents a round get a 50 yr old dad and a 12 yr old daughter out of the house a couple of hours on the weekend to bond with their firearms. Priceless.
 
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Just got back from a gunshow and noticed the guys reselling Walmart ammo have dropped their prices down to $55 a brick. Guess the supply chain is improving or no one was buying at the old $75 price.
 
"Why Can’t I Find .22 LR Ammunition?!?!?"

One word: Hoarders.
 
I stopped by the LGS this morning and he had a shelf full of Federal blue box 22LR ammo priced at $2.95/50. I asked him if he was still breaking down bricks and he admitted he was. Said he could put 5-6 bricks @ $35 each on his shelf and they would be gone by late morning. If he puts 50-60 individual boxes out at <$3 a box he makes a little less on the 22LR ammo but they last all day and he makes more on other sales. People buy 4-5 boxes of 50 and almost invariably buy something else like targets or cleaning supplies. Plus this way he has 10-12 people who leave the shop with something they came in looking for rather than just 2-3 who bought the bricks. Must be something to his strategy, they've been in business since 1964.
 
No, I wish it was but its not. There is simply not enough production to meet demand.

How does this counter the claim that it's hoarders? I think it's the same darn argument, more hoarders / hoarding = more demand. I think it's clear from gunshow craziness to the people I have sold .22lr to, that there is more hoarding than before. And it may not be the one guy with a million 22lr in his basement, but even the individual who in the past would have kept maybe one brick on hand who know has 3 or 4 because thanks to the hoarders can't count on going to store and getting a box before his range trip. This causes a huge increase in demand.

My hypothesis would be this, given the low profit margin on 22lr, for years federal and other companies did not expand production and roughly tried to keep it equal with demand. With demand =~ supply, there were boxes on the shelf and everyone had 22lr available. For every box bought you had a new box to put on the shelf. Then come the elections, you have a spike in demand and now demand >> supply, the boxes on the shelf are bought and so is every new box put up there.

Now federal could make new factories but that's expensive and how long will it take to pay off with the profits from 22lr, assuming that the logistics would allow for more production in the first place. Add on top of that licensing, zoning, insurance all of that it doesn't make sense for what is likely a short-term fluctuation in the demand curve. Also suggesting that an individual should open an ammo factory is just absurd, it's not about being a "go-getter" or a complainer, it's just too darn expensive for what is almost certainly a sure loss in a decade.

The real solution is for federal and the other companies to raise prices if you want it to be available 100% of the time, but they are hesitant to do that since it doesn't change the demand curve. They aren't thinking about the next month or year, they are thinking a decade from now, that's why there's no new factories. They would rather have demand > supply than have supply > demand on a low profit item to guarantee sells especially since brand preference is largely moot for 22lr, a dollar increase over competition could harm customer loyalty / sells. And yes places are getting less than they used to, but there are more stores than even a few years ago and more online retail, it's not going to China, the people who say that just blame china for most things when it's pure capitalist invisible hand forces that explain the situation.
 
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