
Bushnell· Red Dot
Bushnell Electro Optics TRS-25 Red Dot
Compact tube red dot with 3 MOA reticle — AR-ready.
Bushnell, Simmons and Burris red dots, riflescopes, binoculars, bore sighters and scope bases.

Bushnell· Red Dot
Compact tube red dot with 3 MOA reticle — AR-ready.

Bushnell· Tool
Professional-grade bore sighter for zeroing scopes on the bench.

Simmons· Red Dot
Budget tube red dot — shotgun and rimfire ready.

Bushnell· 8x42
All-purpose hunting binoculars — clear glass at a fair price.

Burris· Mount
Heavy-duty steel scope base for Savage actions.

Bushnell· 10x50
10x50 binoculars — long-range glassing for hunters.
Looking for something specific in this category?
About this category
An optic should outlast the gun it's mounted to. We carry red dots, riflescopes, and bore sighters from brands that warranty their products and parts that can take the recoil of a .45-70 lever gun or a 5.56 AR run hard.
Bushnell TRS-25 compact tube red dots (3 MOA), Simmons 1x20mm tube red dots — both AR-ready and zero-hold proven.
Burris Xtreme tactical scopes, Bushnell binoculars for treestand glassing.
Bushnell professional bore sighters — get on paper in 5 rounds instead of 50.
Spend at least 30% of your rifle's cost on the optic. A $1,200 rifle with a $50 scope is a $50 rifle.
Red dots want to be cowitnessed with irons on a defensive rifle. The day your battery dies, you'll thank yourself.
Mount it once, mount it right. Use a torque wrench (15-18 in-lbs on rings) and a level — eyeballing causes 90% of zero-drift problems.
Do you mount and bore-sight optics?
Yes — bring the rifle and the optic to the shop. Bore-sighting with a professional Bushnell collimator is a flat $25; full mounting and torquing is $50.
What red dot for an AR-15 on a budget?
The Bushnell TRS-25 has been the budget red-dot king for over a decade. It's not a Trijicon, but it'll hold zero through thousands of 5.56 rounds.