We’re walking the floor at NRAAM 2026 and every now and then something stops you mid-stride and yeah, the new KelTec KP50 did exactly that.
This thing is… a lot. In a good way.
Right off the bat, the size-to-capacity ratio is what grabs you. You’re looking at a compact 5.7 pistol that can run 50 rounds standard, and if you throw on the jungle mag setup, you’re suddenly sitting on 100 rounds onboard. Flip it, reinsert, and you’re back in business. It’s one of those setups that makes you do a double-take the first time you see it in person.
And unlike the older P50, KelTec cleaned up one of the biggest complaints, the reload.
The KP50 moves to a bottom-insert, drop-free magazine, which means no more top-hinged process. It’s faster, more intuitive, and honestly just makes way more sense for how people actually run a gun.
Handling-wise, it’s surprisingly friendly.
It’s short especially with the brace folded, coming in under 19 inches. It weighs just over 3 pounds unloaded, and with the 5.7 cartridge, you can already tell this thing is going to be easy to keep on target. On the floor, it shoulders quickly, points naturally, and doesn’t feel like some awkward range toy.
Controls are fully ambi, including the charging handle and safety, and the safety itself has a short throw but sits protected enough that you’re not accidentally bumping it when slung.
Nice touch.
You’ve also got a 9.6-inch threaded barrel (1/2×28), so running a can is absolutely on the table, plus a rear Pic rail that lets you swap out the brace or configure it however you want. The version we handled was pretty tricked out (brace, red dot, extras) but there’s also a more stripped-down model that keeps things simple and lands under that $900 mark.
Trigger? Better than expected. Not match-grade, but crisp enough that it didn’t feel like an afterthought.
At the end of the day, this isn’t trying to be a precision platform.
It’s a compact, high-capacity, highly configurable 5.7 setup that leans into what makes that cartridge fun: low recoil, fast follow-ups, and now, a whole lot of rounds on tap.
Is it practical? That depends on what you’re trying to do. Is it one of the coolest things we’ve seen on the floor so far? Yeah… it might be.
Learn more HERE.
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