Do You Really Understand MOA? Most Shooters Get This Wrong
Most shooters have heard the term “MOA,” tossing it around at the range or in online forums. But when it comes time to dial in a scope or measure a group, a lot of folks get fuzzy on what MOA really means and how to use it properly.
You are not alone if you’ve ever asked yourself “How many clicks is that?” or “Is one MOA really an inch?” Let’s break it down from the ground up so that you can read your scope, hit your target, and maybe even explain it better than the guy next to you.
What Does MOA Stand For? Minute of Angle Explained
MOA stands for “minute of angle.” It’s an angular measurement, not a linear one. One MOA equals 1/60th of one degree. "Why does that matter? Because adjustments change the angle of your aim in small increments.
How Big Is One MOA?
Here’s where things get practical. One MOA equals about 1.047 inches at 100 yards. For everyday shooting talk, most round it to an even inch. That’s fine for the range, but when precision counts (especially past 500 yards) that .047 starts to matter.
At 200 yards, one MOA is roughly two inches. At 300 yards, it’s about three inches. The farther out you shoot, the larger that angular spread gets. This is an important factor to consider when making an MOA scope adjustment and why people say MOA grows with distance.
MOA vs. Clicks and How Scopes Use MOA
Most rifle scopes adjust in fractions of an MOA per click. The most common is ¼ MOA per click. That means every time you spin that turret, you’re moving your point of impact by ¼ inch at 100 yards.
If you need to move your point of impact by one inch at 100 yards and your scope adjusts in ¼ MOA clicks, you’ll need four clicks. But at 200 yards, one MOA equals about two inches, so those same four clicks will move your point of impact two inches, not one. To move just one inch at 200 yards, you would only need two clicks.
This is where new shooters get tripped up. They think MOA is always an inch, no matter the range. But MOA is not the same at 50 yards, 100 yards, or 600 yards. It scales with distance.
Why MOA Matters for Accuracy
How to Use MOA at the Range
Common MOA Mistakes Shooters Make
MOA vs. MRAD: Which Is Better?
Should You Stick with MOA?
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