.223 Remington for Moose Hunting? Best Ammo (Round, Load, Cartridge) for a Successful Moose Hunt

Is the .223 Remington a viable caliber/load/round/cartridge for moose hunting? The accurate answer is “it depends”. However, the goal of this article is simply to address the question of whether the .223 Remington is within the ideal range of suitable calibers to harvest moose.

As with anything, the devil is in the details. To answer the question completely, we would need to evaluate the downrange distance to the moose, the bullet type, the grain weight of the bullet, the physical condition of the firearm, the size of the moose in question, the shot placement, the local wind conditions, the expected accuracy of the shooter, the ethics of the ideal maximum number of shots – the list goes on.




What we can do is provide a framework to understand what average conditions might look like, and whether those are reasonably viable for a shot from the average shooter to harvest a moose in the fewest number of shots possible, i.e., ethically.

Let’s dive right in. In the question of “Is the .223 Remington within the ideal range of suitable calibers for moose hunting?” our answer is:

No, the .223 Remington is UNDERKILL for moose hunting, under average conditions, from a mid-range distance, with a medium grain expanding bullet, and with correct shot placement.



Let’s look at those assumptions a bit closer in the following table.

Assumption Value
Caliber .223 Remington
Animal Species Moose
Muzzle Energy 1250 foot-pounds
Animal Weight 1200 lbs
Shot Distance 200 yards


What is the average muzzle energy for a .223 Remington? In this case, we have assumed the average muzzle energy for a .223 Remington round is approximately 1250 foot-pounds.

What is the average weight of an adult male moose? Here we have leaned conservative by taking the average weight of a male individual of the species, since females generally weigh less and require less stopping power. In this case, the average weight of an adult male moose is approximately 1200 lbs.



What is the distance this species is typically hunted from? Distance, of course, plays an important role in the viability of a given caliber in moose hunting. The kinetic energy of the projectile drops dramatically the further downrange it travels primarily due to energy lost in the form of heat generated by friction against the air itself. This phenonemon is known as drag or air resistance. Thus, a caliber that is effective from 50 yards may not have enough stopping power from 200 yards. With that said, we have assumed the average hunting distance for moose to be approximately 200 yards.

What about the other assumptions? We have three other primary assumptions being made here. First, the average bullet weight is encapsulated in the average muzzle energy for the .223 Remington. The second important assumption is ‘slightly-suboptimal’ to ‘optimal’ shot placement. That is to say, we assume the moose being harvested is shot directly or nearly directly in the vitals (heart and/or lungs). The third assumption is that a projectile with appropriate terminal ballistics is being used, which for hunting usually means an expanding bullet.


Various calibers



A common thread you may encounter in online forums is anecdote after anecdote of large animals being brought down by small caliber bullets, or small animals surviving large caliber bullets. Of course those stories exist, and they are not disputed here. A 22LR cartridge can fell a bull elephant under the right conditions, and a newborn squirrel can survive a 50 BMG round under other specific conditions.

Again, the goal of this article is simply to address the question of whether .223 Remington is within the ideal range of suitable calibers to harvest moose - and to this question, the response again is no, the .223 Remington is UNDERKILL for moose hunting.



This article does not serve as the final say, but simply as a starting point for beginner hunters, as well as a venue for further discussion. Please feel free to agree, disagree, and share stories from your own experience in the comments section below.


Disclaimer: the information above is purely for illustrative purposes and should not be taken as permission to use a particular caliber, a statement of the legality or safety of using certain calibers, or legal advice in any way. You must read and understand your own local laws before hunting moose to know whether your caliber of choice is a legal option.





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1 Comments

Donald Ardell - Jun 21, 2021

I disagree with your position you’ve taken on .223 Remington for moose, with an asterisk, mostly because there are a couple mistakes you’ve made regarding the taking of big game that need to be considered and specified before coming to a conclusion. First, for the typical broadside heart/lung shot on a moose, the bullet need not have a specific “Energy,” nor “stopping power,” the first being a computation of a bullet’s mass times the square of its speed divided by 4500,437, and the second being, essentially, a undefined and possibly even nonsense word. Unsurprisingly, moose don’t do math, so computed energy numbers are ultimately meaningless, because a VERY heavy bullet going slow could generate just as impressive an energy number on paper as a VERY light bullet going VERY fast, and both would be extremely poor choices on moose. What a moose hunter needs to be successful on a heart/lung shot is a bullet, particularly a bullet that will penetrate to and through those vitals, and cause mortality by doing damage to tissue in the process. In that case, ‘Sectional Density,’ a characteristic of bullets, and the specific bullet’s construction, are very important in that they describe a bullet that will be much more likely to both penetrate to and through the vitals. In short, a well-constructed, heavy-for-caliber (62 grain+) .224 bullet at typical speeds will penetrate a moose of any size’s ribcage and do sufficient damage to heart and lung tissue to assure a kill. Now, would a cartridge that offered a wider or heavier bullet with stout construction striking at reasonable speed be a better choice and offer more ethical shots? Probably, but we are then talking real big game hunting and not energy computations nor “stopping power”.

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