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Beretta

Beretta

Your Beretta already patterns well. The right choke tube tells it exactly where and how tight to put that pattern for the shot you're actually taking

Find the Choke Tube that Fits Your Beretta Choke System

Beretta has used three different choke systems over the years: Mobil Choke, Optima-Choke, and Optima-Choke Plus/HP. They're not interchangeable. It's important to check the specs to ensure you get the right Comp-N-Choke for your shotgun:

1. Confirm your gauge.

A 12-gauge choke won't thread into a 20-gauge barrel, or vice versa, regardless of which Beretta system you're running.

2. Confirm your choke system.

Beretta's marking is subtler than some brands: Mobil Choke barrels typically show only the gauge, with no extra code; Optima-Choke barrels carry an "OB" mark next to the gauge; Optima-Choke Plus barrels usually show the gauge and chamber length (like "12 GA 3½"") with no code nearby at all. If the barrel stamp leaves you guessing, your factory choke tube is the more reliable check. Mobil tubes are marked PB or ST, while both Optima systems are marked "Optima-Choke" directly on the tube.

3. Select your choke.

  • A choke with open constriction like Improved Cylinder throws a wider pattern for close-flushing birds and skeet-style targets.
  • A tighter Modified or Full choke holds the pattern together longer for passing waterfowl, turkey, or long-range trap and sporting clays presentations.

Consider Comp-N-Choke if...

Consider Comp-N-Choke if you want a proven, do-it-all choke for standard hunting and target work—precision-machined, USA stainless steel, and tool-free to swap between a morning hunt and an afternoon at the range.

Consider Kicks Industries if...

Consider Kicks Industries if you're shooting serious clays competition—skeet, trap, sporting clays, FITASC—and want reduced felt recoil for faster follow-up shots, or need a specialty application like Kicks' Howler predator choke or Buck Kicker buckshot line.

Both are USA-made and built from solid stock rather than cheaper tubing. The difference is which edge matters more for what you're shooting.