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Review: Savage Stance XR

Gunner QuinnBy Gunner QuinnDecember 23, 2025
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Review: Savage Stance XR
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In 2022, Savage Arms entered the polymer-frame, concealed-carry pistol marketplace with the release of a striker-fired subcompact semi-automatic named the Stance. This single-stack 9 mm Luger shipped with a seven-round flush-fit magazine and an extended eight-rounder. It proved to be slim, reliable and its design worked to tame the often-snappy recoil of 9 mm handguns of such small size.

Savage reworked this pistol platform in 2025 to incorporate desirable features not available in the first iteration. Dubbed the Stance XR, these new features include a larger-capacity double-stack magazine, an integral trigger safety and an innovative approach to providing customers with an optics-ready slide. Nevertheless, the designers took care to maintain the features and slim profile that made the original Stance a popular defensive option.

Like its predecessor, the Stance XR action employs a short-recoil, locked-breech design. The 0.97″-wide stainless-steel slide features a beveled nose for easier re-holstering, weight-reduction ports, canted cocking serrations at the front and rear, and an ejection port fitted with an oversize extractor claw. Unlike the polymer unit usually found on most handguns, the rear slide plate on the Stance XR is aluminum and anodized to match the matte black of the nitrided slide. The metallic, three-dot sight system consists of an orange-dot post front and a drift-adjustable, serrated, white-dot, U-notch rear.



The Stance XR can be easily fieldstripped using the takedown lever (r., top) located forward on the left side of the frame. Savage’s dovetailed QRO system (r.) allows red-dot-compatible mounting plates to be installed atop the pistol’s slide without the use of screws.

The Stance XR’s slide employs Savage’s new Quick Release Optic (QRO) system for mounting micro red-dot optics. Most of today’s optics-ready pistol slides employ a relatively simple slide cutout that is drilled and tapped with a pair of holes for support screws. The two screws can be used to support a filler plate when no optic is in place or to directly mount an optic to the slide. But, in many cases, a mounting plate is required to fit the optic to the slide. Two screws are used to attach the plate to the slide and then two more are required to mount the optic to the plate.

Savage’s QRO system eliminates the need for one set of screws and allows the optic to be removed or traded out without removing any screws in the process. The filler plate (or optics mounting plate) is secured to the slide via two dovetails and a spring-actuated plunger set into the rear of the slide just under the left side of the rear sight.

Using the QRO system does not require the slide to be removed from the frame. When ready, the plunger is pressed into the slide using a small pin punch or similar implement. While holding the plunger in place, the installed plate is shifted sideways to the right and off the slide; it can then be replaced with the filler or optic plate of your choice. This system is sturdy and easy to use. Unfortunately, at the time of this evaluation, Savage had yet to ship the compatible QRO plates, so all testing was conducted with the factory-installed irons and the filler plate.

The 3.25″ barrel is made from stainless steel with six-groove rifling, a recessed crown and a witness hole milled into the top of the chamber hood. The recoil assembly features all-steel construction; its nested guide rods support two sizes of round-wire recoil springs. This assembly contributes to reduced levels of felt recoil with the trade-off of requiring more effort when cycling the action manually.

one 10-round and one 13-round double-stack magazine



Whereas the original Stance was a single-stack, the XR includes both one 10-round and one 13-round double-stack magazine.

Available in black, flat dark earth or gray, the polymer frame houses a removable, serial-numbered chassis. This allows the pistol’s frame to be traded out for a different color or configuration. The dustcover has a molded-in three-slot accessory rail to support light and/or laser modules. The trigger guard is undercut where it meets the grip frame for improved comfort. External controls include bilateral magazine-release buttons and slide-stop levers, and a left-side-only takedown lever.

The single-stack Stance shipped with an aluminum trigger that did not have an integral safety; the Stance XR has been modified with a curved polymer trigger that incorporates a smooth-faced metallic safety lever. This lever forms the majority of the trigger’s face, contributing to a more comfortable feel. Our test gun’s trigger exhibited a smoother pull than some striker guns, breaking at an average of 5 lbs., 5 ozs.

Savage Stance XR shooting results

The grip of the frame sports aggressive texturing on all sides, including the finger grooves of the frontstrap and the two provided interchangeable backstraps. This texturing extends to the touch points along the top of the frame, above the trigger guard. The pistol leaves the factory with two blued-steel, double-stack magazines; one fits flush to the base of the grip and provides a 10-round capacity, the other extends 0.63″ past the bottom of the frame, with a polymer sleeve providing a finger rest, and accommodates 13 rounds.

Savage’s Stance XR pistol proved to be reliable with the provided magazines and the 9 mm ammunition tested. Weighing 21.7 ozs. unloaded, its action and grip design work together successfully to manage what could have been more intense levels of felt recoil with standard-pressure and +P loads. The new features represent a timely upgrade to a well-made defensive option that deserves to remain competitive in a crowded marketplace.

Savage Stance XR specs

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