Savage Arms has positioned the new 110 Pro Pursuit as a serious contender in the premium bolt-action space, and the $2,149.99 price tag signals they’re not playing around. Built around the proven 110 action with upgraded ergonomics, a threaded barrel, and a refined stock that actually fits modern shooters, this rifle looks like an attempt to capture the “do-it-all” hunter who wants factory accuracy without immediately jumping to custom builds. At that price point it’s competing directly with established names that have long dominated the mid-to-upper tier, which tells you Savage is betting the combination of their sub-MOA guarantee and feature set will justify the spend.
For the 2A community this matters because every time a mainstream manufacturer releases a high-spec factory rifle at a competitive price, it undercuts the narrative that only boutique or imported options deliver real performance. The 110 platform has already proven itself in the hands of countless hunters and long-range shooters; scaling that reliability into a turnkey package with better glass, better triggers, and better fit-and-finish keeps money and capability inside the domestic market. It also gives new or mid-level shooters a clearer on-ramp to serious equipment without having to navigate the used market or wait on custom shop backorders.
The larger implication is that companies are still willing to invest in expanding domestic production and innovation even as regulatory pressure and supply-chain headaches persist. When a brand like Savage puts real engineering dollars behind a rifle that can legitimately serve as a primary hunting or precision tool, it reinforces the idea that American firearms manufacturing remains both viable and responsive to shooter demand. That matters for keeping the ecosystem healthy—more good factory options mean more people shooting, more data on what works, and ultimately a stronger argument that the civilian market drives genuine progress rather than just reacting to restrictions.