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GLOCK
17

The world's most widely used service pistol. Polymer frame, striker-fired action, and legendary reliability made it the standard for military and law enforcement globally.

9mm
Caliber
17+1
Capacity
34
Total parts
1982
Introduced
Book this firearm
2 / shot · 5 rounds min.
Catalog · GLOCK 17GLOCK 17// 9×19mm · Pistol
Origin
Austria
Maker
Glock GmbH
Action
Striker-fired
Frame
Polymer
Weight
625 g
Length
204 mm
The Story

The pistol that changed everything.

In 1980, the Austrian Army announced a competition to replace their aging Walther P38 service pistol. Engineering firms across Europe submitted refined, all-metal designs. Then a curtain-rod manufacturer named Gaston Glock — who had never designed a firearm — entered with a pistol made mostly of plastic.

Critics laughed. The Austrian military didn't. Two years and 25,000 stress-test rounds later, the Glock 17 won the contract by a margin so embarrassing to its competitors that the trials were quietly buried.

Today, more than 65% of all U.S. police departments issue a Glock as their standard sidearm. The Austrian Bundesheer carries it. So do the British SAS, the Norwegian Armed Forces, the Indian Special Frontier Force, and tens of thousands of officers across Europe and Asia. No handgun in history has spread further, faster, or against more skepticism.

Critics said a plastic pistol would melt in a fire, crack in the cold, or bend out of spec. Forty years and 20 million units later, none of that has happened.

Massad Ayoob, Firearms Instructor

Why it works.

The Glock 17 is built on a single radical idea: simplicity is reliability. The entire pistol — every working mechanism — uses just 34 parts. A Beretta 92 has 70. A SIG P226 has 53. Each part Glock removed was one less thing that could break, freeze, foul, or fail.

The polymer frame doesn't rust, doesn't warp, weighs 30% less than equivalent steel, and absorbs recoil energy in a way metal frames physically can't. The "Safe Action" trigger replaced manual safeties with three internal automatic ones. There is no decocker, no slide-mounted safety, no magazine disconnect. You draw it. You pull the trigger. It fires.

What it feels like to shoot.

The first thing first-time shooters notice is the recoil — or rather, the absence of it. The polymer frame flexes microscopically with each shot, soaking up energy that would otherwise punch back into your hand. Follow-up shots are faster. Groups are tighter. Confidence builds in seconds.

The trigger feel is what made Glock famous: a deliberate take-up, a clean break at around 5.5 lbs, and a short reset that lets you stay on target. It's not a competition trigger — but it's been the benchmark every other striker-fired pistol has been measured against since 1982.

If you've never fired a handgun before, the Glock 17 is the one we recommend you start with. If you've fired hundreds, you'll appreciate why this one became the standard.

Four decades, one design

A timeline.

From an unknown engineer's basement to the holsters of two-thirds of American police officers — in forty years.

The competition begins

Austria announces a search for a new service pistol. Walther, SIG, Beretta, FN, Heckler & Koch all submit refined steel designs.

1980
1982
An outsider wins

Gaston Glock, a curtain-rod manufacturer with zero firearms experience, wins the Austrian military contract with a pistol made mostly of plastic.

America imports the future

The first Glock 17s arrive in the U.S. The "plastic gun" panic sweeps American media. Sales explode anyway.

1985
1991
FBI adopts the platform

After the Miami shootout exposed the limits of revolvers, the FBI begins issuing Glock pistols. Police departments nationwide follow.

Five million produced

Glock crosses the 5-million-units mark. The polymer revolution is now permanent.

2007
Now
The new standard

Over 20 million Glocks produced. Adopted by 65% of U.S. police, dozens of militaries, and shooters in 100+ countries. Every striker-fired pistol made today owes it a debt.

Where you've seen it

In the wild.

Few firearms have crossed from service holsters to the cultural mainstream the way the Glock 17 has. Chances are you've already seen it fired a hundred times — in cinema, gaming, and history.

Film
Die Hard 2
1990

John McClane famously names "the Glock 7" as a "porcelain gun made in Germany" — the line that introduced an entire generation to the brand (and seeded years of myth).

Film Series
John Wick
2014–

Glock 17s and 34s are the title character's go-to sidearms throughout the saga — meticulously researched, faithfully reloaded, and almost reverent in their depiction.

Video Game
Counter-Strike
2000–

The starter pistol for an entire generation of competitive gamers. The Glock-18 is so synonymous with CS that "Glock" became gamer shorthand for any sidearm.

TV Series
Breaking Bad
2008–13

From Hank Schrader's DEA sidearm to Walter White's iconic "porkpie" pistol scene — the Glock anchors much of the show's gun-handling realism.

Service
British SAS
1990s–

After decades carrying the Browning Hi-Power, the world's most famous special forces unit transitioned to the Glock 17 — and never went back.

Service
U.S. Army (M17/19)
2017–

Although the Army officially adopted the SIG P320, more than half of U.S. federal law enforcement still issues some variant of the Glock. The platform's grip on America is unbroken.

From our shooters

What people say.

First-timers, returning visitors, and lifetime gun enthusiasts agree: the Glock 17 is one of the best introductions to handgun shooting we offer.

★★★★★

My first time ever shooting a real firearm. The instructor recommended starting with the Glock 17 and I'm so glad we did — the recoil was way less than I expected, and I actually hit the target on shot two. Already booking again.

Anna K. · Berlin
★★★★★

I've fired Glocks in three different countries now and these guys had it dialed in perfectly — clean, well-maintained, and a great range setup. Worth coming to Riga for.

Marek T. · Warsaw
★★★★★

Finally tried the famous 'plastic gun.' Now I get it. The trigger reset alone made me understand why every police department on Earth carries one. Smooth as silk.

Dāvis L. · Riga
Available today

Pull the
trigger.

Five shots from the most influential service pistol of the last fifty years. Two euros each. No experience required — just bring an ID and your curiosity.