Nosler Trophy Grade 6.5 Creedmoor 120 gr Ballistic Tip

0
Nosler ammunition box with brass cartridges, ideal for hunting and shooting enthusiasts.
Primary UseDeer hunting · Antelope · Hogs · Thin-skinned game
Bullet TypeNosler Ballistic Tip — polymer-tipped, thin jacket, boat-tail
Bullet Weight120 gr
CaseBrass (Nosler premium)
PrimerBoxer
Packaging20 rounds per box
Typical Price~$51–55 / box (~$2.55–2.75 per round)
Closest CompetitorsHornady Superformance 6.5 CM 120 gr CX · Fiocchi Hyperformance 6.5 CM 120 gr Barnes TTSX · Federal Power-Shok 6.5 CM 140 gr SP

Official Specs

SpecValueSource
Muzzle Velocity2,900 fpsNosler / Ammunition Depot
Muzzle Energy2,251 ft-lbsNosler / Ammunition Depot
Bullet Weight120 grNosler
Bullet TypeNosler Ballistic Tip — polymer tip, thin jacket, boat-tailNosler
BC (G1)~0.458Nosler Bullets published data
BC (G7)~0.230Nosler Bullets published data
Manufacturer SKU42050Nosler
UPC054041420501
ReloadableYesNosler premium brass

ME note: The listing publishes 2,251 ft-lbs; the calculated value at 2,900 fps and 120 gr is 2,241 ft-lbs — a 10 ft-lb discrepancy likely due to rounding differences. Both figures are within normal tolerance. This page uses the calculated 2,241 ft-lbs as the ballistics reference.


Ballistics Table

Calculated. Zero: 100 yards. Sight height: 1.5″ above bore. BC (G1): 0.458 (Nosler Ballistic Tip 120 gr, published).

YardsVelocity (fps)Energy (ft-lbs)Trajectory (in)
02,9002,241+1.5
1002,7201,9710.0 ← zero
2002,5511,734-6.5
3002,3931,525-19.0
4002,2441,342-38.6
5002,1051,181-66.7

Key takeaway: at 2,900 fps with a BC of 0.458, the 120 gr Ballistic Tip delivers a flat, fast trajectory well-suited to deer and antelope hunting at 100–350 yards. At 300 yards the load carries 1,525 ft-lbs with only 19 inches of drop from a 100-yard zero. The thin-jacketed Ballistic Tip design provides explosive expansion on thin-skinned game — the defining terminal characteristic that makes this bullet both excellent for deer and less appropriate for heavy game like elk.


The Nosler Ballistic Tip Bullet

The Nosler Ballistic Tip is one of the most widely used polymer-tipped hunting bullets in North America — introduced by Nosler in 1984, it was the original commercially successful polymer-tipped hunting bullet and set the template for the entire category:

  • Color-coded polymer tip — orange tip for the 6.5mm / .264 caliber; Nosler uses color coding to identify caliber; the tip initiates expansion on impact
  • Thin copper jacket — specifically engineered for rapid, violent expansion on deer-sized game; the thin jacket peels back quickly to maximize energy transfer
  • Boat-tail base — reduces base drag for the published BC of 0.458
  • Not bonded — the Ballistic Tip is a cup-and-core design; the core can separate from the jacket on impact; this is intentional — the fragmentation releases energy quickly, which is ideal for deer but can reduce penetration on heavy game
  • Lead core — this is a lead-core bullet; not lead-free

The Ballistic Tip is best understood as Nosler’s deer hunting bullet. It is not their elk bullet (that’s AccuBond) and not their long-range bullet (that’s RDF). The thin jacket and rapid expansion are features, not flaws — they are precisely what makes the Ballistic Tip effective on deer.


Ballistic Tip vs AccuBond vs E-Tip — Nosler’s Three Hunting Designs

Nosler produces three distinct hunting bullet families for 6.5 Creedmoor:

Ballistic Tip (this)AccuBondE-Tip
ConstructionThin jacket, lead coreBonded, lead coreMonolithic copper
TerminalExplosive expansionControlled expansionDeep penetration
Lead-freeNoNoYes
Best forDeer, antelope, hogsDeer through elkCA hunting, elk
BC (G1) 120 gr~0.458~0.458
Price tierMidPremiumPremium

The Ballistic Tip is Nosler’s most affordable hunting option and the right choice for deer-sized game where explosive terminal performance is the goal. For elk or tougher game, AccuBond’s bonded construction is more appropriate.


Variants

This page covers Nosler Trophy Grade 42050 · 6.5 Creedmoor · 120 gr Ballistic Tip only.

Nosler’s 6.5 Creedmoor Trophy Grade lineup includes:

  • Nosler Trophy Grade 6.5 CM 120 gr Ballistic Tip — this page
  • Nosler Trophy Grade 6.5 CM 140 gr AccuBond — bonded elk load
  • Nosler Trophy Grade 6.5 CM 142 gr AccuBond LR — long-range bonded
  • Nosler E-Tip 6.5 CM 120 gr — lead-free option

Best Uses

Good fit:

  • Whitetail deer, mule deer, and pronghorn antelope at 100–350 yards — this is exactly what the Ballistic Tip was designed for; rapid expansion on thin-skinned game at hunting velocities
  • Feral hogs where aggressive expansion and high velocity produce decisive terminal effects
  • Open-country deer hunting where the flat trajectory at 2,900 fps minimizes range estimation errors
  • Hunters who specifically want Nosler Ballistic Tip factory loads with Nosler’s own premium brass

Not the right tool for:

  • Elk — the thin Ballistic Tip jacket can fail to penetrate deeply enough on elk shoulder bone; Nosler’s own AccuBond is the correct choice for elk
  • Lead-free requirements — lead-core; see Nosler E-Tip 120 gr for California hunting
  • Long-range hunting beyond 400 yards where the BC of 0.458 produces steeper drop vs higher-BC alternatives
  • Self-defense — not designed or rated for it

Reliability Notes

No structured submissions yet.

General notes:

  • The Nosler Ballistic Tip has a decades-long track record on North American deer — it is one of the most field-tested deer hunting bullets ever made; factory loads by Nosler apply the same bullet Nosler sells to reloaders
  • Nosler Trophy Grade brass is among the most highly regarded reloadable brass in North America — consistent dimensions, reliable primer pockets, and excellent case life; this is a meaningful differentiator vs some competitors
  • The Ballistic Tip’s reputation for occasional explosive expansion at high velocity (inside 100 yards) is well-documented — some hunters report significant meat/hide damage on close shots; for shots inside 75 yards, a heavier, more controlled bullet may be preferred
  • At $2.65/round this is mid-to-premium pricing for a non-bonded polymer-tipped hunting load; comparable loads from Fiocchi and Ammo Inc use the same Hornady SST bullet class at lower prices

Competitors

LoadWeightBulletBC (G1)Adv. VelocityPrice / boxNotes
Fiocchi Hyperformance 6.5 CM 129 gr SST129 grHornady SST~0.5272,820 fps~$35–38Higher BC, similar terminal category, $14/box less
Hornady Superformance 6.5 CM 120 gr CX120 grCX copper~0.4582,910 fps~$51–55Same BC, lead-free, comparable price
Barnes Vor-Tx 6.5 CM 100 gr TTSX100 grBarnes TTSX~0.3973,300 fps~$50–54Faster, lead-free, lower BC — pronghorn specialist
Nosler E-Tip 6.5 CM 120 gr120 grNosler E-Tip~0.4582,900 fps~$58–64Same weight/velocity, lead-free, $8–12/box more
Federal Power-Shok 6.5 CM 140 gr SP140 grSoft Point~0.4802,750 fps~$28–35Heavier, cheaper, no tip, proven deer bullet

Price Reality

  • Typical retail range: $51–55 per box of 20 (~$2.55–2.75/round)
  • vs. Fiocchi Hyperformance SST: Fiocchi runs $13–17/box less for a higher-BC polymer-tipped load (SST BC ~0.527 vs BT ~0.458) — the Ballistic Tip’s Nosler brand and brass justify some premium, but the BC gap is real
  • vs. Nosler E-Tip (same weight, lead-free): E-Tip runs $8–12/box more for lead-free compliance — the Ballistic Tip is the value option within Nosler’s own 120 gr lineup
  • Nosler brass premium: Nosler Trophy Grade brass is legitimately valued by reloaders — if you reload, the premium over Fiocchi or Ammo Inc is partially recovered in brass value
  • Fair price benchmark: under $54/box is reasonable for Nosler Trophy Grade; above $58/box loses ground against the better-BC Fiocchi SST

Where to Buy

Affiliate links. These do not influence ratings, data, or any editorial content on this page.

  • MidwayUSA
  • Brownells
  • Palmetto State Armory
  • Natchez Shooters Supplies

FAQ

Is the Nosler Ballistic Tip appropriate for elk?

Nosler themselves do not recommend the Ballistic Tip for elk — their AccuBond is their elk bullet. The thin jacket designed for rapid expansion on deer can fail to penetrate deeply enough through the heavy bone and dense muscle of elk, particularly on shoulder shots. Multiple field reports document Ballistic Tips “blowing up” on elk shoulder without adequate penetration. For elk, use Nosler AccuBond, Federal Terminal Ascent, or a similar controlled-expansion or bonded bullet. For deer and antelope, the Ballistic Tip is excellent.

Nosler Ballistic Tip vs Hornady SST — which is better for deer?

Both are polymer-tipped hunting bullets designed for deer-sized game. The key differences: SST uses Hornady’s InterLock ring for better core retention, has a higher BC (~0.527 vs ~0.458 for 120/129 gr comparison), and is available at lower prices through Fiocchi. The Ballistic Tip’s thin jacket produces slightly more explosive expansion — more violent energy release, potentially more tissue disruption at the cost of less penetration depth. For deer at 100–300 yards, both are effective; the SST at a higher BC and lower price through Fiocchi is the value choice.

What does the orange tip on Nosler Ballistic Tip mean?

Nosler color-codes the polymer tips of their Ballistic Tip bullets by caliber — orange indicates 6.5mm / .264 caliber. Other calibers use different colors (yellow for .243, white for .308, etc.). This is purely an identification system, not an indication of different construction or performance. All Ballistic Tip bullets in the same caliber are identical regardless of which box they come from.

Is Nosler Trophy Grade brass worth the premium?

Yes, if you reload. Nosler Trophy Grade brass is manufactured to tighter dimensional tolerances than most factory brass — consistent case walls, reliable primer pocket dimensions, and excellent case life. Reloaders who fire and reload cases multiple times get meaningful value from Nosler’s brass quality. If you do not reload and will discard fired cases, the brass premium is not recovered and a less expensive load becomes more attractive.


Submit Your Data · Real-World Results

Manufacturer velocity figures are measured under controlled lab conditions — barrel length, temperature, and lot number all affect real-world performance. The data below comes from community submissions tied to specific test conditions and reviewed before publishing.

Once this page reaches 3 approved submissions, aggregate velocity and confidence level will appear here automatically.

UPC #FirearmBarrel (in)Avg Velocity (fps)ShotsTemp (°F)ChronographLotNotes
054041420501No data yet

Shot this load? Share your results — firearm type, barrel length, average velocity, shots fired, temperature. No account required.

All submissions are manually reviewed before appearing on this page.

You need to first.

Results vary by firearm, barrel condition, ammunition lot, and environmental factors. Submitted data is for reference only. AmmoReports does not guarantee accuracy of user-submitted results.


Last updated: April 2026 · Data confidence: Low (0 submissions) · Page will update automatically as submissions are approved.

Ammo Reports
Logo