CONCEALMENT 16 Honor Guard 9 | We Put this Pocket Pistol Through the Paces Tamara Keel Join the Conversation At RECOIL, we review every product fairly and without bias. Making a purchase through one of our links may earn us a small commission, and helps support independent gun reviews. Learn More Find out more about how we test products. It feels like the firearms industry, or at least the handgun-manufacturing portion of it, is trying to drive me to using a cut-and-paste script to open handgun reviews of late. I’m running out of different ways to phrase the following sentences: “The tidal wave success of Shall Issue and Constitutional Carry laws sweeping the nation over the previous decades has created an unprecedented demand for small, concealable pistols. Perhaps no market segment is hotter right how than [pocket .380s/micro compact nines] and [$_MANUFACTURER] is the latest to jump into this popular niche with their new [$_PISTOL].” It’s an undeniable market fact, though. It’s a rare handgun maker these days that hasn’t entered the subcompact 9mm wars, from the usual players at Smith & Wesson, Sig Sauer, and Glock, to less traditional pistol contestants like Mossberg, to startups like the subject of this article. Honor Defense hit the market a few years ago with a lone offering, the Honor Guard 9, in a limited number of configurations. From the beginning, the company heavily advertised two facts about the pistol: First, it was 100-percent USA-made, all the way down to the component level. Nothing was outsourced from a foreign country. Second, the pistols were assembled by U.S. military veterans. If you bought an Honor Guard 9, you were helping keep a vet employed. The red, white, and blue patriotic shield logo of the company wasn’t just hype. If you’ve taken apart any pistol produced in the last decade, field stripping the Honor 9 is a snap. All About Timing Timing of the pistol’s launch was somewhat jinxed, as it hit the market when the Tiny Nine segment was still roiling in the wake of the successful S&W Shield and Glock 43 launches. Honor Defense persevered, continuing to chug along, only to face another hurdle when the result of massive overproduction in the run up to the 2016 presidential election left wholesalers blowing out overstock of the aforementioned Shield at fire sale prices. To complete the “Honor Defense Just Can’t Catch A Break” trifecta, the Great P320 Drop Test Brouhaha of Summer 2017 caused the internet to run out and start hitting striker-fired pistols with hammers and flinging them onto concrete. The original version of the Honor Guard 9, which had passed the company’s drop-testing, failed the internet’s. Honor Defense showed up at SHOT 2018 claiming they’d engineered a fix to the problem, offering a voluntary upgrade program similar to Sigs to bring already-sold guns up to the new spec. That SHOT Show, they also showed off an assortment of new frame colors, slide finishes, and a longer 4-inch barreled (well, 3.8-inch, actually) variant of the gun. Build Your Own With all these different options available for the pistol, the Honor Defense website now features a “build-your-own” section, where you can select barrel length, frame configuration and color, slide finish, sights … basically every catalog feature they have can be mixed and matched. I was hoping to try this feature for the review, but the deadline was tight, and I didn’t want to chance not getting the gun in time to do a reasonable amount of testing. I decided to simulate spec’ing out my ideal Honor Guard 9 by requesting a long, bare stainless slide on a black frame with night sights. For the rest of this article, subscribe here: Concealment 16 Why you can trust RECOIL Since our founding in 2012, RECOIL remains the premier firearms lifestyle publication for the modern shooting enthusiast. We deliver cutting-edge coverage of guns, gear, accessories and technology. We go beyond basic reviews, providing no B.S. buyer’s guides, hands-on testing and expert analysis on everything from firearms and survival equipment to watches and vehicles. Our reviewers are the backbone of our operation and come from diverse shooting backgrounds: Former law enforcement, military veterans, competitive shooters, seasoned hunters and plain old firearms enthusiasts. Furthermore, we’re not just gun experts, but dedicated journalists who adhere to the strictest standards of our profession. At RECOIL, editorial independence is the foundation of everything we publish and the cornerstone of reader trust. Our editors, writers and content creators make all editorial decisions independently, free from outside influence. That boils down to: advertisers don’t dictate our coverage, the outcomes of our reviews or what we recommend in our buyer’s guides. First and always, our commitment is to our audience—ensuring every review and article is accurate, unbiased, and driven by real-world experience. Whether you’re selecting your next firearm, upgrading your gear, or exploring the latest innovations in the shooting world, RECOIL provides the trusted insights you need to make informed decisions. Learn more about our Editorial Standards and how we review products. NEXT STEP: Download Your Free Target Pack from RECOILFor years, RECOIL magazine has treated its readers to a full-size (sometimes full color!) shooting target tucked into each big issue. Now we've compiled over 50 of our most popular targets into this one digital PDF download. From handgun drills to AR-15 practice, these 50+ targets have you covered. Print off as many as you like (ammo not included). Get your pack of 50 Print-at-Home targets when you subscribe to the RECOIL email newsletter. We'll send you weekly updates on guns, gear, industry news, and special offers from leading manufacturers - your guide to the firearms lifestyle.You want this. Trust Us.