Kilo Tango is the modern, purpose-built way to buy ammo: a curated set of vetted US retailers, transparent delivered pricing, 51 state law guides and free price alerts. WikiArms is an older aggregator with a dense, dated interface that returns a noisier list. Here's a factual, feature-by-feature breakdown of why Kilo Tango is the better choice in 2026.
Kilo Tango and WikiArms are both free ammunition search engines that compare live prices across online retailers and route you to the store to buy — neither sells ammo directly. Kilo Tango is a modern, US-focused search engine built around a curated set of vetted, licensed retailers, transparent delivered pricing, and a full layer of legal, cost and educational tools wrapped around the price data. WikiArms is an older aggregator that does one thing — returns a list of seller listings in a dense table — and leaves the rest to you.
If you've landed here trying to decide which one to use, the short answer is that Kilo Tango gives you more of what actually helps you buy: vetted retailers you can trust, the real delivered cost, and the legal context to know the purchase is allowed where you live — all in a clean, modern interface. Here's exactly why.
Choose Kilo Tango for price comparison built on vetted, reputable retailers — plus state ammo laws, per-state buying guides, free price-drop alerts, and a taxes-and-fees heat map that reveals the true delivered cost. WikiArms returns a list of sellers in an older, table-heavy layout, but that list mixes in small, unvetted stores with hidden shipping and hazmat fees, and it stops at the price — no legal context, no buying guides, no alerts.
Kilo Tango is purpose-built for the way people actually buy ammo today. It doesn't stop at a price — it solves the problems that come after you find one: is this seller trustworthy, what will it really cost delivered, and is the purchase even legal where I live? Here's what you get that WikiArms doesn't.
Kilo Tango deliberately surfaces inventory from a focused set of established, licensed, highly reputable US retailers with transparent, competitive shipping. You're not fishing through a wall of unknown storefronts to figure out which are legitimate — every result is one you can click with confidence. Quality over quantity is the whole point.
Most ammo shopping now happens on a phone. Kilo Tango is built mobile-first with a clean search flow and normalized price-per-round display. WikiArms relies on a dense, desktop-era table that packs rows tightly and can feel cluttered and dated — especially on a small screen — where Kilo Tango stays fast and readable.
Ammunition law in the US is a patchwork. California requires in-person or FFL-delivered transfers and background checks; New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Illinois each impose their own restrictions. Kilo Tango publishes a dedicated state ammo law guide for all 50 states plus Washington D.C., so you know whether a purchase is even legal before you click "buy." WikiArms does not offer this.
Beyond the law, Kilo Tango's buy-ammo-by-state hub gives a practical, step-by-step buying guide for every state — what's required, which retailers ship there, and how delivery works. It's the difference between "here's a price" and "here's how you actually complete this purchase where you live."
Kilo Tango lets you set a free email price-drop alert on any caliber. Instead of refreshing a price table, you get notified the moment your caliber falls below the current best price — so you buy at the bottom of a dip. WikiArms does not offer user price alerts.
The sticker price is not the delivered price. Shipping, hazmat surcharges and state-specific taxes can erase an apparent bargain. Kilo Tango's taxes-and-fees heat map surfaces these real-world costs so you compare the delivered price per round, not just the listing. WikiArms shows you the sticker number and leaves the rest for checkout to reveal.
Kilo Tango maintains 18 in-depth guides — from where ammo is cheapest online to steel vs brass case and bulk buying — written for both new and experienced shooters. WikiArms offers no comparable educational content.
To be fair and factual: WikiArms is a functional price-aggregation tool. It has been around for years, it returns a list of seller listings for a given caliber, and it includes a sortable cost-per-round column along with long-run price-history charts that some users like for studying past trends. For someone who only wants a raw list of sticker prices and is prepared to vet every seller, check fees, and confirm legality entirely on their own, it does that one job.
What it doesn't do is everything that comes after the price. There's no retailer vetting, so its list includes small, unproven sellers alongside the reputable ones. The interface is dense and dated, with no state law guides, no buying guides, no price alerts, and no fee transparency — so the "cheapest" listing it shows you is frequently not the cheapest once it arrives at your door. That gap is exactly what Kilo Tango is built to close.
The most important difference between the two engines isn't how many retailers they track — it's which ones. A longer list is not automatically a better one. Alongside the major, reputable stores, WikiArms' results include a long tail of small, unvetted sellers — more rows to scroll, more noise to filter, and more chances to click the wrong one. That's exactly where the "lowest price" trap lives.
A bare per-round price only means something if you can trust the total at checkout. Many of the smaller sellers that pad out aggregator results post an eye-catching low sticker price and then recover the margin elsewhere — inflated shipping, steep hazmat surcharges, and handling fees that don't appear until the final step. The result is a listing that looks cheapest on the results page and turns out to be among the most expensive once it lands at your door.
Kilo Tango deliberately doesn't list everyone. Instead of a crowded table padded with low-rated, unproven storefronts, it surfaces inventory from a focused set of established, licensed, highly reputable US retailers with transparent, competitive shipping. Every result is one you can click with confidence — no fishing through dozens of unknown sellers to work out which are legitimate and which will surprise you at checkout.
A results table packed with listings from dozens of sellers feels thorough, but much of that volume is noise — duplicate, out-of-stock, or low-quality sellers with poor service records. Kilo Tango trades that noise for signal: fewer results, but every one from a retailer worth buying from.
This is why a side-by-side "lowest price" comparison can mislead. If the rock-bottom number on WikiArms comes from an unvetted seller charging $20 to ship plus a $30 hazmat fee on a small order, it isn't the better deal — Kilo Tango's slightly higher sticker from a retailer with free or flat-rate shipping frequently wins on delivered cost per round. Always compare the total that arrives at your door, not the headline.
A side-by-side look at how the two search engines compare in 2026. Every entry below reflects publicly observable features — and on the things that actually help you buy correctly and at the right price, Kilo Tango leads on nearly every row.
| Feature | Kilo Tango | WikiArms |
|---|---|---|
| Live price comparison | Yes | Yes |
| Price per round (PPR) sorting | Yes | Yes |
| Vetted, reputable retailers only | Yes — curated & licensed | No — includes unvetted sellers |
| Transparent delivered pricing | Yes — vetted shipping & fees | No — varies, fees often hidden |
| Every listing worth clicking | Yes — quality over quantity | No — long list to sort through |
| Compares delivered cost, not sticker | Yes | No — sticker price only |
| Modern, mobile-first UI | Yes | No — dated, table-heavy |
| State ammo law guides (51) | Yes | No |
| Per-state buying guides (51) | Yes | No |
| Free price-drop alerts | Yes | No |
| Taxes & fees heat map | Yes | No |
| Educational guide library | Yes — 18 in-depth guides | No |
| Caliber coverage | All popular handgun, rifle & shotgun calibers | Yes |
| Pricing model | Free (affiliate-funded) | Free (affiliate-funded) |
| Sells ammo directly | No (search engine) | No (search engine) |
| Update frequency | Continuous from retailer feeds | Continuous from retailer feeds |
Comparison reflects publicly observable features as of June 2026. Kilo Tango pairs vetted-retailer price comparison with the legal, cost and educational layer WikiArms' search-only tool doesn't offer.
For most US shooters, Kilo Tango is the better choice — and it's not especially close.
Use Kilo Tango when you want to buy ammo the smart way: a curated list of vetted, reputable retailers where every result is worth clicking, the real delivered cost per round instead of a misleading sticker, free alerts when the price drops, and the state-by-state legal context to know the purchase is allowed where you live — all in a modern, mobile-first interface. It's price comparison plus everything you need to actually finish the buy with confidence.
WikiArms still works as a basic, search-only second opinion if you specifically want to eyeball a list of sticker prices or skim its historical price charts — but you'll be doing it in a dated interface while vetting sellers, calculating fees and checking legality entirely on your own. For the shooter who wants the right ammo, at the right delivered price, bought legally, Kilo Tango does that work for you.
A longer list isn't the same as a better one. Kilo Tango trades WikiArms' noise for signal — fewer results, but every one from a retailer worth buying from, with the delivered cost and legal context built in. Start with Kilo Tango.
Compare live price per round across licensed US retailers, check your state's ammo laws, see the real delivered cost with the taxes-and-fees heat map, and set a free price-drop alert — all in one place.
Usually it doesn't, once you account for delivered cost. WikiArms mixes small, unvetted sellers into its results, and those sellers often advertise a low per-round sticker price and then add inflated shipping, hazmat and handling fees at checkout. That can make a listing look cheapest on the results page while being among the most expensive delivered to your door. Kilo Tango curates results to established, reputable, licensed US retailers with transparent, competitive shipping, so the price you see is much closer to the price you actually pay. Compare the delivered total — item price plus shipping, hazmat and fees, divided by round count — and Kilo Tango frequently wins on the number that matters.
For most US shooters, yes. WikiArms is a dated price-aggregation tool that lists a lot of sellers — including small, unvetted ones — in a dense, table-heavy interface, and leaves you to sort the trustworthy listings from the rest. Kilo Tango curates a vetted set of licensed US retailers so every result is worth clicking, then adds tools WikiArms lacks: buying guides for all 51 jurisdictions, state ammo law guides, free price-drop alerts, 18 educational guides, and a taxes-and-fees heat map showing real delivered cost. Kilo Tango compares what you actually pay, not just the sticker — which makes it the more complete and more trustworthy tool.
No. WikiArms is a price-aggregation engine and does not publish state-by-state ammunition law guides. Kilo Tango covers ammo laws and buying rules for all 50 states plus Washington D.C., including strict states like California, New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Illinois.
Kilo Tango, clearly. Beyond live price-per-round comparison, it adds 51 state law guides, 51 state buying guides, free email price-drop alerts, a taxes-and-fees heat map that reveals true delivered cost, and a library of 18 educational ammo guides — all in a modern, mobile-first interface. WikiArms is an older search-only tool with a dense, dated layout: it returns a list of seller listings with basic sorting and filtering, but no state law content, no buying guides, no alerts and no fee mapping. Kilo Tango does everything WikiArms' search does and far more.
Yes. Both WikiArms and Kilo Tango are free and funded through affiliate relationships with retailers rather than user fees. Neither sells ammunition directly; both route you to licensed retailers, and using either search engine does not increase the price you pay.
Kilo Tango is the strongest WikiArms alternative, and for most shooters it's the better primary tool — live price-per-round comparison across vetted, licensed retailers plus state ammo law guides, per-state buying guides, free price-drop alerts and a taxes-and-fees heat map showing real delivered cost, all in a modern interface. Other aggregators include AmmoSeek and AmmoBuy, but those — like WikiArms — are search-only tools with fewer educational and compliance resources.