5 Drills to Improve Pistol Accuracy
Pistol accuracy doesn’t come from shooting more rounds — it comes from shooting with purpose. Most accuracy problems aren’t mysterious; they’re the result of a few correctable fundamentals being applied inconsistently.
These five drills are instructor-approved methods to tighten groups, improve control, and build repeatable accuracy without gimmicks.
Why Accuracy Comes From Fundamentals
Before drills matter, fundamentals matter more.
Accuracy depends on:
Consistent grip
Controlled trigger press
Stable sight alignment
Mental focus during execution
The drills below isolate these elements so errors become obvious and fixable.
Drill #1: Slow Trigger Press Drill
Purpose: Improve trigger control and eliminate anticipation.
How to perform:
Start at a close distance
Align sights on target
Press the trigger slowly until the shot breaks
Focus on keeping sights perfectly still
What it fixes:
Exerting to much pressure on the trigger pull, pushing shots, inconsistent breaks.
Drill #2: Wall Drill (Dry Fire)
Purpose: Identify movement during trigger press.
How to perform:
Unload and verify the firearm is safe
Stand close to a blank wall
Aim at a small reference point
Press the trigger while watching the sights
What it fixes:
Grip tension, sight movement, trigger slap.
Drill #3: Cadence Drill
Purpose: Balance speed and accuracy.
How to perform:
Fire controlled pairs at a consistent rhythm
Maintain sight alignment between shots
Increase cadence only when accuracy holds
What it fixes:
Rushing shots, loss of control under speed.
Drill #4: Dot Torture Drill
Purpose: Test multiple fundamentals simultaneously.
How to perform:
Use a dot torture target
Follow the prescribed sequence
Track misses honestly
What it fixes:
Grip consistency, trigger discipline, focus under repetition.
Drill #5: Reset Drill
Purpose: Improve trigger reset control.
How to perform:
Fire a shot
Hold trigger to the rear
Reset slowly until the click
Fire the next shot
What it fixes:
Over-travel, inconsistent trigger timing.
How Often You Should Run These Drills
Quality matters more than volume.
A productive approach:
Dry fire several times per week
Live fire with a clear goal
Track progress honestly
Short, focused sessions outperform long, unfocused ones.
When Drills Stop Working
If drills stop producing results, it’s usually because:
Technique isn’t being corrected
Errors aren’t being identified
Feedback is missing
This is where professional instruction accelerates improvement.
Final Thoughts
Accuracy improves fastest when practice is intentional.
These drills isolate the fundamentals that matter most and reveal errors quickly. Run them consistently, track results, and resist the urge to rush progress. Precision follows discipline.