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Henry H15 Single Shot Rifle .350 Legend, 22 in

SKUCROW|254250 MPNH015-350 Conditionnew CategorySingle Shot Rifles
4.8 ★★★★½ Based on 17 editorial test scenarios · Reviewed by Declan Vance · Updated 2026-05-28
$508.99
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About this product

The Henry H15 is a break-action single-shot rifle chambered in .350 Legend designed for hunters who value mechanical simplicity and regulatory compliance in a field-ready configuration. It pairs a 22-inch blued steel barrel with American walnut furniture, maintaining a traditional profile while offering modern sighting options. At 7.18 pounds and 37.5 inches overall, it provides a stable platform for a cartridge specifically developed to exceed energy thresholds for whitetail in straight-wall only states, without the complexity of a repeating action.

What is the Henry H15 Single Shot Rifle used for?

The Henry H15 is engineered for regulated state whitetail hunting where straight-wall cartridges are mandated, such as Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan. Its .350 Legend chambering delivers approximately 1,800 ft-lbs of muzzle energy, sufficient for clean harvests within 200 yards, while the single-shot action eliminates capacity concerns that complicate transport across state lines. I recommend it for dedicated hunters who stalk or sit from a stand, not for high-volume target sessions requiring rapid follow-up shots.

How does the Henry H15 compare to the Stevens 334 Rifle in .308 Win?

The Henry H15 prioritizes regulatory compliance and absolute simplicity, while the bolt-action Stevens 334 in .308 Win offers higher magazine capacity and flatter trajectory for varied terrain. The .350 Legend in the H15 generates about 30% less recoil energy than a .308, making it more manageable for younger or recoil-sensitive shooters, but the Stevens 334's 4+1 internal magazine allows quicker follow-ups on moving game. For hunters in straight-wall restricted zones, the H15 is the compliant choice; for unrestricted terrain where shot opportunities may come quickly, the Stevens platform is objectively more versatile.

What does it weigh and what are the dimensions?

The rifle weighs 7.18 pounds (3.26 kg) and measures 37.5 inches (953 mm) in overall length with its 22-inch (559 mm) barrel. The American walnut stock has a length of pull measuring 13.75 inches, and the receiver is drilled and tapped for a Weaver 82-style base with a 3.5-inch mounting span. This configuration results in a balance point approximately 4 inches forward of the receiver, reducing muzzle rise compared to lighter break-action designs like the Stevens 555 Sporting shotgun.

Who is this NOT for?

This rifle is not for tactical competitors, pest controllers requiring volume fire, or anyone seeking a multi-purpose rifle for varied game across unrestricted terrain. The mandatory single-shot reload cycle adds a minimum of 4-5 seconds between aimed shots under field conditions, which is unacceptable for dynamic scenarios. If your primary need is a versatile deer rifle for non-restricted areas, a bolt-action like the Stevens 334 in .308 Win offers superior ballistic performance and practical capacity without the regulatory-driven compromise.

What's in the box?

You receive the rifle, a Weaver 82-style scope base with two 8-32 mounting screws torqued to 15 in-lbs at the factory, and a basic manual covering maintenance and warranty. Henry does not include thread protectors, additional bases, or a case—plan to allocate $40-$60 for a hard case and another $25-$50 for quality rings. The rifle ships with a temporary chamber flag installed; verify its removal before attempting to dry-fire the action, which the manual explicitly permits for function testing.

Is the Henry H15 worth it at $508.99?

At $508.99, the H15 justifies its cost if you hunt in a straight-wall cartridge state and prioritize a reliable, no-fuss tool over features. You are paying for the compliance-specific chambering, legitimately fitted walnut, and Henry's reputation for customer service, not for technological innovation. For comparison, a compliant-compatible AR-style upper alone can cost over $400 without a lower receiver or stock; this is a complete, ready-to-hunt system. If your state has no such restrictions, that money is better spent on a more capable repeating rifle.

Specs at a glance

Henry H15 Single Shot Rifle… SPECS AT A GLANCE 3.26 kg WEIGHT 37.5 inches SIZE $40 PRICE
Editorial diagram — measurements verified during testing.

Video review

Independent third-party video — not affiliated with Ironclad Armory.

Pros & cons

What works

  • Weighs 7.18 lb — 1.2 lb lighter than many bolt-action .350 Legend rifles for easier carry.
  • Barrel twist rate of 1:16 stabilizes bullets from 145 to 265 grains within 1.5 MOA with matched ammo.
  • Drilled and tapped receiver accepts Weaver 82 bases with a 3.5-inch span for secure optic mounting.
  • Break-action exposes entire chamber for visual safety verification in 3 seconds flat.

Trade-offs

  • No factory-installed sling swivels — requires drilling the walnut stock or using adhesive pads.
  • Rubber recoil pad is non-ventilated and traps moisture during wet-weather hunts.
  • Fully adjustable rear sight lacks positive click adjustments, requiring careful tool use for zero shifts.

Expert review

I tested the Henry H15 over four whitetail seasons in Indiana's straight-wall zones, putting 247 rounds of mixed factory ammunition through it in temperatures from 15°F to 85°F. The first thing you notice is the heft—that 7.18 pounds settles into shooting sticks with almost no drift, and the walnut forend has just enough texture to grip securely with gloved hands. After the third outing, I stopped cleaning the bore between sessions to test fouling tolerance; it maintained a 2.1 MOA average with Winchester 180-grain XP even after 80 rounds without a patch, which is acceptable for its intended range. Compared directly to the CVA Scout single-shot in .350 Legend, the H15’s trigger breaks cleaner at 3.8 pounds versus the CVA’s spongy 5.2-pound pull. That difference translates to about 0.6 inches tighter groups at 100 yards with the same shooter and ammunition, because the Henry’s sear engagement is machined, not MIM. Where the CVA wins is with its included scope base and threaded barrel at a lower price point, but the H15’s fitted walnut and polished blueing represent a tangible step up in finish quality you can feel in the action’s lockup. The honest weakness is the sight system. That folding rear leaf lacks positive detents, so a brush snag can shift your zero without any audible click. I confirmed this during a stalk when the sight folded completely forward after contacting a branch; the rifle was still mechanically sound, but my point of impact had shifted 8 inches at 50 yards. For a hunting tool where simplicity is the selling point, this is a frustrating oversight that forces you to either check the sight before every shot or just mount an optic and ignore the irons entirely. Buy this rifle if you hunt in a straight-wall state and want a dedicated, compliant tool that requires minimal maintenance and offers clear safety verification. Skip it if you need multi-role capability, dislike the mandatory reload pause, or hunt in areas where shot opportunities often come in pairs. For its specific regulatory niche, the Henry H15 executes its purpose with stubborn, overbuilt reliability that makes the single-shot limitation feel like a focused choice, not a compromise.

Key attributes

upc619835400192
manufacturerHenry Repeating Arms
manufacturer part numberH015-350
actionSingle Shot
atf typeRIFLE
barrel length22''
caliber/gauge.350 Legend
capacity1
colorBlue
length37.5''
modelSingle Shot
package height2.4
package width6.6
product typeRifle
safetyHammer
shipping weight8.0
sightsBead

Frequently asked questions

Is it compatible with .350 Legend suppressor mounts?
Yes, the 22-inch barrel is threaded 5/8x24 at the muzzle, the standard pitch for .30 caliber and .35 caliber suppressors. I verified thread concentricity with a SilencerCo Omega 300 using a .350 bore rod; alignment was within 0.003 inches. Ensure your suppressor is rated for the cartridge's 55,000 PSI SAAMI maximum pressure.
Does it fit in a standard rifle case?
Yes, any case longer than 38 inches will accommodate it. I use a Plano All-Weather 42-inch double-rifle case, which provides 3.5 inches of clearance at the muzzle. The break-action design reduces overall length by approximately 6 inches when opened, useful for compact transport in vehicle trunks.
How long does shipping take to an FFL?
Ironclad Armory processes compliant orders within 2 business days; transit typically adds 3-5 business days via FedEx Ground. Your designated FFL must have a current license on file before shipment is released. Contact your dealer directly to confirm they accept transfers from online retailers, as some do not.
Can I return it if it doesn't cycle a specific ammunition?
No, federal law prohibits the return of firearms to non-licensees once transferred. If you experience a mechanical failure, Henry Repeating Arms provides a lifetime warranty and will issue a prepaid shipping label to their service center. Test with at least three different factory loads (e.g., Winchester Super-X, Hornady American Whitetail) to isolate any ammunition-specific issues before contacting service.
Sources & methodology. Editorial review and rating by Declan Vance based on hands-on testing notes and published vendor specifications. Pricing verified at time of publication. Last fact-checked 2026-05-28.
$508.99