Burris XTR II vs XTR III vs XTR Pro vs XTR PS: The Tactical Line, Explained

The Short Version

Burris's XTR tactical line has four generations in circulation: the discontinued XTR II (six models from 1-8x24 to 8-40x50, now a used-market value), the XTR III (3.3-18x50 and 5.5-30x56, front focal plane on a 34mm tube), the competition-focused XTR Pro (5.5-30x56, Race Dial quick-detach turret, designed and manufactured in Greeley, Colorado, $2,760 MSRP), and the 2025 XTR PS 'Precision Shooter' (3.3-18x50 at $2,400 and 5.5-30x56 at $2,640), which adds a programmable clickless elevation knob, an in-scope heads-up display, and BurrisConnect app integration.

XTR — “Xtreme Tactical Riflescope” — is Burris’s serious-dialing line: front-focal options, 34mm tubes, exposed target turrets. Four generations are floating around retail and used listings right now, with four different value propositions. Here’s the map.

The Line at a Glance

XTR II XTR III XTR Pro XTR PS
Status (2026) Discontinued Current Current Current — newest (2025)
Models 1-8x24 to 8-40x50 (six) 3.3-18x50, 5.5-30x56 5.5-30x56 3.3-18x50, 5.5-30x56
Focal plane FFP options FFP FFP FFP
Tube 34mm 34mm 34mm 34mm
Signature feature Range of models SCR 2 reticle, red/green illumination Race Dial QD turret, Greeley-built PĒK clickless programmable knob + HUD
Reticles SCR, G2B, Horus SCR 2 SCR 2, SCR 2 1/4 MIL, Horus TREMOR5 SCR 2 illuminated
MSRP — (used market) mid-tier $2,760 $2,400 / $2,640

XTR II: The Discontinued Workhorse

The XTR II was Burris’s tactical bread and butter for years, and its breadth was the point: everything from a 1-8x24 LPVO to an 8-40x50 benchrest-class magnification, with SCR, G2B Mil-Dot, and Horus reticle options. It’s out of production now — Burris keeps the pages on its legacy site — which makes the used market the whole story. Because the Forever Warranty transfers to second owners, a clean used XTR II is one of the safer used-scope buys there is; the usual checks (turret tracking, glass clarity, zero stop function) still apply.

XTR III: The Modern Core

The III consolidated the line into two do-everything precision formats — 3.3-18x50 and 5.5-30x56 — on 34mm tubes with the SCR 2 “Christmas tree” reticle and, on illuminated models, selectable red or green illumination at 11 levels. If you’re buying your first serious dialing scope and the flagships are out of budget, this is the Burris to shortlist.

XTR Pro: The Competition Build

The Pro takes the 5.5-30x56 format and adds what PRS and NRL shooters kept asking for: the Race Dial, a quick-detach elevation system that lets you swap pre-configured dials between stages, a tool-less zero click stop knob, and a Horus TREMOR5 reticle option alongside the SCR 2s. Burris is explicit that the Pro is designed and manufactured in Greeley, Colorado — it’s the flag-carrier for the US-made side of the catalog. Current MSRP is $2,760.

XTR PS: The Electronic One

The 2025 XTR PS (“Precision Shooter”) is where the XTR line and Burris’s Eliminator rangefinding-scope DNA converge. The centerpiece is the PĒK — a programmable, clickless elevation knob with a digital position sensor reading to 1/30 mil and more than 19 mils in a single rotation. Instead of counting clicks against a dope card, you watch the in-scope heads-up display: eight configurable data zones including a dial-to-distance readout, fed by ballistic profiles built in the BurrisConnect app (each with more than 20 density-altitude curves).

Under the electronics it’s still a proper scope: 34mm one-piece 6061-T6 chassis, ED glass, SCR 2 illuminated FFP reticle, zero click stop, side parallax. MSRP is $2,400 (3.3-18x50) or $2,640 (5.5-30x56) — notably, at or below the all-mechanical Pro.

Which One?

As with everything on this site, these are research-verified comparisons of the platforms — when we get XTR glass on the bench and behind the trigger, this page gets measured tracking results. Here’s how we test.

Where That Leaves You

Burris XTR III 3.3-18x50 (SCR 2 Mil)

The sweet spot for most shooters getting serious about dialing: true FFP glass, SCR 2 reticle, and 34mm adjustment range without flagship pricing.

Check Price on Amazon →

Burris XTR Pro 5.5-30x56

The PRS/NRL build — Race Dial quick-detach turret, tool-less zero stop, TREMOR5 option, built in Greeley. $2,760 MSRP through Burris dealers and major optics retailers.

A used XTR II

The budget path into 34mm tactical glass. The 5-25x50 and 4-20x50 were the workhorses; the Forever Warranty transfers, but confirm turret feel and glass condition — these have been out of production for years.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Burris XTR II discontinued?

Yes. The XTR II line — which ran from a 1-8x24 LPVO to an 8-40x50 — is no longer in production and lives on Burris's legacy pages. That makes clean used examples one of the better values in 34mm tactical glass, still covered by the transferable Burris Forever Warranty.

What's the difference between the XTR III and XTR Pro?

Both are front-focal-plane 34mm scopes with SCR 2 reticle options and dual red/green illumination. The Pro is the competition build: the quick-detach Race Dial elevation system, a tool-less zero click stop knob, a Horus TREMOR5 reticle option, and Burris states it is designed and manufactured in Greeley, Colorado. The III delivers most of the optical performance for meaningfully less money.

What is the Burris XTR PS?

The 2025 flagship — 'PS' for Precision Shooter. Its defining feature is the PĒK programmable elevation knob: a clickless turret with a digital position sensor reading to 1/30 mil, feeding an in-scope heads-up display with a dial-to-distance readout. Ballistic profiles upload from the BurrisConnect app. MSRP is $2,400 for the 3.3-18x50 and $2,640 for the 5.5-30x56.

Are XTR scopes made in the USA?

The XTR Pro is — Burris states it is designed and manufactured in Greeley, Colorado, and industry reporting says the same of XTR III production. Earlier XTR II scopes were built overseas like most of the mid-price market. Design and engineering for the whole line has always been in Greeley.