Race guns with iron sights and with optics

Iron Sights vs Red Dot — What’s Better for Beginners?

If you’ve just bought your first pistol — or are planning to — you’ve probably asked yourself:
Should I start with iron sights or invest in a red dot sight? Which one is faster, more accurate, and better for learning proper shooting technique?

In this video breakdown, we hear directly from POSIO — IPSC Junior World Champion — who shares his experience comparing iron sights vs red dots in real shooting drills. While many shooters assume the red dot is always faster, POSIO shows that the reality is more nuanced.

“With a red dot, we only have to align one thing — the dot with the target. With irons, we align three: rear sight, front sight, and target. So naturally, there’s more going on.” — POSIO

But does that make iron sights slower in every case? Not necessarily.

According to champion, red dots do help with seeing mistakes during the shot — especially during trigger press — but at certain distances, iron sights can actually keep up if your draw and index are solid.

To make it clear, he runs live fire tests at close, medium, and long distances, comparing his times and hits using both systems.


Picture of POSIO explaining what gun will be used in this test. Image of Tanfoglio Limited Custom Extreme with iron sights and Tanfoglio Domina Extreme with a frame-mounted red dot

To keep things fair, POSIO uses two nearly identical pistols: a Tanfoglio Limited Custom Extreme with iron sights and a Tanfoglio Domina Extreme with a frame-mounted red dot.

Testing Setup

To compare iron sights or red dot at different ranges, he sets targets at 5, 10, and 15 meters.
For each distance, he fires one shot with a red dot, then one with iron sights.

The drill created in Drills App uses 6 sets, 1 shot per set, and a 10-second pause between them to switch guns. SG Timer GO is controlled remotely, so all focus stays on the shooting.

starting shooting drill using sg timer Go and Drills App

At close range, POSIO starts with the red dot pistol, then switches to irons.

results of shooting displayed on smartphone screen

⏱️ “First shot with the red dot — 0.78. Irons — 0.75, but a Charlie hit,” he notes.


Across three runs, iron sights consistently edged out the red dot, even producing an Alpha hit on the third attempt in just 0.69 seconds.

shooter pointing on targets on the range

Why irons win up close?

“At 5 meters, aligning iron sights is faster. I see the sights during the draw — no need to hunt for the dot.”

He adds that the Alpha zone favors quick vertical alignment, letting him react off his fiber front sight.

Result: Iron sights take the win at 5 meters.


Iron Sights & Red Dot on 10 and 15 meters

Moving to 10 and 15 meters, the picture begins to shift.

“I struggled with finding the dot at first,” POSIO admits, “but then both red dot and iron sights hit Alpha at the same time — 1.17 vs. 1.15.”

results of shooting session in Drills App. Compare results of iron sights and red dot guns

As the distance increased, mistakes with irons became more visible: “I saw the front fiber, but didn’t align it with the rear sight — and got Charlie hits.”

At 15 meters, the red dot consistently showed its advantage:

⏱️ Open (dot): 1.22, 1.57, 1.36

⏱️ Iron sights: 1.42, 1.51, 1.41

“That’s where the red dot pulls ahead. It gives you feedback and helps you stay on target — especially at longer distances.”

pistol with iron sights

That shows that iron sights can be slightly faster on close-range targets, especially if your draw and index are solid — you can match dot speeds.

But the real gap starts showing at longer distances.
That’s where red dots offer advantages — they help you identify mistakes through the visual feedback of the dot and let you acquire the target faster. That’s where optics can save you time.

shooting with red dot pistol

Tags: Drills appdry firesg timerSG Timer 2Shooters globalshooting timershot timer