How to Choose the Right Stun Gun
The stun gun that works best is the one you'll actually carry. A 90-million-volt unit sitting in a drawer at home does nothing for you in a parking lot. Start with how you'll carry it — on a keychain, in a purse, on a belt, in a vehicle — and let that narrow the field. Size, activation method, and additional features like alarms or flashlights matter more than voltage alone.
Voltage numbers are the most visible spec on any stun gun listing, but they're also the most misleading. Manufacturers rate voltage differently, and a higher number doesn't automatically mean a more effective device. Milliamp output — when listed — is a more reliable indicator of stopping effectiveness. Features like squeeze activation, disable pins, anti-grab strips, and multi-function design often matter more in a real encounter than the difference between 60 million and 90 million volts.
Stun Guns by Type
Flashlight Stun Guns
Flashlight stun guns combine an LED flashlight with a built-in stun device, giving you a tool you'll use daily — not just when you feel threatened. Models range from budget aluminum options like the BashLite to tactical-grade units with Triple Stun Technology and multi-mode LEDs. Because they look like ordinary flashlights, they're a practical choice for nighttime walking, vehicle carry, and home defense. The flashlight gives you a reason to have it in your hand before a situation escalates.
Disguised Stun Guns
Disguised stun guns are concealed inside everyday objects — cell phones, perfume bottles, pens, lipstick, hairbrushes, walking canes, hiking staffs, and umbrellas. The advantage is the element of surprise: nobody recognizes a self-defense tool until you deploy it. Each disguise fits a different carry situation. A cell phone stun gun works in your hand on the street. A perfume bottle disappears in a clutch or makeup bag. A hairbrush sits in a purse without raising questions. A walking cane or hiking staff gives you 32-56 inches of reach while looking like mobility equipment.
Stun Batons
Stun batons provide 12 to 26 inches of reach — significantly more than any handheld stun gun. That distance lets you deliver a stun from outside an attacker's arm range, and many models electrify the shaft so the baton can't be grabbed and taken. Built from aircraft-grade aluminum or reinforced polymer, they're the strongest option for home defense and professional security use. Compact 12-16 inch models fit in a vehicle or beside a bed. Full-size 24-26 inch tactical models provide maximum reach and visual deterrence.
Stun Guns for Women
Stun guns for women are compact, lightweight models designed for purse carry, keychain attachment, and smaller hands. Many feature bright colors, disable pins for anti-disarm protection, and rechargeable batteries. This subcollection includes disguised models (lipstick, cell phone, perfume), keychain stun guns, and slim handheld units — any stun gun that fits naturally into how women typically carry everyday items.
Stun Knuckles
Stun knuckles integrate the stun contacts into a fist grip — your hand becomes the weapon. The Sting Ring wears on a single finger. The Triple Sting Ring covers three fingers with squeeze activation. The Talon fires with a palm squeeze. The Spike drives two sharp electrodes forward like a punch dagger. These are close-quarters devices designed for situations where you're already in physical contact with a threat and need to create space to escape.
TASER Devices
TASER devices are a different category from stun guns. A stun gun requires direct contact. A TASER fires electrode darts from up to 15 feet, delivering a neuromuscular incapacitation charge through the darts' wires. Civilian models include the compact TASER Bolt 2, the flashlight-integrated StrikeLight 2, and the dual-shot TASER 7 CQ. TASERs are sold in their own collection and are not shown in this grid. For a detailed comparison, read our stun gun vs. TASER guide.
For help with specs, activation types, safety features, and matching a stun gun to your specific situation, read our complete stun gun buying guide.