Estimated reading time: 11 minutes
The Unit 9 Compact is not some toy pretending to be a training pistol. It is a Glock 19-style, CO2-powered, non-lethal training system built for real reps, real feedback, and real force-on-force work without the range drama.

I’ve been watching Unit Solutions closely since they launched their Unit 4 training rifle, and when they announced the Unit 9 Compact Training Pistol, I was genuinely excited to get my hands on one. I’ve trained with their AR platform at certain facilities, and I knew they weren’t messing around when it came to build quality and realism. So when the Unit 9 arrived, I dug in immediately. What I found confirmed everything I was hoping for and then some.
Watch the Unit 9 Compact Video Review
What Is the Unit 9 Compact, and Why Does It Feel So Real?
The Unit 9 Compact is a non-lethal training pistol built to replicate the fit, form, and function of a Glock 19-pattern handgun. This isn’t a cheap airsoft gun dressed up in tactical clothing. It’s a serious piece of kit that has already found its way into the hands of the U.S. Army, U.S. Special Operations Command, U.S. Marshals, Border Patrol, the Marine Corps, the Air Force, and too many more to list. And now, civilians can get one too.
Unit 9 is classified by the ATF as a non-firearm, meaning it ships straight to your door with no FFL required. It fires 8mm non-lethal projectiles propelled by an 8-gram threaded CO2 cylinder housed in the magazine. You can run it with non-marking reusable rounds, biodegradable marking rounds that leave a colored paint mark on impact, or in pure dry-fire mode using only the CO2 for realistic slide reciprocation without any projectile at all. That versatility is one of the things that makes this tool genuinely special.
Unit 9 Compact Specs for This Glock 19-Style Training Pistol
| Model | Unit 9 Compact Training Pistol |
|---|---|
| Pattern | Glock 19-pattern handgun |
| Classification | ATF-classified non-firearm |
| Projectile | 8mm non-lethal projectiles |
| Power Source | 8-gram threaded CO2 cylinder housed in the magazine |
| Training Modes | Dry-fire mode, non-marking mode, marking mode |
| Magazine Capacity | 15 rounds |
| CO2 Runtime | Approximately 25 cycles through the magazine |
| Marking Round Velocity | Approximately 550 feet per second |
| Optics Footprint | Native Trijicon RMR footprint |
| Adapter Plates | Aimpoint Acro and Leupold Delta Point Pro |
| Accessory Rail | Picatinny rail on the dust cover |
| MSRP | $749 |
| Warranty | Two-year warranty backs the pistol and magazine |
| Guarantee | 90-day money-back guarantee |
First Impressions: The Unit 9 Compact Has Real-Gun Weight
I pulled the Unit 9 out, and the first thing I noticed was the weight. I immediately grabbed a Gen 3 Glock 19 off the shelf and did a side-by-side comparison. Then a Shadow Systems. Then a Ruger RXM. Unit 9 holds its own against all of them. The Unit9 is properly weighted for a realistic feel, and it points the same way a real gun points. That is not an accident. It is engineering.

The high-visibility blue slide is the industry-standard indicator for non-lethal training tools, required by law enforcement. It is not just cosmetic. It is a safety feature that communicates immediately and clearly that this is a training tool. In a scenario environment, that distinction matters enormously.
The grip texture is excellent. The controls are where you expect them. There is an ambidextrous mag release on both sides, though if your actual carry gun does not have that feature, you can simply choose not to use one side. It has a slide release on both sides as well. The takedown procedure is similar to what you are used to. Everything about this gun is designed to transfer directly to your actual firearm, so the reps you put in here are reps that count.
The magazine deserves its own mention. It is a metal unit with a plastic base pad, and Unit Solutions built it to be drop safe, meaning you can dump it on the ground during a reload drill without any concern whatsoever. Each magazine holds 15 rounds, which matches the capacity of a standard Glock 19, and the slide locks back on the last shot just like the real thing. One CO2 cartridge gets you approximately 25 cycles through the magazine, so you are looking at a solid chunk of training time before you need to swap it out. For the cost and the realism, that is a genuinely impressive setup.
The Trigger Does Not Train Bad Habits, and That Matters
Triggers are where most training pistol alternatives disappoint. They are either too light, too heavy, mushy, or just wrong in a way that actively trains bad habits. Unit 9 does not have that problem.

There is genuine take-up, just like a real trigger. You hit a wall, and then there is a crisp, clean break. Running the trigger on Unit 9 and then picking up a real Glock 19, the transition felt completely natural. That is the entire point of a training tool, and Unit Solutions nailed it.
The dry-fire report is also notably loud. Loud enough that if you run the CO2 cartridge without any rounds loaded, you can use a shot timer. Real drills. Real feedback. In your garage, your basement, your backyard. No hearing protection required. No range fees. No round-trip drive to the gun club.
Three Unit 9 Training Modes, and Why the Cost Math Works
One of the most practical aspects of Unit 9 is the flexibility of its ammunition system. You have three distinct training modes.
Dry-fire mode uses only the CO2 cartridge to cycle the slide and produce a realistic reset. The slide actually reciprocates, giving you recoil impulse feedback that is mild but present. This costs roughly 4 cents per shot when you factor in the CO2. For pure fundamentals work covering draw stroke, grip, trigger press, and sight alignment, this is phenomenal value.
Non-marking mode uses reusable plastic rounds alongside the CO2. These can be picked up and reloaded, bringing the effective cost down significantly over time. Even counting the CO2, you are looking at around 7 cents per round. This is the sweet spot for group shooting, accuracy drills, and practicing fundamentals with actual projectile feedback.
Marking mode uses biodegradable 8mm marking balls, similar in concept to Simunitions but accessible to civilians and dramatically cheaper. They travel at approximately 550 feet per second, break on impact, leave a colored paint mark, and yes, they sting. These are safe to shoot indoors, require no cleanup in your yard, and will not stain. Cost runs about 18 cents per round, which is a fraction of what professional Simunition training systems cost.
Compare that to the price of 9mm ammunition today, plus the time, fuel, and range membership costs to get to an actual facility, and the math starts looking very favorable, especially if you are serious about regular training.
Force-on-Force Training Is Where the Unit 9 Gets Mean
Here is where Unit 9 separates itself from every dry-fire laser gadget and inert blue gun on the market: you can actually shoot someone with it in a training scenario.
We ran force-on-force drills using the marking rounds. I had the Unit 9 in a Safariland Incog XS holster, which fits Glock 17/19 pattern guns and their clones, and the Unit 9 drops right in. We ran scenario-based draws from concealment. When you have to put a round on an actual moving target who is engaging back, something changes in your brain. The stress inoculation is real. The feedback is real. And critically, nobody gets seriously hurt.

For appendix carry practitioners, especially, this is a significant advantage. Drawing from AIWB with a live firearm during training carries real risk. Running the same drills with Unit 9 eliminates that catastrophic failure mode entirely while keeping the scenario meaningful and the feedback honest.
We shot groups at approximately four yards, which is a realistic defensive distance given that the overwhelming majority of defensive encounters happen within three yards. The groups were tight and consistent, comparable to what you would see from a real pistol at that distance. The slide locks back on the last round, just like the real thing. It is the small details that add up to a complete training experience.
Optics, Lights, and Accessories: Build Your Carry Gun in Training Form

The Unit 9 ships with iron sights co-witnessed for red dot use. Out of the box, it has a native Trijicon RMR footprint. Adapter plates are available for the Aimpoint Acro and Leupold Delta Point Pro. There is a Picatinny rail on the dust cover for mounting a weapon light. If you run a light and optic setup on your carry gun, you can replicate that exact configuration on the Unit 9 and train with it.

Running a red dot on a training pistol is particularly valuable for teaching dot tracking. The dot disappears when your grip breaks down. Unit 9’s recoil impulse, while not identical to a live round, is enough to reveal grip inconsistencies and give you real feedback on whether your dot is tracking cleanly through the shot.
Pros and Cons: The Unit 9 Compact Is Serious, But Not for Everybody
- Pros: Realistic Glock 19-pattern fit and feel, 15-round magazines, last-round slide lock, usable trigger, three training modes, CO2-powered slide reciprocation, force-on-force capability, native Trijicon RMR footprint, light rail, no FFL required, two-year warranty, 90-day money-back guarantee.
- Cons: $749 is not impulse-buy territory, recoil impulse is not identical to live fire, and casual shooters who only visit the range twice a year may not use it enough to justify the investment.
Final Verdict: The Unit 9 Compact Is Not Cheap, But It Makes Sense

At $749, the Unit 9 Compact is not an impulse purchase. But I would push back on anyone who dismisses that number without thinking it through. If you shoot 500 rounds a month in live-fire training, which is a conservative number for anyone serious, you are spending real money on ammunition, range fees, travel, and time. Unit 9 pays for itself. More importantly, it gives you training opportunities that the range simply cannot provide: low-light scenarios in your own home, force-on-force with your family or training partners, draw practice from concealment without any risk of a negligent discharge, and daily repetitions without any of the logistics.
It ships with one magazine and iron sights standard. A two-year warranty backs the pistol and magazine. A 90-day money-back guarantee backs the purchase. Unit Solutions is also shipping the AR-15 version of this system, the Unit 4, which carries the same philosophy into the long-gun world.
Is Unit 9 for everyone? No. If you are a casual shooter who gets to the range twice a year, there are cheaper ways to improve. But if you are a serious student of the gun, if you carry every day, if you have family members you are trying to train, or if you are a professional who needs consistent reps between range visits, this tool deserves a hard look. The military and law enforcement community figured that out already. The civilian market is just catching up.
For more information, visit unitsolutions.com.

