Range USA Hits 50 Stores, With Chester, VA as the Milestone
Gun ranges can be intimidating. Dark rooms, poor service, confusing layouts—it’s a turn-off for new shooters and even seasoned enthusiasts. That frustration is exactly what inspired the founding of Range USA back in 2012. Now, 13 years later, the company has opened its 50th store, located in Chester, Virginia.
This isn’t just another ribbon-cutting. Chester represents Range USA’s first location in the state, expanding the company’s footprint to 14 states and making it the largest indoor shooting range operator in the nation.
A Vision from Day One
When I asked Tom Willingham—founder and president of Range USA—to take us back to the early days, he explained the idea in simple terms: Make gun stores and ranges feel welcoming.
“I visited a few local stores and had a terrible experience in all of them,” he told me. “My plan was to mainstream the retail gun experience for the mainstream gun enthusiast. Our store was organized, well lit, and merchandised liked a normal retail store. This vision has not changed since inception but has only intensified in its execution.”
That vision now extends across 50 locations, each built around the same idea: Shooting sports should be safe, accessible, and enjoyable for everyone.
What Chester Brings to the Table
The new Chester facility is a big one—15,000 square feet of retail and range space. Inside, you’ll find:
- 20 public lanes, 25 yards each, rated for calibers up to .308
- More than 70 rental firearms for hands-on testing
- Over 400 firearms and 5,000 boxes of ammunition in stock
- Two classrooms (capacity 20 each) for group or private lessons
The range itself is climate-controlled and overseen by dedicated Range Safety Officers. Like every Range USA store, the experience is meant to feel approachable, with professional staff greeting customers at the door instead of hiding behind a counter.
The Chester store officially opened October 17 at 11801 US 1, just north of Home Depot.
Scaling the Range USA Way
Growing from a single location to 50 in just 13 years is no small feat. I asked Willingham what made it possible.
“The key drivers have been the fantastic team we’ve assembled and the way we work together,” he explained. “The biggest challenge is always getting the right people in the right seats. That, and access to capital—anything to do with guns has a hard time obtaining capital. But our people are instrumental in making it possible.”
Today, Range USA employs more than 1,700 people nationwide, with each store averaging 25–30 employees. Maintaining a consistent culture across that many people is no small job either.
“Communication is the key,” Willingham said. “We always try and deliver the ‘why’ behind each message, so people understand it’s not just change for the sake of change. Having long-tenured associates in key roles has also helped us keep culture and expectations consistent.”
Training and New Shooters
In 2024 alone, Range USA introduced 350,000 new shooters to the sport. In total, more than 10 million customers have used the ranges since the company started. Every class follows a USCCA-influenced curriculum, ensuring consistency while still adapting to local regulations.
“Consistency is key to scaling,” Tom Willingham told me. “With different laws, regulations, and training requirements across the country, it is an always changing landscape of keeping consistency and adapting to new regulations. USCCA does a great job providing content, training, and localized focus in every state.”
The result? Over 300,000 students have completed a Range USA course or lesson so far.
Word of Mouth and a New Generation
When asked what’s driving so many new people into the sport, Willingham’s answer was straightforward:
“Word of mouth is the best attractant we have. It starts with making sure the customer’s first experience is great. Our stores are light, bright, clean, with professional staff who make people feel welcome. The old stereotype of dark, intimidating gun shops? We remove that barrier entirely.”
It’s a formula that works. Range USA has steadily grown into a national brand while keeping community at the center.
Beyond the Four Walls
While the brick-and-mortar stores remain the company’s heartbeat, RangeUSA.com adds another 50,000 products to the mix, plus online courses and free local pickup for firearms with no transfer fees. That hybrid approach, he explained, makes Range USA stand apart.
“We’re the only retailer where a customer can shop however they’re comfortable, pick up a gun in-store, and then step onto a range with it—all supported by the same team,” Willingham said.
Looking Ahead
Chester may be store number 50, but the company isn’t slowing down.
“Our goal is to continually improve the customer journey and dominate the retail gun and range segment of this industry. There’s no set number of stores. We’ll expand into markets that show a need for our model,” Willingham said.
Willingham also emphasized where the industry is headed:
“The indoor range industry is bright. More people from all walks of life are shooting for personal protection, as a hobby, for stress relief, or just for fun with friends. The industry will evolve into a more concentrated footprint driven by safety and satisfaction. Range USA will continue to lead with innovation.”
And for aspiring entrepreneurs looking at this kind of growth?
“Take calculated risks, not foolish ones. Work harder than anyone else. Be a problem solver. Surround yourself with good and smart people,” Willingham said.
A Thank You to the Community
As Range USA celebrates its 50th location, the message from leadership is simple:
“A great big thank you to all the hardworking people who have contributed to making Range USA what it is today. Every store, every community, and every employee matters to our success. We’re a passionate organization, and we’re grateful,” Willingham said.
Josh is the Editor in Chief of The Firearm Blog, as well as AllOutdoor and OutdoorHub.
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There is a PERFECT spot for one of these right next to the HEB Plus on I-35 in Kyle, already graded and zoned Commercial with plenty of room for parking, five minutes from a huge Cabela's which has a good selection of guns but no place to try them out. The one in Round Rock is super nice and very successful, but who the hell wants to try getting there from the south end of Austin through the third or fourth worst highway travel corridor in the US?
...Come on, y'all, hook us up! "The Range" in south Austin is nice, I guess, but they've got nearly nothin' in the way of guns/ammo/accessories.
Twenty 25 yard lanes rated to .308 isn't exactly impressive although it would be a welcome addition to areas with no previous options for pistol ranges, depending on pricing of course. I've seen multiple ranges rise, then fall, because they wanted to be "upscale" and charged ridiculous amounts for range use fees. You can't expect the average Joe Citizen to pay exorbitant range fees AND continue to come back regularly. Not will the affluent be enough to support the business unless you place it strategically in an area where there's a lot of money already.