The Henry SPD Predator is not a traditional lever gun. Instead, it was designed from the action forward to deliver precision usually reserved for modern bolt‑action rifles.

Built by Henry’s Special Products Division
The SPD Predator comes from Henry Repeating Arms’ Special Products Division. This is the same internal team behind the Lever Action Supreme Rifle.
Instead of modifying an existing design, Henry re‑engineered the core systems that normally limit lever‑action accuracy. As a result, the SPD Predator feels purpose‑built rather than adapted.
Henry states that the rifle incorporates three newly patented systems:
- a new fire control system
- a redesigned internal linkage
- a proprietary magazine release
As a result, each system was developed to improve consistency and stability during firing.
A Redesigned Lever‑Action System
Traditional lever actions rely on complex linkages. Those systems can introduce movement at the moment the shot breaks.
By contrast, Henry’s redesigned linkage minimizes that movement. It keeps the action stable and repeatable from shot to shot.

The new fire control system allows for a factory‑tuned, user‑adjustable trigger. From the factory, it breaks at approximately four pounds. In practice, the trigger remains consistent even as the action cycles.
The patented magazine release supports MSR‑pattern magazines. This allows the rifle to feed from AR‑style magazines while maintaining proper alignment and reliable chambering.
Carbon‑Wrapped Barrel and Suppressor Support
At the center of the rifle is an 18‑inch match‑grade 416R stainless steel barrel. Henry tension‑wraps the barrel in carbon fiber.
This construction increases rigidity, reduces weight, and helps manage heat during longer shooting sessions.

The barrel is threaded 1⁄2×28 for suppressor use. For predator hunters, this means reduced recoil, lower sound signature, and less disruption when multiple animals appear during a stand.
Optics, Stock, and Shooter Interface
Henry equips the SPD Predator with a forged carbon‑fiber Picatinny rail. It provides a rigid mounting surface for LPVOs or high‑magnification predator optics.

The gray laminate stock includes an adjustable comb. This allows shooters to establish a repeatable cheek weld across different optic heights.
The rifle ships with a Harris S‑LM bipod, reinforcing its role as a precision tool straight out of the box.
Despite its features, the rifle weighs about 6.2 pounds, keeping it light enough for field use.

Accuracy and Factory Guarantee
Henry backs the SPD Predator with a three‑shot sub‑MOA accuracy guarantee. It is the only lever‑action rifle offered with that level of factory commitment.

During development, Henry reports repeated long‑range impacts that are uncommon for the lever‑action category. These results reflect the rifle’s intended performance envelope.
A Modern Lever Gun With a Clear Purpose
The SPD Predator is chambered in .223 Remington / 5.56 NATO. It feeds from MSR‑pattern magazines, accepts modern optics and suppressors, and focuses on precision over nostalgia.
Henry positions it as a working predator and varmint rifle. It keeps the speed and handling of a lever action while delivering accuracy closer to a precision bolt gun.
Henry SPD Predator – Specifications
- Manufacturer: Henry Repeating Arms
- Division: Special Products Division
- Model: SPD Predator
- Caliber: .223 Remington / 5.56 NATO
- Action: Lever
- Barrel: 18″ match‑grade 416R stainless, carbon‑fiber tension wrapped
- Twist Rate: 1:8″
- Thread Pattern: 1⁄2×28
- Trigger: Factory‑tuned, user‑adjustable (~4 lb)
- Magazine: MSR‑pattern, 10‑round included
- Optics Rail: Forged carbon‑fiber Picatinny
- Stock: Gray laminate with adjustable comb
- Weight: ~6.2 lbs
- Accuracy Guarantee: Three‑shot sub‑MOA
- Included Accessories: Harris S‑LM bipod
- MSRP: $2,510
Learn more HERE.
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It’s pictured on a bench with a bipod. It looks like it would be impossible to cycle the action without losing rifle/scope positioning for a follow up shot, regardless of if it’s off a truck hood, the Earth or a bench while utilizing the bipod. Don’t get me wrong, I like Henry rifles, but if I’m shooting off a bipod, I would like to be able to cycle the action with minimal disruption to my sight picture.
For me to pay $2,500 for a lever gun it would have to be able to gut and skin the carcass and maybe drag the carcass out of the woods. Accuracy (precision) is worth only so much and I have never missed a deer.
I have bolt action rifles on big caliber rifles but the most accurate I have many but the most impressive was a Browning semi auto 30-06 safari made in Belgium when at 25 yards on a small bore target with a Leopold gold ring scope I could key hole shots I have shot many guns out of my 71 years of age and have many that are very accurate but the particular Browning has always left me wishing I would have never sold it 😀
Henry needs to keep up with Browning as they fall far behind
223 is definitely not my choice caliber if it were a 300 win mag or the 30-06 then I would be interested don’t know why people are trying to push that baby caliber on others?
“Henry equips the SPD Predator with a forged carbon‑fiber Picatinny rail.” How does one forge carbon fiber? It is not a malleable substance. Sounds like BS advertising hype to me.
They said forged, but maybe cast is a better word.
If one clicks on the “lever action supreme” link under Henry Special Products section, it links up to an article about Smith and Wesson’s lever gun. Mistake or clever marketing?
Isn’t accuracy a function/result of shooter skill and technique? This gun, like pretty much all guns, is capable of performance far above the shooter. Cool to hear about engineering intended to bring it toward the “precision” rifle (note differences between accuracy and precision, which are often interchanged) but someone will still find a way to miss with this rifle. Until next time…
Sound concept, looks promising but for now reserved for varmint shooters. Not yet in the caliber “window” I use.
Interesting rifle
But at what price??
Beautiful rifle but I’m a traditionalist and if I wanted a mag on a rifle I would buy a bolt action 😂😂.