The AK receiver is the serialized component of the rifle—the legally-defined firearm that everything else attaches to. Choosing the right receiver is the foundational decision of any AK build, determining caliber compatibility, parts kit fitment, and the overall character of the rifle.
Stamped vs. Milled Receivers
Stamped Receivers: Made from bent sheet steel (typically 1mm thick for standard AKMs, 1.5mm for some variants). Stamped receivers are lighter, less expensive to manufacture, and represent the vast majority of AK-pattern rifles worldwide. Modern U.S.-made stamped receivers from manufacturers like Century Arms, Nodak Spud, and Childers Guns offer excellent quality.
Milled Receivers: Machined from a solid block of steel, as used in the original AK-47 and some later variants. Heavier and more expensive, but extremely rigid. Often chosen for aesthetic authenticity or use with specific parts kits.
Caliber Compatibility
Receivers are specific to caliber and magazine pattern:
- 7.62x39: The classic AKM caliber. The most common and widely supported.
- 5.45x39: Soviet-era intermediate cartridge used in AK-74 and 100-series variants.
- 5.56 NATO: Used in some export variants; fewer parts kit options but more common U.S. magazines.
- 9x39: Specialty subsonic caliber popular for suppressed builds.
Variant Considerations
AK receivers are not universally interchangeable. Key variant considerations include:
Yugo-Pattern: Slightly different dimensions from standard AKM. Requires Yugo-specific parts and furniture.
Side Rail: Some receivers have an integral side optic rail machined or welded on the left side—essential if you plan to use a side-mount scope base.
Compliance: U.S. receivers for 922(r)-compliant builds must count as U.S.-made parts. Using a U.S.-made receiver is one of the simplest ways to achieve compliance when building from a parts kit.
Selection Guidelines
Match the receiver to your parts kit—most AK builds start with a surplus parts kit, and the receiver must be compatible with the kit's trunnion dimensions and caliber. For new builders, purchasing a receiver from a reputable U.S. manufacturer (Childers Guns, Nodak Spud, Morrissey Defense) with proper dimensions for your specific parts kit saves considerable fitting work.