Smith & Wesson M&P FPC 9mm Folding Carbine | 16.25" Threaded Barrel | 20+1 Capacity
The M&P FPC (Folding Pistol-Caliber Carbine) delivers compact 9 mm firepower in a right-side-folding platform that shrinks to 16.4 inches without disturbing your optic’s zero. Built in Smith & Wesson’s Maryville, Tennessee facility, this straight-blowback carbine blends a 16.25-inch 4140 steel threaded barrel with a lightweight polymer frame and 6061-T6 aluminum receiver, giving shooters a 5.03-pound package ready for range, duty, or backpack carry.
Condition
Overall Condition: Excellent condition, showing only faint signs of any prior use or handling.
Bore Condition: Excellent - Clean, mirror finish, no signs of wear.
Rifling Condition: Excellent Rifling - Sharp lands and grooves.
Specific Condition Notes: Light scratches and minor handling wear on exterior surfaces; bore remains clean and clear.
What’s Included
- Original hard case
- Two 20-round factory Smith & Wesson M&P magazines
- One 17-round factory Smith & Wesson M&P magazine
The FPC’s right-side folding design locks securely, keeping the optic rail upright so zero is maintained when the stock is deployed. An integrated carrier in the fixed stock holds two spare M&P9 magazines, letting you carry 57 rounds on board before a reload pouch is needed.
Its 16.25-inch barrel is threaded 1/2-28 TPI for suppressors or muzzle devices and uses a 1:10 RH twist ideal for common 9 mm bullet weights. The free-float aluminum handguard offers a full-length Picatinny rail up top and M-LOK slots at the 3, 6, and 9 o’clock positions for lights, lasers, or foregrips.
Controls are modern and ambidextrous where it matters: a reversible magazine release and a flat-faced trigger promote consistent pulls, while the cross-bolt safety sits within easy reach of either hand. The reciprocating charging handle tucks neatly along the receiver when not in use.
Accepting standard double-stack M&P9 pistol magazines and priced with an MSRP of $659, the M&P FPC gives shooters magazine commonality with their sidearm, a threaded barrel out of the box, and a fold-up footprint that travels anywhere a backpack can go.




