Smith & Wesson M&P40 Full-Size .40 S&W, Pre-M2.0, No Thumb Safety, 4.25 in Barrel, 15+1, 3 Magazines
This first-generation Smith & Wesson M&P40 stands out as a full-size, pre-M2.0 pistol with no external thumb safety and a 4.25 inch barrel. It features a stainless steel slide and barrel with a Melonite finish, ambidextrous and reversible controls, and practical duty sights. It comes with three 15-round magazines and a camo zippered pistol rug.
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.
Bore Rifling: Excellent Rifling - Sharp lands and grooves.
Specific Condition Notes: There are minimal markings from previous handling with only light signs of use. The bore is bright and clean.
What’s Included
- Smith & Wesson M&P40 full-size pistol (pre-M2.0, no thumb safety)
- Three 15-round steel double-stack magazines
- Zippered soft pistol rug (camouflage pattern)
The M&P40 shown here is the first-generation, full-size configuration chambered in .40 S&W with a 4.25 inch barrel and 15+1 capacity. Its slide and barrel are stainless steel treated with Melonite for durability, paired with a black polymer frame. It is made in the United States.
Controls are set up for broad usability: an ambidextrous slide stop and a reversible magazine release support either hand. The design omits an external thumb safety, and the sear deactivation lever allows disassembly without pulling the trigger. A loaded chamber viewport offers quick visual confirmation.
The slide carries rear-only scalloped serrations for confident manipulation. Steel, dovetailed white-dot sights include a low-profile rear notch and a white-dot front for a crisp, straightforward sight picture.
A Picatinny accessory rail with three cross-slots is molded into the dust cover for mounting compatible lights or accessories. The interchangeable backstrap system tailors the grip to the shooter while maintaining the pistol’s full-size control and balance.




