The Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT Is Here: Inside the Factory Langdon 92
Beretta and Langdon Tactical Technology just put a factory LTT-spec’d 92 on dealer shelves. The 92G Elite Combat LTT — SKU FA0275, $1,299 MSRP, $999.99 street — lands at the front of the 2026 92-platform conversation with a Toni System compensator and magwell, a chrome trigger over a DLC-coated sear and hammer, three 22-round magazines with +4 extensions, and the LTT-engineered slide and frame the platform’s carriers have been chasing through aftermarket trigger jobs for two decades. Here is what the spec sheet says, why a Langdon factory build was overdue, and where the Elite Combat LTT sits in the Beretta 92 lineup that has carried police and U.S. servicemen for forty years.

Is the Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT worth $1,299?
The Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT is worth $1,299 MSRP — or the $999.99 street price several dealers are running at launch — for the 92-platform carrier who has been quoted $300 to $600 to send a stock 92 to Langdon Tactical for the trigger job, the slide work, and the comp install separately. The factory Elite Combat LTT collapses those line items into one SKU with a serial number, a warranty, and a three-magazine package already in the box. For carriers new to the 92, $999.99 buys a competition-spec build that would be three trips back to the gunsmith on any other platform.
What is the 92G Elite Combat LTT — the full spec sheet
Pulled directly from Beretta USA’s product page for SKU FA0275 on the morning of June 17, 2026:
- Caliber: 9mm Luger, single-action / double-action with the 92G de-cocker-only configuration
- Barrel: 4.9 inches, threaded, black finish
- Overall length: 9 inches with the Toni System compensator installed
- Weight: 36.2 ounces
- Frame: Alloy, based on the 92A1 full-size platform
- Slide: LTT-engineered with the LTT slide cut and aggressive front and rear cocking serrations
- Trigger: Chrome-finished, over a DLC-coated sear and hammer
- Compensator: Toni System single-port, factory-installed
- Magwell: Toni System flared magwell
- Magazines: Three 22-round magazines, each with a Toni System +4 magazine extension
- Grips: LTT textured G10 grips
- Sights: Fiber-optic front sight
- Controls: Extended takedown and disassembly levers
- MSRP: $1,299
- Street price at launch: $999.99 at multiple dealers
- Availability: Shipping to authorized Beretta dealers in June 2026
That is a competition-tier package out of the box. The headline numbers — chrome trigger, DLC sear and hammer, factory Toni System compensator, three 22-round mags — are what made the launch land.
Why a factory Langdon 92 was overdue
The Beretta 92 has been in production since 1975. Ernest Langdon has been building the platform into a serious competition and carry pistol since the early 1990s — the LTT trigger job, the polished feed ramp, the DLC internals, and the “G” conversion (de-cocker-only, no safety) are all his shop’s signatures. For thirty years, getting an LTT-spec Beretta meant sending a stock 92 to Langdon Tactical’s shop in Fredericksburg, Virginia, paying for the parts, paying for the labor, and waiting for the turnaround.
The Elite Combat LTT is the SKU that closes that loop. Beretta is building the gun on the line, with LTT’s parts spec and Langdon’s approval, and shipping it to dealers as a factory product with a Beretta warranty. The carrier who would have spent $1,500 on a base 92 plus a Langdon trigger job is at $1,299 MSRP on a serialized factory Elite Combat LTT — with the compensator and three mags already included.
That is also the reason Toni System is on the spec sheet alongside Langdon. Toni System — the Italian manufacturer that makes the compensator, the flared magwell, and the +4 magazine extensions — has been Langdon’s parts partner on the 92 platform for years. The Elite Combat LTT is the first time the entire Langdon-Toni System package has shipped as a single boxed pistol from Beretta directly.
The Toni System components, by what they do
The three Toni System pieces on the Elite Combat LTT are not cosmetic.
- The single-port compensator redirects propellant gas upward off the muzzle, pulling the front of the gun down through recoil. On a 9mm 92-platform pistol, the practical effect is measurable: faster split times on second and third shots and a flatter sight picture under speed. The trade in length — the comp adds about an inch — is the cost of carrying it.
- The flared magwell widens the mag opening so a reload under stress finds the gun cleanly instead of catching the mag baseplate on the grip edge. Magwells are a competition standard for a reason; the factory installation means no aftermarket trip.
- The +4 magazine extensions take the standard 17-round 92 magazine to 22 rounds. Three of these ship in the box, which puts 66 rounds on hand without buying a single accessory.
Together, those three pieces are what a serious competition or duty carrier would add to a stock 92 over six to twelve months of upgrades. The Elite Combat LTT puts them on the gun before the first range trip.
How it sits in the Beretta 92 lineup
The 92 family is dense. The Elite Combat LTT lives at the top of the carry-and-compete tier, alongside two siblings worth knowing for context:
The Beretta 92G Elite LTT II at $1,249 MSRP is the older, no-compensator version of the same collaboration — same LTT slide and trigger work, fiber-optic front, but without the Toni System compensator and magwell. Carriers who want the LTT internals in a more pocket-and-holster-friendly footprint pick the LTT II. The 92X Performance is Beretta’s in-house competition build — a different design path with the Vertec frame, optic-ready slide, and Wilson Combat Steel guide rod. The Performance is the optics-first answer; the Elite Combat LTT is the irons-and-fundamentals answer. The base 92FS at $720 MSRP is the carrier who wants the platform without the Langdon spec — the right buy for a holster gun that will not see a competition stage.
The Elite Combat LTT does not compete with any of those on price. It competes on a single factory SKU delivering the trigger work, the compensator, the magwell, and the magazines as one unit.
Who should buy the 92G Elite Combat LTT, and who should not
The Elite Combat LTT is the right buy for the carrier who already runs a 92 and has been quoting trigger jobs and comp installs at Langdon’s shop. It is the right buy for the competition shooter who wants a factory-warrantied carry-and-compete pistol with the magwell and the +4 mags already in the box. It is the right buy for the duty officer or armed professional who carries a 92-platform pistol on the job and wants the LTT internals without the chain-of-custody headache that comes with sending a service pistol to an aftermarket shop.
It is the wrong buy for the carrier whose ceiling is $750 and who is well served by the duty 9mm field we cover in the HK VP9A1 X Tactical review, and for the carrier who has already paid for an LTT trigger job on a base 92 and is now considering a redundant second pistol — that money is better spent on training and ammo.
How to get one
Beretta is shipping the Elite Combat LTT to authorized dealers nationwide. Street pricing at $999.99 is showing up at the larger online dealers; in-store pricing at independent gun stores will vary. For carriers who want the gun first and the accessory rail second, the Elite Combat LTT’s Picatinny rail is the same dust-cover spec as the rest of the 92 family — existing 92 lights and lasers fit without modification. For the carrier who already runs a 1911 alongside the 92, our Kimber DS Warrior double-stack 1911 breakdown covers the parallel double-stack-1911 conversation.
The Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT FAQ
What is the Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT?
The Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT is the 2026 factory build of the Beretta + Langdon Tactical 92 collaboration. SKU FA0275, MSRP $1,299, street $999.99. It is a 9mm Luger, alloy-frame, full-size 92-platform pistol with the LTT slide and trigger work, a Toni System single-port compensator, a Toni System flared magwell, and three 22-round magazines with +4 extensions, all shipping factory-installed.
How much does the 92G Elite Combat LTT cost?
The Beretta 92G Elite Combat LTT is $1,299 MSRP and $999.99 street at launch through multiple major dealers including AmmoLand and authorized Beretta retailers. The gun ships in June 2026 to authorized dealers nationwide, with stock varying by region.
What does Langdon Tactical bring to the 92G Elite Combat LTT?
Langdon Tactical Technology engineered the slide cut, the chrome trigger, the DLC-coated sear and hammer, the LTT G10 grips, and the “G” de-cocker-only configuration. Ernest Langdon has built his shop’s reputation on the 92 platform since the early 1990s; the Elite Combat LTT is the first time the full Langdon spec has shipped from Beretta as a factory SKU rather than an aftermarket conversion.
What is the Toni System compensator for?
The Toni System single-port compensator redirects propellant gas upward off the muzzle to reduce muzzle flip in recoil. The practical effect is a flatter sight picture and faster shot-to-shot recovery, particularly on rapid strings. Toni System is the Italian manufacturer Langdon Tactical has partnered with for years on 92-platform compensators, magwells, and magazine extensions. The Elite Combat LTT ships with the compensator factory-installed.
How does the Elite Combat LTT compare to the 92G Elite LTT II?
The 92G Elite Combat LTT and the 92G Elite LTT II share the same LTT slide work, chrome trigger, and DLC internals. The Combat adds the Toni System single-port compensator, the Toni System flared magwell, and the three +4-extended 22-round magazines. The LTT II at $1,249 MSRP is the no-compensator version for carriers who want the LTT internals without the added overall length the comp introduces.
Is the 92G Elite Combat LTT a competition pistol or a carry pistol?
The Elite Combat LTT is engineered to serve both roles. The +4 magazines and Toni System compensator favor competition use; the LTT trigger work, the chrome trigger, and the iron sights with fiber-optic front favor carry and duty work. Carriers who plan to compete in production-class divisions should confirm the comp does not put the pistol out of class — some sanctioned competition divisions restrict compensators.
The 92 platform finally gets the factory LTT spec it has been waiting for
The Beretta 92 is a forty-year-old platform that has carried U.S. servicemen as the M9 and law-enforcement officers across the country. The LTT internals have been the platform’s aftermarket gold standard for thirty of those years. The Elite Combat LTT is what happens when the manufacturer finally builds the gun the aftermarket has been chasing — factory warranty, three magazines, comp on the muzzle, magwell on the bottom, and a serial number that ties it all together. At $999.99 street, it is the 2026 92-platform conversation the market has been waiting for. For the carrier who runs a 1911 alongside the 9mm, our coverage of the Kimber DS Warrior picks up the double-stack-1911 thread. For everyday-carry gear that pairs with a duty pistol, Popular EDC’s 2026 multitool guide covers the rest of the working kit.
Reader note: Friday, June 19, 2026 is Day 64 of Silencer Central’s 100 Days of Silence. The Day 64 prize pool includes a Ruger PC Charger 9mm with Shooting Targets USA accessories. Free to enter, 21+, U.S. residents in eligible states. Set a reminder.
Last updated June 17, 2026. All specifications and pricing were verified against Beretta USA’s product page for SKU FA0275 on the same date. Availability and dealer pricing subject to change.