The One You’ll Actually Have With You
The best self-defense tool is the one that’s with you when you need it. The Fang works on that principle — it’s small enough to live on your keychain permanently, which means it goes everywhere your keys go. Keys go to work, to the parking garage, to the late-night gas station stop. The Fang just comes along.
At 2.88 x 1.5 x 0.5 inches and 0.2 lbs, it’s genuinely compact — not “compact for a stun gun,” just compact. It sits flat, doesn’t snag on things, and the keyring attachment keeps it from wandering to the bottom of a bag.
Who This Keychain Stun Gun Is For
College students, commuters, people who run or walk in the early morning or late evening. If you’re someone who wants something small and always-there rather than something you have to think about grabbing, this fits that need well.
It’s also a solid option for anyone buying their first stun gun — there’s nothing complicated here. Safety on, trigger pressed, it works. The battery meter removes the one thing people worry about: not knowing if it’s charged.
My daughter has one on her backpack keyring. I’ve got no complaints about the build quality and neither does she.
Is This the Right Choice for You?
Choose the Fang if you want:
- Everyday keychain carry — it goes where your keys go, automatically
- A built-in flashlight that’s actually bright enough to use
- No disposable battery hassle — just plug it in to recharge
- A lifetime warranty on a carry item that takes daily wear
Consider something else if you need:
- More voltage output — larger stun guns offer higher milliamp ratings
- Belt or holster carry — this is designed for keyring, not standalone carry
How It Actually Works
Sixty million volts sounds like a big number, and honestly it is — it’s more than enough to interrupt muscle function and make someone reconsider. The electrodes are positioned at the front of the device; press it against an attacker and trigger it. Even the sound and spark of a stun gun firing is often enough deterrent on its own.
The 100-lumen flashlight is worth mentioning separately because it’s not just a checkbox feature. That’s genuinely useful brightness for checking a dark parking garage, lighting your path to the front door at night, or just finding what you dropped under the car seat. You’ll probably use the flashlight more than anything else, which means the device stays in your hands and in practice.
The battery meter indicator is the small detail that makes this more trustworthy than a lot of keychain options. You don’t have to guess or test-fire to know where the charge sits. Check it, plug it in when it’s low, done.
Quick Comparison: How Does the Fang Stack Up?
| Feature | Fang Keychain Stun Gun | Full-Size Stun Gun | Pepper Spray Keychain | Personal Alarm Keychain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carry Method | Keyring ✓ | Belt/holster | Keyring ✓ | Keyring ✓ |
| Voltage | 60,000,000V ✓ | Up to 95M+ V ✓ | N/A | N/A |
| Flashlight | 100 lumens ✓ | Varies | None | None |
| Battery Indicator | Yes ✓ | Varies | N/A | N/A |
| Rechargeable | Yes ✓ | Varies | N/A | Varies |
| Best For | Always-on keychain carry | Primary carry tool | Spray deterrent | Noise/alert only |
Practical Details
Dimensions: 2.88 x 1.5 x 0.5 inches. Weight: 0.2 lbs. Battery: rechargeable lithium with USB charging. Output: 60,000,000 volts. Flashlight: 100 lumens. Includes keyring attachment. Available in Black, Pink, and Purple. Lifetime warranty from Safety Technology.
If the best carry is the one that actually happens, the Fang makes a solid case for itself — it lives on your keys and comes along without any extra thought required.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does the battery last between charges?
With normal use — meaning you’re not firing it constantly — the rechargeable lithium battery holds up well for weeks to months between charges. The battery meter takes the guesswork out of it. When you see it getting low, plug it in via USB for a couple of hours and you’re back to full. It’s worth making it part of a regular routine, like charging your phone.
Is 60 million volts actually effective?
Yes. Voltage is what allows the current to penetrate through clothing. Sixty million volts is more than sufficient to disrupt muscle control and cause significant discomfort, which is the point. It’s worth noting that milliamp output also matters — check the product specs for the full picture. But at this voltage level you’re not dealing with a weak device.
How do I know if it’s charged and ready to use?
That’s what the battery meter is for. It gives you a visual indicator of the current charge level without having to test-fire the device. A quick glance tells you where you stand. Charge it when it’s low, and you’ll always know it’s ready. Simple as that.
Will this work through thick winter clothing?
Stun guns are most effective with direct skin contact, but 60 million volts provides enough penetration for most clothing layers. Heavy winter coats could reduce effectiveness somewhat. If this is a concern, positioning matters — aiming for less-covered areas like the neck or hands gives you better contact. For very cold climates with heavy gear, a higher-milliamp device or a backup tool like pepper spray is worth considering.














