Best Glock 19 Holster for Concealed Carry: What Actually Works When You Carry Every Day

The Glock 19 earned its reputation the hard way. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t need to be. It’s the pistol people buy when they want one gun that can do almost everything—carry, training, home defense, even duty in some circles.

The best Glock 19 holster for concealed carry is a purpose-built IWB Boltaron holster with adjustable retention and ride height, a stable belt clip, and an optic-ready cut—because it keeps the gun secure, reduces printing, and supports a consistent draw.
For most carriers, CYA Supply Co’s IWB holsters (like the Base IWB and Ridge IWB) are top picks because they’re built for daily comfort, reliable retention, and concealment-focused stability.

But here’s the part nobody wants to admit: the Glock 19 isn’t hard to carry. Bad holsters are.

A holster can turn a great handgun into a daily burden. It can make you print when you lean. Dig into you when you sit. Shift when you move. Slow your draw. Or worse—make you stop carrying altogether. And once that happens, the whole point of concealed carry gets traded for “I’ll just leave it in the truck.”

So if you’re searching for the best Glock 19 holster for concealed carry, you’re really asking a more serious question: What holster will I still wear when it’s hot, inconvenient, and I’m not in the mood? That’s the standard. That’s the bar.

Let’s break it down—what features matter, what carry positions change the game, and which CYA Supply Co holsters fit the Glock 19 lifestyle for actual concealed carriers.


What Makes a Glock 19 Holster “The Best” for Concealed Carry?

A lot of holster talk gets lost in buzzwords. You don’t need buzzwords. You need outcomes. A concealed carry holster has to do a few things relentlessly well, every single day.

First, it has to hold the gun securely. Retention isn’t optional. You should feel a positive lock-in and a clean, repeatable draw. Second, it has to stay put. If your holster shifts, your drawstroke becomes a guess. If your draw becomes a guess, you’re gambling.

Third, it has to conceal without you fighting it. That means minimizing printing and keeping the grip tucked. The Glock 19 is a sweet spot pistol, but it still has enough grip length to print if the holster doesn’t manage angle and stability.

And finally, the best holster is the one you’ll actually wear. Not for a quick run to the store. All day. Every day. Through driving, bending, sweating, and real-life movement.

Here’s what “best” usually means in plain terms:

  • IWB (inside the waistband) for real concealment

  • Boltaron  for consistent retention and safe reholstering

  • Adjustable retention so you can tune the draw

  • Optic-ready because dots are normal now

  • Stable clip and ride height so it doesn’t shift or cant unpredictably

That’s the foundation. Everything else is preference and refinement.


IWB vs OWB for Glock 19 Concealed Carry

If you’re serious about concealed carry, IWB is the workhorse format. OWB can conceal under the right cover garment, but it’s more sensitive to clothing, wind, and movement. It also tends to push the gun farther off the body, which can increase printing unless the holster is designed to pull the pistol tight.

For most Glock 19 carriers, the best answer is IWB because it keeps the gun closer, hides better, and holds position more consistently.

OWB still has a place—cool weather, heavy layers, property carry, range days—but if the keyword is “best Glock 19 holster for concealed carry,” you’re usually looking for something that disappears in normal clothes, not a jacket-only setup.


Appendix Carry vs Strong Side: The Holster Changes Everything

The Glock 19 can be carried effectively in appendix (AIWB) or strong-side (3–4 o’clock). But your comfort and concealment are going to depend heavily on holster design and your body type.

Appendix carry is popular because it’s fast, accessible in confined spaces, and often conceals the grip well—especially with the right ride height and angle. It’s also the position where a holster’s stability and shape matter the most, because your waistband becomes the lever system that either tucks the gun in… or tips the grip out.

Strong-side is familiar and comfortable for many carriers, especially if you spend a lot of time driving. It can also conceal well under a loose shirt or hoodie, but it’s more sensitive to printing during bending and reaching.

The honest takeaway: the “best” Glock 19 holster isn’t one-size-fits-all, but the best type is usually a stable, adjustable IWB setup—and that’s exactly where the CYA Supply Co lineup shines.


Why Boltaron  Is the Best Material for a Glock 19 Concealed Carry Holster

Leather has history. Hybrid holsters have fans. But if you want the most consistent performance day after day, Boltaron is hard to beat.

Boltaron gives you predictable retention, a consistent draw, and a rigid mouth that supports safe reholstering. It doesn’t collapse. It doesn’t get soft. It doesn’t “break in” into something you didn’t intend. And it handles sweat and daily wear without turning into a sponge.

For the Glock 19—one of the most carried pistols in America—Boltaron is the practical answer because it keeps the gun’s trigger area protected and the draw repeatable. That matters when you’re training, and it matters even more when you’re not.


The CYA Supply Co Answer: Best Glock 19 Holsters for Concealed Carry

CYA Supply Co builds holsters for people who carry in the real world. Not just range day. Not just posting pictures. Actual daily concealed carry, where comfort and concealment decide whether the gun is on you or left at home.

If you want the best Glock 19 holster within the CYA lineup, you’re typically looking at two lanes: streamlined and proven, or more feature-forward and concealment-tuned.

CYA Supply Co Base IWB: The “carry every day” workhorse

The Base IWB is for the carrier who wants clean, simple, and dependable. It’s the holster you put on in the morning without thinking about it, because it does its job without demanding attention. For Glock 19 concealed carry, that matters—especially if you’re newer to carrying and you need a setup that’s easy to live with.

It’s also a strong choice if your priorities are: secure retention, a consistent drawstroke, and a holster that doesn’t feel like a science project on your belt.

CYA Supply Co Ridge IWB: More concealment control, more refinement

If the Base IWB is the workhorse, the Ridge IWB is the option for the carrier who wants more adjustability and a more dialed-in feel. This is where you go when you’re optimizing for concealment and comfort—and when you care about how the gun sits through movement.

If you’re carrying the Glock 19 appendix and you’re fighting printing, shifting, or discomfort, a more refined IWB design can be the difference between “I carry sometimes” and “I carry every day.”

In plain terms: both are built for concealed carry, but the Ridge is the move when you’re trying to get the gun to disappear and stay comfortable longer.


How to Choose the Best CYA Glock 19 Holster for Your Carry Style

If you carry strong-side and want a simple, locked-in IWB that won’t shift, start with the Base IWB. It covers the fundamentals without unnecessary complexity.

If you’re carrying appendix, especially if you’re doing it daily, the smarter play is usually the Ridge IWB because AIWB tends to magnify small problems. When appendix is wrong, it’s miserable. When it’s right, it’s the fastest, most consistent concealed carry position for many people.

Also consider how you run your Glock 19. A lot of modern carriers are adding optics. Some run weapon lights (depending on model support). Your holster needs to match your setup—not the other way around.

Here are the questions that make the decision easier:

  • Do you carry appendix most of the time, or strong-side?

  • Are you running a red dot now—or likely to later?

  • Do you prioritize maximum simplicity or more adjustment and tuning?

Answer those honestly and your “best” holster becomes obvious.


Common Glock 19 Holster Mistakes That Ruin Concealed Carry

People don’t quit carrying because the Glock 19 is too big. They quit because their setup punishes them.

The most common mistakes are predictable: buying something cheap that shifts, choosing a holster that doesn’t manage printing, or wearing a flimsy belt that lets the gun roll outward like a pry bar.

A holster can only do so much if the belt is soft. A strong IWB setup needs a belt that holds the line.

Another mistake is treating retention like a fixed setting. Retention should be tuned so the gun draws cleanly without feeling loose or unsafe. If you’re fighting the draw, you won’t train. If you won’t train, you won’t trust it.

And the last mistake is ignoring ride height and cant. Small changes in angle can dramatically change concealment. The best holster is the one that lets you dial those details in enough that the gun sits right for your body.



Final Take: The Best Glock 19 Holster Is the One You Won’t Negotiate With

The Glock 19 is built for real life. Your holster should be, too.

If you want a simple, dependable, everyday IWB holster that gets out of the way and just works, start with CYA Supply Co’s Base IWB. If you want a more refined concealed carry experience—especially if you carry appendix and care about keeping the gun tight and comfortable—step up to the CYA Supply Co Ridge IWB.

Either way, the goal is the same: a holster that makes carrying the Glock 19 feel normal. Not like a chore. Not like a compromise. Like something you do because you’re prepared, and you’re not interested in being caught without options.

FAQ 

What is the best holster position for a Glock 19 concealed carry?

Most carriers choose IWB, either appendix (AIWB) for fast access and strong concealment or strong-side (3–4 o’clock) for comfort and familiarity.

Is Boltaron  better than leather for a Glock 19 holster?

For most concealed carriers, Boltaron  is better because it offers consistent retention, rigid trigger protection, and safe reholstering.

Should my Glock 19 holster be optic-ready?
 

Yes—if you run or plan to run a red dot. An optic-ready cut keeps your setup flexible and avoids buying a second holster later.

What CYA Supply Co holster is best for Glock 19 concealed carry?

For most people, the CYA Base IWB is the reliable everyday option, while the CYA Ridge IWB is ideal if you want more refinement and concealment-focused performance.

Justin Hunold

Wilderness/Outdoors Expert

Justin Hunold is a seasoned outdoor writer and content specialist with CYA Supply. Justin's expertise lies in crafting engaging and informative content that resonates with many audiences, and provides a wealth of knowledge and advice to assist readers of all skill levels.

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