For OWB carry, I use a Blackhawk Serpa with a paddle mount. Very steady and secure, affordable, durable, and they're obviously widely used for a reason, but you gotta have your belt on fairly tight since with this holster, the ride is high and to the outside, but that's what can make your draw lightning fast. It also helps to have the gun to the outside when you have a jacket on since it gives you a bot more clearance. But with a too-loose belt, it'll look like it's sagging to the outside. It also gives a more "profesional look instead of some beat-up, cracked leather holster or one of those awful on-size-fits-all nylon ones. "Nylon" just screams "couldn't afford anything better." It's probably going to blow your mind that retention holsters are not-and were never-designed to prevent a snatch, though manufacturers would like you to think so. Someone going for your gun can press that button down and draw it just as easily as you can, when you think about it. They don't offer enough snatch-preventative to make the legit claim they're designed to thwart snatching. They're rather designed to keep the gun in the holster if you get into a scrape and are knocked down, or if you have to fire from a prone position and don't need the gun falling out accidentally in the mean time. But yeah, I'm going to go with Serpa, prefferably mounted on a paddle, but you can also later switch just the paddle itself out in favor of a belt-only platform (sold seperately.) All the mounting options attach with included screws. Disadvantages: You are going to have to most likely undo your belt and lower your pants a little to get it off your belt. It bears saying, since some don't know this, but wear it with the paddle inside your pants, won't you? That's the idea with paddle holsters. Oh yeah, and it's also adjustable to at least three different cant angles! I've even used mine for cross-draw carry, (gun's) butt facing forward on my non-dominant side.