Find your perfect disc
Answer a few questions about your game and we'll match you to discs from our database of 1,596 - with the flight numbers, stability, and reasoning behind every pick.
How the Disc Finder matches you
Good disc recommendations come down to three things: the speed your arm can actually throw, the slot you need to fill (putter, midrange, fairway, or distance), and the flight shape you want. The finder reads your answers into a target stability and a speed ceiling, then ranks all 1,596 discs in our database against your profile and explains why each pick fits. Slower arms and newer players get slower, more understable discs that fly straight with less effort; bigger arms and windy courses push toward faster, more overstable molds.
What the quiz asks
- 01How would you describe your game?
- 02How far do you throw?
- 03How do you throw?
- 04What are you looking for?
- 05What flight do you want?
- 06Anything you're trying to fix?optional
- 07Where do you usually play?optional
- 08Feel & weight preferences?optional
- 09Budget?optional
Which disc golf disc should you throw?
What disc golf disc should I throw?
It depends on three things: how fast your arm actually is, the slot you need to fill (putter, midrange, fairway, or distance driver), and the flight shape you want. Slower arms and newer players throw slower, more understable discs that fly straight with less effort; faster arms can hold faster, more overstable molds on line. The finder reads your answers into a target stability and speed ceiling and ranks every disc against it.
What are the best disc golf discs for beginners?
Beginners do best with slower, understable discs - speed 5 or under, negative turn (-2 to -4), and low fade - because they fly straight and far without needing much arm speed. Classic beginner-friendly picks are an understable midrange, a slow understable fairway driver, and a straight putter. The finder surfaces the easiest-to-control discs in each slot for your profile.
How many discs does a beginner need to start?
Three is plenty: a putter for putting and short approaches, a straight midrange, and one understable fairway driver. Master those flights before adding a faster distance driver - high-speed discs need more arm speed than most new players have, and throwing them early just builds bad habits.
Is the disc finder free?
Yes. The finder is free, takes about a minute, and every recommendation comes with the disc's flight numbers, stability, and the reasoning behind the pick so you can see why it fits - not just a name.
