Find your actual draw weight, recommended range, and hunting kinetic energy
Understanding bow draw weight is one of the most important steps in archery, whether you are a competitive target shooter, a recreational archer, or a bowhunter preparing for deer season. Draw weight refers to the peak force — measured in pounds — required to pull your bowstring back to full draw. However, the weight stamped on your bow's limb is almost never the weight you actually pull at your personal draw length. This calculator solves that problem by giving you the true poundage your body handles every time you shoot. The AMO (Archery Manufacturers Organization) standard rates bow draw weight at a 28-inch draw length. Most archers do not draw exactly 28 inches. If your draw length is shorter or longer than that reference, the actual force on your fingers or release aid changes by roughly 2.5 pounds per inch for recurve and longbow designs, and about 1.5 pounds per inch for compound bows. For example, if your rated draw weight is 50 lbs at 28 inches but your personal draw length is 26 inches, you are actually pulling approximately 45 lbs — a meaningful difference that affects arrow speed, kinetic energy, and physical fatigue during practice. For compound bows, the picture is more nuanced because of let-off. Compound bows use a cam system that dramatically reduces holding weight at full draw. A typical 80% let-off bow with a 60 lb peak draw weight only requires you to hold 12 lbs at full draw, making it far easier to hold steady while aiming. This calculator shows both your compound peak draw weight (used for arrow spine selection) and your holding weight (the physical load on your muscles). Beyond calculating your actual poundage, this tool provides an archer profile recommendation mode. By entering your gender, age group, body weight, archery experience, primary purpose, and fitness level, you will receive a draw weight range that matches your physique and goals. Beginners often start too heavy, which leads to poor form, fatigue, muscle strain, and missed shots. The widely cited 75 percent comfort rule states that your ideal starting draw weight is one you can hold at full draw for at least three to five seconds without shaking. Starting lower and building up gradually produces better archers than muscling through an overpowered bow. Hunters have an additional concern: kinetic energy. Regulations in most US states require minimum draw weights for specific game species — commonly 35 to 45 lbs for whitetail deer. But draw weight alone does not determine lethality; kinetic energy, which combines arrow mass and velocity, is a better measure of penetration capability. This calculator computes KE in foot-pounds using the standard archery formula and maps your setup to hunting thresholds for small game, deer, elk and moose, and dangerous game. If you do not own a chronograph, the built-in arrow speed estimator models your approximate fps from draw weight, draw length, and bow type, giving you a useful KE estimate without any additional equipment. Finally, arrow mass matters for equipment safety. The industry minimum is 5 grains of arrow weight per pound of draw weight — so a 60 lb bow needs at least a 300 grain arrow. Shooting an arrow that is too light can damage your bow and is unsafe. This calculator checks your arrow against that guideline and flags a warning if your setup falls below the safe minimum.
Understanding Bow Draw Weight
What Is Draw Weight?
Draw weight is the maximum force in pounds required to pull a bowstring from rest to full draw. For recurve and longbow designs, this force increases linearly as you draw back — the bow follows Hooke's Law, storing more energy the further you pull. The peak force is typically felt right at full draw and is the number stamped on the bow limb at the standard 28-inch draw length. For compound bows, the force builds to a peak and then drops sharply as the cams roll over, reducing to a much lower holding weight at full draw. This let-off mechanism is what makes compound bows so popular among hunters who need to hold at full draw while waiting for the right shot angle.
How Is Draw Weight Calculated?
The most common adjustment formula is: Actual Draw Weight = Rated Draw Weight + (Your Draw Length − 28) × 2.5 for recurves and longbows. Compound bows use a smaller multiplier of approximately 1.5 lbs per inch because their cam geometry distributes the force differently. Holding weight for compound bows is calculated as: Holding Weight = Peak Draw Weight × (1 − Let-off Percentage / 100). Kinetic energy uses the formula: KE = (Arrow Weight in Grains × Arrow Speed²) / 450,240, where the constant 450,240 converts from grain·fps² to foot-pounds. Momentum = (Arrow Weight in Grains / 7,000) × Arrow Speed in fps. The minimum safe arrow weight is 5 grains per pound of draw weight.
Why Draw Weight Selection Matters
Choosing the correct draw weight affects accuracy, physical health, and hunting legality. Too much draw weight causes an archer to anticipate the shot, flinch, and develop poor form habits that are very difficult to correct later. Muscle strain and overuse injuries are common among archers who start too heavy. Conversely, too little draw weight may not provide sufficient kinetic energy for ethical hunting. A deer hunting setup generally needs at least 40 ft-lbs of kinetic energy for reliable penetration and quick, humane kills. Elk and larger game require 65 ft-lbs or more. This calculator bridges both concerns — it helps you stay within your physical capability while confirming your setup meets hunting standards.
Limitazioni e avvertenze
The draw weight adjustment formula (2.5 lbs/inch for recurves) is an industry average. Different bow designs, limb materials, and individual bow force curves can vary from this estimate by 0.5 to 1 lb per inch. For precise measurements, a bow scale is always more accurate than a formula. Arrow speed estimates from the built-in estimator are simplified models based on typical bow efficiency factors; actual velocities depend on peep sight weight, string material, wax condition, arrow rest type, and dozens of other variables. A chronograph remains the gold standard for speed measurement. Hunting draw weight minimums vary by US state and country — always verify local regulations before hunting.
Formulas
Recurve / Longbow Draw Weight Adjustment
Actual DW = Rated DW + (Actual DL − Rated DL) × 2.5
Adjust rated draw weight by ±2.5 lbs for each inch your draw length deviates from the rated draw length (usually 28")
Compound Bow Peak Draw Weight
Peak DW = Rated DW + (Actual DL − Rated DL) × 1.5
Compound bows gain approximately 1.5 lbs per inch due to their cam geometry distributing force differently than recurve limbs
Compound Holding Weight
Holding DW = Peak DW × (1 − Let-off / 100)
Example: 60 lb peak × (1 − 0.80) = 12 lbs holding weight at 80% let-off
Arrow Kinetic Energy
KE (ft-lbs) = (Arrow Weight (gr) × Speed (fps)²) / 450,240
The constant 450,240 converts grain·fps² to foot-pounds (derived from: 1 lb = 7,000 gr; kinetic energy = ½mv²)
Arrow Momentum
Momentum (slug·ft/s) = (Arrow Weight (gr) / 7,000) × Speed (fps)
Momentum correlates strongly with penetration depth; heavier slower arrows can outperform lighter faster arrows on tough-skinned game
Minimum Arrow Weight
Min Arrow (gr) = Draw Weight (lbs) × 5
Safety minimum: 5 grains per pound of draw weight to prevent bow damage from under-spine or too-light arrows
Reference Tables
Draw Weight Recommendations by Body Type
Suggested starting ranges from Hunter's Friend / Ascham Oaks combined tables
| Categoria | Peso corporeo | Suggested Range |
|---|---|---|
| Large Frame Men (18+) | 180+ lbs | 65–75 lbs |
| Medium Frame Men (18+) | 150–180 lbs | 55–65 lbs |
| Small Frame Men (18+) | 120–150 lbs | 45–55 lbs |
| Large Frame Women (18+) | 160+ lbs | 45–55 lbs |
| Medium Frame Women (18+) | 130–160 lbs | 30–40 lbs |
| Small Frame Women (18+) | 100–130 lbs | 25–35 lbs |
| Athletic Older Boys | 130–150 lbs | 40–50 lbs |
| Larger Child | 100–130 lbs | 25–35 lbs |
| Small Child | 70–100 lbs | 15–25 lbs |
Hunting Kinetic Energy Thresholds
Minimum kinetic energy (ft-lbs) recommended for ethical harvest by game species
| Game Species | Min KE (ft-lbs) | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Small Game | 20–30 | Rabbits, turkeys, upland birds |
| Deer / Antelope | 40–65 | 40 ft-lbs ethical minimum; 55+ preferred |
| Elk / Moose | 65–85 | Large body mass requires deep penetration |
| Dangerous Game (Bear, etc.) | 85+ | High bone density; penetration critical |
Hunting Minimum Draw Weight by Game (Common US Requirements)
Draw weight minimums vary by state — always verify local regulations
| Game | Typical Minimum Draw Weight | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Small Game | 25 lbs (informal) | Usually no regulated minimum |
| Whitetail Deer | 35–45 lbs | Varies widely by US state |
| Elk / Large Game | 45–50 lbs | Many western states require 45+ lbs |
| Dangerous Game (Bear) | 55+ lbs | State-specific; higher recommended |
Worked Examples
Recurve Archer — Short Draw Length
Rated draw weight: 45 lbs @ 28". Personal draw length: 26". Arrow: 350 gr at 165 fps.
Draw length difference: 26" − 28" = −2 inches
Actual draw weight: 45 + (−2 × 2.5) = 45 − 5 = 40 lbs
Min arrow weight: 40 × 5 = 200 gr (350 gr arrow is well above minimum ✓)
KE = (350 × 165²) / 450,240 = (350 × 27,225) / 450,240 ≈ 21.2 ft-lbs
Game suitability: Small game only (21 ft-lbs < 40 ft-lbs deer minimum)
40 lbs actual draw weight; 21.2 ft-lbs KE — suitable for small game archery only
Compound Hunter — Standard Setup
Rated: 60 lbs @ 28". Actual draw length: 29". 80% let-off. Arrow: 420 gr at 260 fps.
Compound adjustment: 60 + (29 − 28) × 1.5 = 60 + 1.5 = 61.5 lbs peak
Holding weight: 61.5 × (1 − 0.80) = 61.5 × 0.20 = 12.3 lbs
Min arrow: 61.5 × 5 = 307.5 gr (420 gr arrow is safe ✓)
KE = (420 × 260²) / 450,240 = (420 × 67,600) / 450,240 ≈ 63.0 ft-lbs
Momentum = (420 / 7,000) × 260 = 15.6 slug·ft/s
61.5 lbs peak, 12.3 lbs holding; 63 ft-lbs KE — suitable for deer hunting (borderline elk)
Come Utilizzare Questo Calcolatore
Scegli la tua modalità
Select 'Find My Actual Draw Weight' if you already own a bow and want to know your true poundage at your draw length. Select 'What Weight Should I Start With?' if you are buying your first bow or returning after a break and need a starting recommendation.
Enter Bow Settings (Adjust Mode)
Input the rated draw weight from your bow's limb label, the rated draw length it was measured at (usually 28 inches), and your personal draw length. For compound bows, also select your let-off percentage. Results update automatically as you type.
Add Arrow Details for Kinetic Energy
Enter your arrow weight in grains and either your chronograph-measured arrow speed or enable the speed estimator. The calculator will compute kinetic energy in foot-pounds and show which game species your setup legally and ethically supports.
Rivedi i tuoi risultati ed esporta
Read your actual draw weight, compound peak vs. holding weight breakdown, arrow minimum mass compliance, KE zone chart, and hunting suitability. Use the Print or Export CSV button to save your archer profile card for reference at the bow shop or range.
Domande Frequenti
Why does my actual draw weight differ from what's on the bow limb?
Bow manufacturers rate draw weight at the AMO standard of 28 inches. If your personal draw length is shorter or longer than 28 inches, the bow is pulled to a different point on its force curve, which changes the poundage. Recurve and longbow designs follow a roughly linear force curve, gaining or losing about 2 to 2.5 pounds per inch of deviation from 28 inches. Compound bows gain weight more slowly, approximately 1 to 2 pounds per inch, because their cam geometry spreads the force differently. This is why two archers shooting the same '50-pound recurve' can experience noticeably different draw weights if their draw lengths differ by several inches.
What is compound bow let-off and why does it matter?
Let-off is the percentage reduction in draw weight that a compound bow's cam system provides at full draw. A bow with 80% let-off and a 60-pound peak draw weight only requires you to hold 12 pounds at full draw. This is crucial for hunters who must hold steady while waiting for an animal to present the right angle — sometimes for many seconds. High let-off makes compound bows much more forgiving for beginners and aging archers. However, peak draw weight still determines arrow speed and kinetic energy. For arrow spine selection, always use peak draw weight, not holding weight.
What draw weight do I need for deer hunting?
Most US states require a minimum draw weight of 35 to 45 pounds for whitetail deer hunting — check your specific state regulations because these vary. However, minimum legal weight does not guarantee ethical kills. Archery experts recommend targeting at least 40 foot-pounds of kinetic energy for deer-sized game to ensure adequate penetration for a quick, humane harvest. A typical 50-pound recurve with a 350-grain arrow at 180 fps delivers approximately 25 ft-lbs, which is marginal. Increasing arrow weight or draw weight substantially improves this. Most successful deer hunters use 50 to 65 pounds with properly tuned equipment.
How do I find my correct draw length?
The most accurate method is to have a qualified archery shop measure your draw length with a long arrow or a dedicated draw length arrow on a properly set-up bow. For a quick estimate at home, measure your arm span from fingertip to fingertip with both arms extended horizontally, then divide by 2.5. For example, a 70-inch arm span suggests a 28-inch draw length. A secondary method is to measure your height in inches, subtract 15, and divide by 2 — this is less accurate but useful for a starting point. Draw length affects both comfort and accuracy; a draw that is too long causes poor form and missed shots.
What is the 5 grains per pound minimum arrow weight rule?
The 5 grains per pound guideline is a safety minimum established to prevent bow damage. Shooting an arrow that is too light — sometimes called a 'dry-fire-like' condition — puts extreme stress on the bow limbs because insufficient arrow mass fails to absorb the stored energy properly. For a 60-pound draw weight bow, the minimum safe arrow weight is 300 grains (60 × 5). Most archery manufacturers void their warranties if an arrow lighter than this minimum is used. For hunting, a heavier arrow is generally preferred because more mass improves penetration, momentum, and downrange energy retention, even if muzzle velocity is slightly lower.
How much should I increase my draw weight each month?
The standard beginner progression is to add no more than 5 pounds every 4 to 8 weeks, only when you can comfortably hold at full draw for 3 to 5 seconds without muscle trembling. Rushing weight increases is the most common cause of rotator cuff injuries and chronic shoulder problems in archers. Many experienced coaches recommend spending at least two full months at each weight level to build the specific muscle groups archery demands. For compound shooters, limb bolts typically allow adjustment of 10 to 15 pounds without needing new limbs. For recurves and longbows, moving up usually means purchasing heavier limbs or a new bow.