Complete Beginner's Guide to Disc Golf Gear
Disc golf is refreshingly cheap to get into compared to most sports - most courses are free, and you can play your first round with a single disc. But walk into any disc golf shop or scroll a few "best of" lists and it's easy to feel like you need to spend hundreds of dollars before you even start. You don't.
Here's exactly what to buy first, what to skip, and where to spend more once you know you're hooked.
Step 1: Get Three Discs
Everything else is optional. A driver, a midrange, and a putter cover the vast majority of shots you'll need. Resist the urge to buy a "max distance" driver - those are designed for fast, experienced throws and will fly poorly (often hooking hard left for a right-handed backhand) in a beginner's hands.
The easiest solution is a starter set that bundles all three in beginner-friendly plastic. See our full breakdown in the Best Disc Golf Discs guide.
🥏 Recommended First Discs
Step 2: Get a Bag (Once You Have More Than a Few Discs)
With 3–6 discs, your pockets or a tote will do. Once your collection grows past that - and it will - a simple backpack keeps everything organized and takes the strain off your arms over 18 holes. You don't need a $130 premium pack for your first bag.
See our Best Disc Golf Bags guide for picks at every price point, starting around $35.
Step 3: Practice at Home (Optional, But Helpful)
Putting is the fastest way to lower your score, and you don't need a course to practice it. A basic basket in your backyard or garage lets you build a putting routine in whatever time you have. See our Best Disc Golf Baskets guide for affordable options.
Step 4: Wear the Right Shoes
This is the most overlooked beginner upgrade. Disc golf courses are often wet, muddy, or hilly, and regular sneakers slip - which directly affects your throwing stability. Trail running shoes or hiking shoes with grippy soles make a noticeable difference. See our Best Disc Golf Shoes guide.
What You Don't Need Yet
- A cart - useful once you're carrying a full bag over 18 holes regularly, but not essential for your first rounds. See the carts guide when you're ready.
- Premium plastic discs - your preferences will change a lot in your first season. Learn on base plastic first.
- A huge disc collection - three discs is plenty to start. Add specialty discs only once you understand what your game is missing.
- Rangefinders, towels, gloves, etc. - nice-to-haves, not must-haves. Add them as you find a need.
Putting It All Together
For most new players, a reasonable first purchase looks like: a starter disc set (~$25–35), a basic backpack once your collection grows (~$35–40), and a pair of trail shoes if you don't already own a pair. That's a complete, functional setup for well under $100 - everything else can wait until you know what your game actually needs.
For an even tighter budget breakdown, see our Best Disc Golf Gear Under $50 roundup.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the single most important first purchase?
A beginner-friendly disc set. Everything else - bags, baskets, shoes - supports the actual throwing, but the discs are what determine whether your early rounds feel fun or frustrating.
Do I need to join a club to play?
No. Most disc golf courses are public, free, and open to anyone. Clubs and leagues are a great way to meet other players and improve faster, but they're entirely optional.
How much should I expect to spend in my first year?
Many players start for under $50 and add gear gradually. A reasonable first-year budget - including a bag, a few extra discs, and a basket for practice - is often $100–150 spread out as you go.