Recurve Bow Length Calculator — WA/AMO Sizing Chart

🏹 Recurve Bow Length Calculator

Find your ideal recurve bow length using WA/AMO standards — by draw length, discipline & experience

Quick Presets
📏Enter Your Details
🎯 Your Recurve Bow Recommendation
Recommended Bow Length
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WA/FITA Size Category
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Typical Brace Height
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inches
Riser + Limb Configuration
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Your Draw Length:--
Discipline:--
Recommended Bow Length:--
Brace Height Range:--
Riser / Limb Options:--
Height Cross-Check:--
Olympic Tip: Olympic archers prefer 70–72" bows for better stability at long distances (70m and beyond). The longer limbs reduce vibration and improve consistency.
Brace Height Tip: Brace height affects forgiveness — a higher brace height (8–9"+) is more forgiving of form errors, making it ideal for beginners and recurve archers still refining technique.
📋Draw Length to Bow Length Chart (WA/AMO Standard)
Draw Length Recommended Bow Length Bow Length (cm) Archer Type
Under 25"64"163 cmYouth / Short Draw
25" – 26.5"66"168 cmBeginner Adult / Junior
26.5" – 28"68"173 cmAverage Adult
28" – 29.5"70"178 cmOlympic / Tall Adult
29.5" and above72"183 cmLong Draw / Very Tall
🔧Riser + Limb Combinations
Riser Length Limb Size Total Bow Length Common Use
17" (Short)Short Limbs62–64"Youth / Very Short Draw
19" (Short)Short Limbs64"Youth / Junior
23" (Medium)Short Limbs66"Beginner Adult
25" (ILF Standard)Short Limbs66–68"General Adult
25" (ILF Standard)Medium Limbs68"Most Common Setup
25" (ILF Standard)Long Limbs70"Olympic / Competitive
27" (Long)Long Limbs72"Long Draw / Tall Archers
📐Brace Height by Bow Length
Bow Length Min Brace Height Max Brace Height Recommended Range
64"6.0"7.5"6.5–7.0"
66"6.5"8.0"7.0–7.5"
68"7.0"8.5"7.5–8.0"
70"7.5"9.0"8.0–8.5"
72"8.0"9.5"8.5–9.0"
🎯Discipline Recommendations
Olympic Target
70–72"
Stability at 70m
Indoor Target
66–70"
18m / 25m
Field Archery
64–68"
Maneuverability
3D Archery
62–68"
Short & compact

Picking the right recurve bow length matters more than many beginners think The bow must fit your draw length and also your body as archer. Draw length is simply how far you can pull the string until full draw.

For most archers, the “sweet spot” is between 66 and 68 inches. A 68-inch bow is a common standard length for many folks, though not for all. If your draw length is about 28 inches, a 68-inch bow works well for Olympic recurve shooting.

How to Pick the Right Recurve Bow Length

As a general rule, the bow is around 40 inches longer than the draw length.

Here is a useful summary based on draw length. If your draw length is under 26 inches, a 64-inch bow usually works. Between 26 and 28 inches, choose 66 inches.

Between 28 and 30 inches, the best choice is a 68-inch bow. And for anything above 30 inches, a 70-inch bow makes senese.

Interestingly is how the “official” length actually works. A 68-inch bow does not necessarily measure 68 inches from tip to tip. The number comes from a standard method defined by AMO.

The AMO bow length is actually three inches longer than the AMO bow string that keeps the bow at the right height.

Takedown recurve bows allow archers to mix risers and limbs to reach different lengths. With a 25-inch riser, short limbs give a 66-inch bow, medium limbs do 68 inches, and long limbs cause 70 inches. If you switch to a 23-inch riser, short limbs give 64 inches, medium give 66, and long give 68.

Such flexibility is really useful.

Target archery and hunting require different lengths. World archery disciplines, such as barebow and Olympic recurve, typically use bows in the 66 to 72-inch range. Hunting recurves tend to be shorter.

For hunting, something in the 62 to 64-inch range commonly works better, because longer bows can be a pain to bear through woods. For bowfishing, even shorter bows around 50 to 54 inches are great, because they have less risk to hit the knee rails on the boat.

Someone with a short draw length, for instance 23 inches, might require a bow as short as 62 inches. Folk with average draw length honestly can shoot almost everything, from a 60-inch hunting recurve to a 70-inch target recurve, just fine. Personal preference here plays a big role.

Beginners should not care too much about bow length, because it is one of the less important specs early. Moreover, draw length can even adjust as your form improves over time.

Finding the best size means a bit of trial and error. A 66-inch bow commonly gives a nice balance between little finger pinch and a solid power draw for many shooters. Finding thebest size takes some trial and error.

Recurve Bow Length Calculator — WA/AMO Sizing Chart

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