Arrow weight is one of the most consequential choices a bowhunter makes — yet it's also one of the least understood. Heavier arrows hit harder and penetrate deeper. Lighter arrows fly faster and flatter. Where you land on that spectrum should depend on what you're hunting, how far you're shooting, and what you want your setup to prioritize. Here's the data you need to make that decision.
Understanding the Numbers: GPI, Total Arrow Weight, and Grains per Pound
Arrow weight is measured in grains (gr). The total weight of a finished hunting arrow includes the shaft, insert, point/broadhead, nock, and fletching. When you weigh an arrow on a grain scale, you're measuring total arrow weight — and this is the number that matters for calculating kinetic energy and momentum.
GPI (grains per inch) describes shaft weight only, before you add any components. A shaft with a GPI of 8.5 cut to 28 inches weighs 238 grains before anything is added. GPI is useful for comparing shafts but is not your final arrow weight.
Grains per pound of draw weight is a common rule of thumb for minimum safe arrow weight. Most bow manufacturers recommend at least 5 grains per pound of draw weight. A 70-pound bow should shoot arrows weighing at least 350 grains total. Lighter arrows can cause dry-fire-like stress on the bow system and reduce bow longevity.
Heavy vs. Light: The Core Trade-Off
🏋️ Heavy Arrow (500+ gr)
- ✓ Superior penetration
- ✓ Higher momentum (harder to stop)
- ✓ Quieter at the shot
- ✓ Less wind drift
- ✓ Easier on the bow
- ✗ Slower — lower IBO speed
- ✗ More arc = steeper trajectory
- ✗ Tighter distance estimation required
⚡ Light Arrow (350–420 gr)
- ✓ Faster — flatter trajectory
- ✓ More forgiving of ranging errors
- ✓ Higher kinetic energy at the shot
- ✗ Less penetration for a given KE
- ✗ More deflection on bone
- ✗ Louder at the shot
- ✗ More wind drift at distance
Kinetic Energy vs. Momentum: Why Both Matter
Kinetic energy (KE) and momentum (momentum = mass × velocity) are both used to evaluate an arrow's effectiveness, but they tell you different things. KE measures how hard the arrow hits on impact — it's the energy available to drive the arrow into the animal. Momentum measures how hard the arrow is to stop — it determines how far the arrow continues to penetrate after impact.
Heavier arrows carry more momentum. At the same KE, a heavy, slow arrow will penetrate deeper than a light, fast arrow because momentum is proportional to mass while KE is proportional to mass times velocity squared — speed matters more for KE, but mass matters more for momentum. This is why big-game hunters targeting elk, moose, and bear consistently prefer heavier arrows even at the cost of speed.
| Total Arrow Weight | Category | Best For | Typical Speed (at 70 lb) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 350–420 gr | Light | Antelope, long shots, open terrain | 285–310 fps |
| 420–500 gr | Mid-weight | Whitetail, mule deer, general hunting | 265–290 fps |
| 500–600 gr | Heavy | Elk, black bear, hogs | 245–270 fps |
| 600+ gr | Heavyweight / trad-style | Moose, dangerous game, trad bowhunting | 220–250 fps |
Note on speed estimates: These ranges assume a 70-lb draw weight and approximately 28" draw length. Every 5 grains of arrow weight added typically costs 1–1.5 fps. Your actual speed will vary — shoot through a chronograph to confirm.
Minimum Kinetic Energy by Game Animal
The NFAA and most experienced bowhunters use the following KE guidelines. These are minimums — more is always better for ethical kills.
| Game Animal | Minimum KE (ft-lbs) | Recommended KE |
|---|---|---|
| Small game (rabbit, turkey) | 25 ft-lbs | 25–40 ft-lbs |
| Whitetail deer | 40 ft-lbs | 50–65 ft-lbs |
| Mule deer / antelope | 40 ft-lbs | 55–70 ft-lbs |
| Black bear | 50 ft-lbs | 65–85 ft-lbs |
| Elk / caribou | 65 ft-lbs | 75–95 ft-lbs |
| Moose / brown bear | 80 ft-lbs | 90+ ft-lbs |
KE is calculated as: KE = (arrow weight in grains × speed² ) ÷ 450,240. A 450-grain arrow at 275 fps produces approximately 75.6 ft-lbs of kinetic energy — well within the recommended range for elk.
How Arrow Weight Affects Your Sight Tape
This is where arrow weight becomes directly relevant to your sight tape. Every time you change arrow weight — switching shafts, adding a heavier insert, going from a 100-grain to a 125-grain broadhead — your arrow's trajectory changes. A heavier arrow slows down and arcs more steeply. Your 40-yard pin is no longer accurate for the heavier arrow even if your 20-yard zero looks the same.
The practical impact: if you swap to a heavier hunting arrow setup after practicing all summer with lighter arrows, you need to rebuild your sight tape. The yardage marks will shift — especially at 40–60 yards. Use SightTapeGen to generate a custom tape for your actual hunting arrow weight and confirmed arrow speed, and verify it at each distance before hunting season.
Building Your Arrow: Component Weight Breakdown
Understanding where your arrow's weight comes from helps you tune total weight intentionally. Here's a typical hunting arrow breakdown:
| Component | Typical Weight Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shaft (28", mid-weight carbon) | 240–320 gr | GPI × cut length |
| Insert | 10–50 gr | Heavy brass inserts add significant weight |
| Broadhead / field tip | 85–125 gr | Most common: 100 gr; big-game hunters often run 125 gr |
| Nock | 8–15 gr | Lighted nocks add ~15–20 gr vs. standard |
| Fletching (3× vanes) | 15–30 gr | Larger vanes add weight; feathers are lighter |
| Typical total | 380–530 gr | Varies widely by component choice |
If you want to increase total arrow weight without changing your shaft or broadhead, the easiest levers are: heavier inserts (brass vs. aluminum), a heavier broadhead (125 gr vs. 100 gr), or a heavier nock system. If you want to go lighter, move to a lightweight aluminum insert and standard nock, and choose a high-GPI lightweight shaft.
The Bottom Line by Setup
Whitetail under 40 yards: 420–480 gr total. Plenty of speed, excellent penetration, and the extra weight quiets the shot.
Mule deer / open country: 400–450 gr. Slightly lighter for a flatter trajectory at distance. Confirmed arrow speed matters — verify your sight tape at 50+ yards.
Elk, bear, or any tough big game: 500–600 gr or heavier. Penetration and momentum matter more than speed here. Don't go light to chase speed on heavy game.
Traditional bowhunting: 600+ gr is common and appropriate — aluminum or wood arrows at traditional bow speeds need the weight to carry momentum.
Once you've settled on your hunting arrow setup, weigh it on a grain scale and shoot it through a chronograph to confirm actual speed. Then build a custom sight tape at SightTapeGen with those real numbers — not manufacturer estimates. Your yardage marks will be accurate at every distance, not just at 20 yards.