Picture this. You’re at a friend’s basement party. Someone pulls out a dartboard. Everyone steps up, throws a few darts, laughs, and talks trash. But you — you hit a triple 20 on your very first throw. The room goes quiet. You grin.
That moment? It’s closer than you think. Learning how to get started with darts is one of the easiest, most rewarding things you can do as a sports beginner in the US. Forget expensive equipment or elite athletic ability. All you really need is a dartboard, a set of darts, and a willingness to learn.
This guide gives you everything — setup, gear, rules, technique, practice drills, the mental game, and how to find your first local league. By the end, you’ll be ready to step up to the oche with real confidence.
What Is Darts? (And Why Americans Are Obsessed With It)
Darts is a precision throwing sport where players throw small, pointed projectiles — called darts — at a circular target board called a dartboard. It sounds simple. It is simple to start. But it takes years to truly master, which is exactly what makes it so addictive.
Originally a pub game from medieval England, darts has exploded in the United States over the last decade. Bars, game rooms, recreation centers, and basements across the country now have dartboards. The American Darts Organization (ADO) runs hundreds of local leagues in every state.
Here’s why beginners love it:
- Anyone can play. Any age, any fitness level, any background.
- It’s cheap to start. A solid beginner setup costs under $60.
- It’s competitive fast. You can challenge friends within your first week.
- It’s a mental sport. Strategy, focus, and math matter as much as aim.
- It’s deeply social. Darts is one of the few sports that’s better with a drink in hand.
What You Need to Get Started with Darts
The Dartboard
Your first decision: what kind of dartboard?
| Type | Best For | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Bristle / Sisal Board | Beginners & serious players | $30 – $120 |
| Electronic / Soft-Tip Board | Casual home use, auto-scoring | $50 – $200 |
| Magnetic Board | Kids, zero-damage practice | $10 – $25 |
Best choice for beginners: A bristle (sisal) dartboard. These are self-healing — the fibers close back up after each dart pull. They’re used in all official tournaments. Boards like the Winmau Blade 6 (~$60) or Viper Shot King (~$45) are perfect starting points.
💡 Pro Tip: Avoid cheap cork boards. They wear out fast, don’t hold darts well, and build bad habits.
Darts: Steel Tip vs. Soft Tip
| Type | Used With | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| Steel Tip | Bristle board | Traditional, tournament-standard |
| Soft Tip | Electronic board | Safer, lighter, bounces out more |
For authentic play, go steel tip. Most US bars and leagues use steel tip on bristle boards.
Weight matters. Start with darts in the 20–26 gram range. Most beginners do well around 22–24g. Heavier darts are more forgiving for new throwers.
Dart anatomy — know your gear:
- Barrel — The grip section. Made of brass (affordable) or tungsten (slimmer, better balance).
- Shaft/Stem — Connects barrel to flight. Comes in short, medium, and long.
- Flight — The “wing” at the back. Shapes affect drag and stability.
💡 Beginner Pick: A brass dart set around 22–24g is perfect to start. Budget around $15–25. Upgrade to tungsten after 3–6 months.
Other Gear You’ll Need
- Dartboard surround/cabinet — Protects your wall from stray darts. Get one.
- Dart mat — Marks the throw line, protects your floor, and prevents dart bounce damage.
- Dart case — Keeps your darts safe and organized.
- Scorer app — Free apps like Darts Scoreboard or Dart Counter handle math for you.

How to Set Up Your Dartboard (Official US Measurements)
Getting your setup right from day one matters. Wrong measurements = bad practice habits.
| Measurement | Standard |
|---|---|
| Bullseye height from floor | 5 feet 8 inches (1.73m) |
| Throw line (oche) from board | 7 feet 9¼ inches (2.37m) |
| Diagonal distance (floor to oche) | 9 feet 7½ inches (2.93m) |
Step-by-step setup:
- Mount the board so the bullseye is exactly 5’8″ from the floor.
- The 20 segment must be at the top (black, not white).
- Measure 7 feet 9¼ inches from the face of the board horizontally.
- Mark or tape the oche line on the floor.
- Make sure you have at least 5 feet of clear space on each side.
- Good lighting directly above the board makes a huge difference.
⚠️ Common Mistake: Many beginners measure from the wall instead of the face of the board. Always measure from the board’s face.

Understanding the Dartboard
Before you throw a single dart, learn the board.
The standard dartboard has 20 numbered segments arranged in a specific (non-random!) order designed to punish inaccuracy. Miss a 20 slightly? You land on 1 or 5.
Key scoring areas:
| Area | Points |
|---|---|
| Single segment | Face value (e.g., 20 = 20 pts) |
| Double ring (outer narrow ring) | 2× face value |
| Triple ring (inner narrow ring) | 3× face value |
| Bull (outer bull, green) | 25 points |
| Bullseye (inner bull, red) | 50 points |
The Triple 20 (T20) is the highest-scoring single throw: 60 points. Pro players aim here almost exclusively when scoring.
Basic Rules of Darts: The Games You Need to Know
501 — The Standard Game
This is the game you’ll see in every tournament, bar league, and competitive setting.
- Both players start at 501 points.
- Each turn, you throw 3 darts and subtract your total score.
- Goal: Reduce your score to exactly zero.
- Rule: You must finish on a double (or bullseye). This is called “checking out.”
- If you score too many and go below zero — that’s a “bust.” Your score resets to what it was before that turn.
Example checkout: If you need 32, aim for double 16. Hit it — you win.
301 — Faster Games, Perfect for Practice
Same rules as 501 but starting at 301. Shorter, faster, great for beginners.
Cricket — The Strategy Game
Cricket is wildly popular in the US, especially in bar leagues.
- Numbers in play: 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, and Bullseye.
- Hit a number 3 times to “close” it (own it).
- Once you close a number, you score points on it until your opponent closes it too.
- Win: Close all numbers and have equal or higher points.
Unlike 501, Cricket emphasizes strategy and board control as much as scoring power. Many beginners find it easier to learn and more enjoyable to play.
Around the Clock — Best for Absolute Beginners
Hit every number from 1–20 in order, then the bullseye. No math. Just accuracy. Perfect for your first session.
How to Throw Darts: Stance, Grip & Release
This is where most beginners go wrong — and where most guides are too vague. Let’s fix that.
Your Stance
Your stance is your foundation. Get it wrong and nothing else works.
Step 1 — Foot position:
- Your dominant foot leads (right-handers: right foot forward).
- Face your body slightly toward the board — don’t stand square.
- Keep both feet behind the oche. You can lean forward, but feet stay back.

Three accepted stance styles:
| Stance | Description | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Forward stance | Front foot points at board, body angled | Most beginners |
| Side stance | Body turned 90° sideways, shoulder leads | Classic pub style |
| Angled stance | Hybrid of both | Natural throwers |
💡 Start with the forward stance. It’s the most natural for US beginners and gives the best sight line to the board.
Step 2 — Balance:
- Weight slightly on your front foot.
- Don’t lean so far you topple. Stay controlled.
- Keep your non-throwing arm relaxed at your side or slightly extended for balance.
How to Grip a Dart
The grip is personal — but here are rules everyone should follow:
- Hold the dart at the barrel (not the tip, not the flight).
- Use 3 fingers minimum: thumb, index, middle finger.
- Don’t death-grip it. Light but secure. Imagine holding a pen you’re about to write with.
- Fingers should feel relaxed, not tense.
- Point the dart slightly upward — about 10–15 degrees above horizontal.

Common grip mistakes:
- ❌ Gripping too tight → causes wobble and inconsistency
- ❌ Too many fingers → awkward release
- ❌ Tip pointing downward → poor arc trajectory
The Throwing Motion
Think of a dart throw like a piston — straight back, straight forward.
- Raise your elbow to roughly shoulder height. Keep it still throughout.
- Draw the dart back toward your face — near your cheek or eye line.
- Drive forward smoothly, accelerating through the release.
- Release when your arm is almost fully extended.
- Follow through — your hand should point toward the target after release.
⚠️ Biggest beginner mistake: Moving your elbow during the throw. Your elbow is your pivot point. It should stay locked in place.
Rhythm check: Slow back, fast forward. Never rush the draw. The power comes from the forward snap.
5 Common Beginner Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)
Most beginners make the same errors. Here’s what to watch for — and what competitors’ guides miss:
| Mistake | Why It Happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Elbow drifting outward | No awareness | Film yourself, check elbow stays up |
| Inconsistent grip pressure | Nerves | Practice “pen hold” grip at home daily |
| Aiming at wrong targets | No strategy | Learn basic 501 finishes before playing |
| Rushing throws | Excitement | Build a pre-throw routine (see below) |
| Wrong dart weight | Random buying | Start 22–24g, adjust based on feel |
The Pre-Shot Routine: Your Secret Weapon
Most beginner guides skip this entirely. Big mistake.
A pre-shot routine locks in consistency and eliminates nerves. Every top player has one.
Here’s a simple 5-step routine to build from day one:
- Step to the oche — same foot, same spot, every time.
- Take one slow breath — inhale through the nose, exhale slowly.
- Look at the target — not the dart. Pick your exact spot on the board.
- Set your grip — same grip pressure, every throw.
- Throw — smooth, committed, no hesitation.
This takes about 4–5 seconds. It feels weird at first. After a week, it becomes automatic — and your consistency will visibly improve.
Practice Drills to Improve Fast (Solo)
You don’t need a partner to get better. These drills are used by serious players at every level.
Drill 1: Around the Clock
Goal: Hit 1 through 20 in order, then bullseye. Rules: Beginners — singles count. Intermediate — doubles only. Why it works: Builds familiarity with the entire board, not just T20.
Drill 2: Group Therapy (Grouping Drill)
Goal: Throw all 3 darts. Then aim your next 3 at the first dart you threw. Why it works: Trains tight grouping — the foundation of consistent scoring.
💡 Track this: Measure the spread of your 3 darts in inches each session. Watch it shrink over weeks.
Drill 3: Doubles Focus
Goal: Hit each double from D1–D20 and both bulls in order. Why it works: You can’t win at 501 without hitting doubles. Most beginners never practice them until it’s too late.
Target: Hit at least 50% of doubles before joining a league.
Drill 4: The 100-Hit Challenge
Goal: Hit T20, T19, and T18 — track every hit for a week. Aim for 100 total hits across all three. Why it works: Builds the muscle memory needed for high-scoring turns in 501.
Drill 5: Pressure 301
Goal: Play solo 301, but give yourself a par score — say, 15 darts to finish. Why it works: Creates pressure. You’re competing against yourself. This is “deep practice” — far more effective than mindless throwing.

The Mental Game: What No One Tells Beginners
Here’s what separates a 6-month player from a 2-year player: mental game.
Darts is as much a mental sport as a physical one. Your brain affects every throw.

Visualization
Before each throw, see the dart landing exactly where you want. Not vaguely — specifically. Picture the dart entering the triple 20 wire. Research shows this mental rehearsal measurably improves accuracy over time.
Managing the “Dartitis” Fear
Dartitis is the yips of darts — a mental block that causes hesitation at the release point. It affects beginners who over-think their throws.
Prevention:
- Never analyze your throw mid-motion. Commit fully.
- If you miss badly, reset your routine before the next dart — don’t react.
- Focus on process, not score. Good routine = good results over time.
Breathing Control
Tension kills throws. Before pressure shots — a match-winning double, a crucial finish — take one full slow breath. Drop your shoulders. Then throw.
Positive Self-Talk
Replace “I always miss this double” with “I’ve hit this before, I’ll hit it again.” This isn’t soft advice — it’s sports psychology used at the professional level.
Darts Glossary: Key Terms Every US Beginner Must Know
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Oche | The throwing line (pronounced “ockey”) |
| Barrel | The grip section of the dart |
| Flight | The wing at the back of the dart |
| Shaft/Stem | Connects barrel to flight |
| Bust | Scoring too many — turn is void |
| Checkout | Finishing combination to win |
| Double | Double the segment value |
| Triple | Triple the segment value — max scoring area |
| Tops | Double 20 — the most common checkout target |
| Madhouse | Double 1 — the hardest checkout |
| Ton | 100 points in one turn |
| Ton-80 | 180 points — maximum possible score in one turn (3x T20) |
| Cricket | Popular US darts game using numbers 15–20 + bull |
How to Find Darts Leagues in the US
Playing solo is fun. Playing in a league is addictive.
Where to find leagues:
- American Darts Organization (ADO) — dartsamérica.com — the largest governing body in the US
- National Dart Association (NDA) — focuses on soft-tip electronic darts
- Local bars and game rooms — most cities have weekly league nights; just ask the bartender
- Facebook Groups — search “[Your City] Darts League”
- Meetup.com — search “darts” in your zip code
What to expect as a new league player:
- Most leagues have beginner/C divisions. You won’t be thrown in with sharks.
- Handicap systems are common — beginners compete fairly against experienced players.
- The social side is half the reason people join. Expect new friends fast.

Beginner Darts Budget Guide
| Setup Level | What You Get | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Budget Starter | Basic bristle board + brass darts | $40–$55 |
| Solid Beginner | Mid-range bristle board + brass/low tungsten darts + surround | $75–$110 |
| Serious Beginner | Quality bristle board (Winmau/Unicorn) + tungsten darts + mat + case | $130–$180 |
💡 Best value move: Buy a mid-range board like the Winmau Blade 5 and a starter pack of 22g brass darts. Total cost: ~$65. That’s all you need for 6+ months.
Quick Reference Cheat Sheet
| What | Standard |
|---|---|
| Bullseye height | 5 feet 8 inches |
| Throw line distance | 7 feet 9¼ inches |
| Starter dart weight | 22–24 grams |
| Best beginner game | Around the Clock or Cricket |
| First checkout to learn | Double 16 (32 remaining) |
| Practice session length | 20–30 minutes daily |
| Best solo drill | Around the Clock + Doubles Focus |
FAQ: How to Get Started with Darts
Q: How long does it take to get good at darts? Most beginners see noticeable improvement within 2–4 weeks of regular practice. Competitive league-level play usually comes after 3–6 months of consistent throwing.
Q: Is darts a sport or a game? It’s both. Darts is officially recognized as a sport in the US and internationally, with professional tours, world championships, and regulated competitions.
Q: Can I play darts in a small apartment? Yes. You only need about 8–9 feet of clear space from wall to oche. Electronic boards with soft tips are safer for tight spaces.
Q: What weight darts should a beginner use? Start in the 22–24 gram range. Heavier darts (24–26g) are more forgiving. Lighter darts (18–20g) require more precise throws. Experiment after 1–2 months.
Q: Do I need an expensive dartboard to start? No. A $35–$50 bristle sisal board is perfectly fine for beginners. Avoid magnetic or cork boards.
Q: How do I stop bouncing darts? Bounce-outs happen when darts hit wire dividers. Two fixes: aim slightly off-center from the wires, and upgrade to a board with thin wire dividers (like the Winmau Blade series).
Q: What’s the best darts game for beginners? Start with Around the Clock for your first few sessions — no math required. Then move to Cricket for strategy fun, and eventually 501 for competitive play.
Final Thoughts
Learning how to get started with darts is one of the best decisions you can make as a sports beginner. It’s cheap, social, mentally stimulating, and competitive at every level — from your first basement game to a local ADO league.
Athletic ability isn’t required. A small amount of space is usually enough, and getting started doesn’t require a large budget.
Success in darts comes down to four essentials: a quality dartboard, suitable darts, a solid grasp of the fundamentals, and purposeful practice.
Set up your board today. Learn your stance. Run the Around the Clock drill tonight. In two weeks, you’ll be hitting numbers you never expected — and wondering why you didn’t start sooner.
Now step up to the oche. Your first triple 20 is waiting.
Share this guide with a friend who’s never tried darts — and challenge them to a game this weekend.












