Disc golf round stats go beyond your total score — counting birdies, pars, and bogeys reveals exactly where your game gains and loses strokes. Enter your hole-by-hole performance to get a complete statistical breakdown.
Round Setup
Hole Results
Click each hole to set the score relative to par:
Advanced Stats (Optional)
How to Use the Disc Golf Round Stats Tool
Tracking disc golf round statistics gives you actionable data on which parts of your game need work. Simply knowing your total score doesn't reveal whether you lost strokes from poor drives, bad approaches, or missed putts. This tool breaks it all down.
Step 1: Set Up Your Round
Enter the course par and your total score. If you want a rating estimate, also enter the course SSA. Then click each hole square to cycle through: Eagle (−2), Birdie (−1), Par, Bogey (+1), Double (+2). Click through each of the 18 holes.
Step 2: Add Advanced Stats (Optional)
For deeper analysis, enter your fairways hit, Circle 1 putt attempts, and Circle 1 putts made. Circle 1 (inside 33 feet) is the standard metric for putting performance in professional disc golf. A 75%+ C1X (circle 1 excluding the putt after landing near the basket) is considered strong for competitive play.
Interpreting Your Results
High bogey rates (more than 6 per round) indicate a need for better approach accuracy or scramble recovery. Low birdie rates combined with good pars suggest your game is consistent but not aggressive enough. A birdie-to-bogey ratio above 1:1 typically produces below-par rounds.
FAQ
Is this round stats tool free?
Yes, completely free with no signup required. All calculations run locally in your browser.
Is my data private?
Yes. No data is sent to any server. Your round stats are processed locally.
What is a good birdie rate in disc golf?
Beginners average 0-2 birdies per 18 holes. Intermediate players (800-900 rated) average 2-5 birdies. Advanced amateurs (900-950) average 5-8 birdies. Professional players regularly shoot 8+ birdies per round with multiple eagles in strong rounds.
What counts as a scramble in disc golf?
A scramble (also called a save) is when you recover from a missed fairway or poor approach shot and still make par or better. It measures your short game and putting efficiency. A 50%+ scramble rate indicates strong recovery play.
How is PDGA rating estimated from my score?
Rating is estimated using: Rating = 1000 + (SSA - your score) × 8.33. The SSA (Scratch Scoring Average) is the expected score for a 1000-rated player. Enter your score and the course SSA to get an estimated round rating.
What should I focus on to reduce bogeys?
Most bogeys come from missed approaches and missed putts. Focus on: (1) landing your approach disc within 30 feet of the basket, and (2) converting putts inside 33 feet (circle 1). Improving circle 1 putting has the biggest impact on reducing bogeys per round.