In archery, a home arrow describes the moment when the arrow is fully aligned with the bowstring and aimed directly at the target. The home position in archery is the archer's starting reference point for every shot — the foundation from which the arrow is released. Establishing it consistently is what separates repeatable accuracy from guesswork.
The process begins by clipping the nock — the small notch at the back of the arrow — onto the bowstring. A correct fit produces an audible click, and a light tap should release the arrow cleanly. If the nock is too tight it can disrupt the release; too loose and the arrow may slip during the draw. Proper nocking ensures the arrow sits straight and aligned before the draw begins.
The archer draws the bowstring back, bringing the arrow with it. A consistent draw length is essential to a repeatable home arrow: variations in draw length change how the arrow behaves in flight, making a reliable anchor reference critical. Draw weight also matters — higher draw weights require stiffer arrow shafts to maintain proper flight.
At full draw, the archer aligns the arrow with the target using body position, sight alignment, and muscle memory. When the desired aim is achieved, the arrow is considered home. The archer holds this starting position in archery briefly to confirm the shot is steady before releasing.
Reaching a clean home arrow position on every shot takes deliberate repetition. Over time, archers develop the muscle memory needed to anchor to the same reference point shot after shot, and to adapt the home position for wind, varying distances, and different arrow types.
Equipment plays a supporting role. A well-matched arrow suited to your draw weight and bow type makes it easier to establish a reliable home arrow, and a recurve bow built to your draw length provides the mechanical consistency the position depends on. The bowstring itself is equally important — a quality string holds its length under repeated draws, keeping your anchor reference stable.
At a glance
The four main bow types
Most archery bows fall into one of these four families. Click any to read its full definition.
PAIR WITH THIS ARTICLE
Pick how you shoot — we'll surface the three Legend products that pair with this build.