Arrow inserts are small threaded sleeves installed inside the point end of an arrow shaft. They anchor screw-in points and broadheads, add forward weight that shifts the balance toward the front of the shaft, and let you swap point styles without re-gluing the shaft.
Most archery inserts are made from aluminum or brass, and the difference matters for tuning.
The most common type. A lip stops the insert flush at the shaft face once seated. Used across most carbon and aluminum shaft diameters.
HIT inserts seat entirely inside the shaft — hidden from view. Originally engineered for small-diameter shafts where a lipped insert would no longer be compatible, they require epoxy and a dedicated seating tool to position them at the correct depth before the adhesive cures.
A hybrid design, part internal and part external. Easton's 5mm Half-Out inserts are available in 25-grain aluminum or 75-grain steel, and extend roughly half an inch beyond the shaft to provide a flush fit with 5/16" points and broadheads.
Glue-in inserts for arrows are bonded with adhesive — epoxy for carbon shafts, hot melt for aluminum. Screw-in inserts thread directly into aluminum shafts with larger inner diameters and are easy to remove, though they can loosen over time.
Getting your aluminum arrow inserts or brass inserts right is one step in a broader tuning process. Understanding how arrow spine relates to your draw weight ensures all your components work together for consistent flight.
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.