FOC Calculator: What It Is and How to Use It
FOC Calculator
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Arrow Measurements
Enter your arrow component details
FOC Formula
FOC (%) = ((BF − (L ÷ 2)) ÷ L) × 100
BF = Balance Point from nock end · L = Total Arrow Length
in
in
Component Weights
gr
gr
gr
gr
gr
FRONT OF CENTER
Arrow Length
inches
Balance Point
inches from nock
Total Weight
grains
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FOC Position Gauge
Visual balance position along the arrow
0% 7% 10% 15% 25% 30%+
Poor <7% Fair 7–10% Good 10–15% Best 15–19% High >19%
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Step-by-Step
Full calculation breakdown
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    Component Chart
    Weight distribution
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    FOC Reference Table
    Your result compared to standard ranges
    FOC Range Rating Best For Penetration Wind Drift
    FOC Range Guide
    Below 7%
    Low FOC
    < 7%
    Arrow tail-heavy. Poor flight stability, inconsistent groups. Not recommended for any application.
    7–10%
    Marginal FOC
    7–10%
    Acceptable for short-range target work. Flight will be somewhat erratic at longer distances.
    10–15%
    Good FOC
    10–15%
    Excellent all-around performance. Recommended for 3D archery, field archery, and general target shooting.
    15–19%
    Optimal FOC
    15–19%
    Ideal for hunting applications. Excellent penetration, great stability, and resists wind drift effectively.
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    FOC Calculator: What It Is and How to Use It

    If you shoot a bow, whether for hunting or target archery, you have probably heard the term FOC thrown around. Some archers obsess over it, others have no idea what it means. Either way, your arrow’s FOC percentage has a real effect on how it flies, how accurate it is, and how well it performs at distance.

    The FOC Calculator in this tool does one thing really well. It takes your arrow measurements and gives you an instant FOC percentage, along with a full breakdown of exactly how that number was calculated. No guesswork, no manual math, just clean results you can actually use.

    What FOC Actually Means

    FOC stands for Front of Center. It is a percentage that tells you how much of your arrow’s weight is shifted toward the front half. A higher FOC means more weight is sitting forward of center. A lower FOC means the arrow is more balanced toward the tail.

    The reason this matters is simple physics. An arrow that is slightly front-heavy will stabilize faster in flight, resist wind better, and hit with more consistency. Too light at the front and the arrow tends to wobble, plane off course, or lose accuracy at longer distances.

    The standard FOC formula used by archers and manufacturers is this:

    FOC (%) = ((Balance Point from Nock minus Half the Arrow Length) divided by Total Arrow Length) times 100

    That is not complicated once you see it broken down, and the calculator walks you through each step so you understand where your number is actually coming from.

    How to Use This Calculator

    You need two measurements to get started. First, the total arrow length from the bottom of the nock groove to the very end of the shaft. Second, the balance point, which is how far from the nock end the arrow balances on your finger.

    Plug both numbers in, hit Calculate FOC, and the result appears immediately along with a visual gauge, a step-by-step breakdown, and a reference table showing exactly where your arrow lands across the standard FOC ranges.

    The tool also has an Advanced mode if you want to go deeper. In that mode you can enter the weight of each individual component, including the shaft, point, insert, fletching, and nock. When you do that, a doughnut chart shows the weight distribution across all parts, which is genuinely useful if you are trying to figure out where to add or remove weight.

    There is also a Compare mode that lets you run three different arrow setups side by side. If you are deciding between a 100 grain point and a 125 grain point, or comparing two different shafts, you can see the FOC results for each setup without switching back and forth.

    What the Numbers Actually Mean

    The FOC gauge in the calculator highlights five zones and here is what each one means in plain terms.

    Anything below 7 percent is considered poor. The arrow is tail-heavy and will not fly reliably regardless of your form or bow setup.

    Between 7 and 10 percent is marginal. It works at close range but starts to break down at longer distances or in wind.

    From 10 to 15 percent is where most target and 3D archers want to be. Flight is clean, groups are consistent, and the setup works well across different distances.

    From 15 to 19 percent is the hunting sweet spot. Penetration improves noticeably, wind drift drops, and the arrow hits with authority downrange. Most bow hunters aim to land in this zone.

    Above 19 percent is high FOC territory. Some hunters push into this range intentionally for big game or tough-angle shots. The arrow is very front-heavy which helps penetration, but you give up some speed and kinetic energy in the process.

    Adjusting Your FOC

    Once you know your current FOC number, the next logical question is whether you need to change it. A few practical ways archers adjust FOC include switching to a heavier point or broadhead, adding a brass insert, changing to a lighter nock or fletching, or cutting the shaft slightly shorter.

    Each change shifts the balance point and affects your percentage. Running the calculator again after any adjustment takes about ten seconds and shows you exactly how much the change moved the needle.

    Who This Tool Is Actually For

    Bowhunters tuning a new arrow build before season will find it useful immediately. Competitive archers dialing in setups for 3D or field rounds can use it to optimize without relying on feel alone. Even beginners who just want to understand why their arrows are flying inconsistently can use this to check if FOC is part of the problem.

    The calculator also includes a copy and share function so you can quickly send your result to a coach, pro shop, or archery forum thread without having to retype everything.

    Conclusion

    The FOC Calculator takes what used to be a calculation most archers did by hand or skipped entirely and makes it genuinely easy to understand. If you have never checked your arrow’s FOC before, it is worth doing. And if you have been guessing at it, now you have an accurate number to work from.