Fade is a disc golf flight rating that describes how strongly a disc finishes left as it slows down at the end of its flight, for a right-handed backhand thrower. It's measured on a scale from 0 to 5 — the higher the number, the harder the disc fades.

The quick answer

Fade is the fourth and final number in disc golf's standard flight rating system (Speed / Glide / Turn / Fade). Every disc fades at the end of its flight — even a "0 fade" disc has a small finishing motion — but the rated number tells you how aggressive that finish is.

Reading fade ratings:

  • 0: Minimal fade. Disc finishes straight or with a very gentle drift.
  • 1: Soft, reliable fade. Most beginner-friendly discs live here.
  • 2: Standard fade. Most midranges and many fairway drivers.
  • 3-4: Strong fade. Overstable distance drivers, utility approach discs.
  • 5: Hard, fast fade. Very overstable specialty discs used for skip shots, forehand approaches, and worst-wind utility work.

Why discs fade

As a spinning disc loses forward speed, the aerodynamic forces that kept it flying flat begin to weaken. Gyroscopic precession then takes over — the disc's tendency to roll one way under asymmetric pressure becomes the dominant force. For a right-handed backhand thrower, that direction is left.

Fade is essentially the disc's natural end-of-flight behavior. The more overstable a disc's shape is, the more aggressively it fades. Conversely, very understable discs may not fade at all — they can stall and drop without ever banking left.

RHBH, LHBH, and forehand

Like the other three flight numbers, fade is rated from a right-handed backhand perspective. For a left-handed backhand or right-handed forehand thrower, the direction reverses — a 3-fade disc finishes right at the end of flight. The number itself describes how strongly, not which direction.

Real examples — how fade plays out

  • The Innova Mako3 (5 / 5 / 0 / 0) is famously straight-flying. Its 0 fade means it finishes wherever you point it, with almost no left-drift at the end of flight.
  • The Discraft Buzzz (5 / 4 / -1 / 1) has a soft, predictable fade. It finishes with a gentle leftward arc — enough to settle a disc to a stop but not enough to feel forced.
  • The Innova Destroyer (12 / 5 / -1 / 3) has a strong fade typical of overstable distance drivers. Even on a flat release, the disc will dive left at the end of its flight.
  • Fade 5 discs are rare and specialized — utility molds used for spike hyzers or extreme forehand approaches. Most players don't bag one until they're well into intermediate skill level.

When fade matters when choosing a disc

Three situations where fade rating is critical:

  1. Headwinds. Wind effectively increases a disc's relative speed, which amplifies both turn and fade. Higher-fade discs are better in headwinds because they're less likely to be over-turned by the wind and they finish predictably.
  2. Forehand drives. Forehand throws are more prone to wobble and off-axis releases. Overstable, high-fade discs are forgiving — they'll come back to their fade line even from a wobbly start.
  3. Approach precision. A 0-fade approach disc lands roughly where you throw it. A 3-fade approach disc lands somewhere left of where you throw it. For target-oriented shots inside circle 2, fade rating predicts where the disc ends up — and the Discraft Luna (3-fade approach disc) is popular precisely because its consistent fade makes its landing point predictable.

Where fade ratings break down

Fade ratings, like all flight ratings, are imperfect:

Fade is power-dependent. A 12-speed driver with 3 fade only behaves as rated if you throw it at its design speed. Under-throw it, and the fade dominates earlier — making the disc finish even further left than the rating would suggest. This is why beginners often find overstable drivers unsatisfying; they're never throwing them hard enough to reach the disc's "cruise" phase before fade takes over.

Plastic affects fade meaningfully. Premium plastics (Champion, Z, C-Line) retain their fade longer. Base plastics (DX, Pro, Active) lose fade as the disc beats in. A two-year-old DX Destroyer will fade less than a fresh Star Destroyer even though they're labeled identically.

Community data tends to report slightly less fade than manufacturers. Across nearly every commercial mold, real throwers observe somewhat softer fade than published numbers suggest. Discpedia surfaces both values on every disc page so you can choose based on observed behavior, not just marketing.

For direct contrasts of fade in action, look at the strong-fade Luna (3 fade), the soft-fade Buzzz (1 fade), and the no-fade Mako3 (0 fade). Browse all 25 discs in the disc index.