Glide is a disc golf flight rating that describes how well a disc stays in the air during flight. It's measured on a scale from 1 to 7 β the higher the number, the longer the disc resists falling out of the air, which generally translates to more distance.
The quick answer
Glide is the second number in disc golf's standard flight rating system (Speed / Glide / Turn / Fade). Of the four ratings, glide is the most subjective β it doesn't have a tight technical definition, and manufacturers don't always agree on what a "5 glide" means versus a "4 glide." But the rating is still useful as a relative comparison within a brand.
Reading glide ratings:
- 1-2: Low glide. Used mostly on putters and short approach discs where precise distance control matters more than carry.
- 3-4: Moderate glide. Most midranges and many fairway drivers.
- 5: High glide. Most distance drivers and flagship midranges.
- 6-7: Very high glide. Specialty drivers designed for maximum distance from moderate arm speed.
Why glide matters
Imagine throwing two discs with identical Speed, Turn, and Fade values, but one has glide 3 and the other glide 6. The high-glide disc will:
- Travel further at the same arm speed
- Hold its altitude longer in still air
- Feel "floaty" in hand after release
- Be more affected by wind (both helpful tailwinds and hurtful headwinds)
The low-glide disc will:
- Drop more predictably
- Be easier to stop on short approach shots
- Be more wind-resistant
- Land with less skip and roll