Last modified: April 14, 2026
Every year, disc golfers try to answer the same question: which discs are people actually buying? The DiscList is one of the few sources that attempts to measure exactly that, by aggregating sales data from retailers all over the world.
Their global ranking for the period from January 12 to April 3, 2026 offers an interesting snapshot of what’s selling best right now – and not all of the discs on the list are necessarily the ones you see thrown by touring pros.
In this article
No surprise — Buzzz sits on top
The number one disc on the list is the Discraft Buzzz, a position it has held for a long time. The Buzzz is a midrange with extremely predictable flight, neutral fade, and a feel that a huge number of players love. It’s not the fastest disc or the longest-flying one, but it does exactly what it’s supposed to do, over and over again – and that’s precisely why it’s a bestseller.
For beginners, the Buzzz is a safe and reliable choice, and for more experienced players it’s a trusted workhorse on the course. That it continues to hold the top spot with steady momentum confirms that this isn’t just a trend – the Buzzz is a true classic.

Axiom dominates the top 4
The most striking thing about this year’s ranking is that Axiom has three discs in the top four. The Crave in second place is a fairway driver with smooth, controllable flight. The Hex in third is a widely loved midrange with a slightly understable tendency, and the Pixel in fourth is a putter with excellent feel and a consistent throwing line.
It’s unusual for a single brand to dominate the very top of the list like this, and it suggests that Axiom – sister brand to MVP Disc Sports – has found a manufacturing style and disc feel that resonates with a broad audience.
MVP, which shares a factory with Axiom, is also heavily represented on the list with discs like the Glitch (No. 6), Trail (No. 7), Wave (No. 8), Watt (No. 42), and Reactor (No. 45). Taken together, Axiom and MVP dominate the upper half of the ranking in an impressive way.
Innova holds its ground
Innova Champion Discs doesn’t have quite as many top-five placements, but they make up for it by having the most discs on the list overall. The Destroyer (No. 5) is the best-selling distance driver, while the Wraith (No. 10) and Mako3 (No. 9) remain solid fixtures near the top.
Classics like the Aviar (No. 21), Leopard (No. 27), and TeeBird (No. 28) show that Innova’s older molds are still very much alive and relevant. Innova is the brand with the broadest representation in the top 100, reflecting the historical market share they’ve held since the early days of the sport.
Big jumps for Kastaplast
For Nordic disc golfers in particular, it’s especially interesting to see what the Swedish brand Kastaplast is doing on the list. The Berg (No. 11) remains stable and climbs slightly, while the real talking points are the Impa (No. 46) and the Falk (No. 34), which have jumped 72 and 60 spots respectively since the previous ranking period.
Those are remarkable moves for two distance drivers. The Reko (No. 29) is also showing strong sales momentum, and this putter remains popular among European players.
Discmania’s new releases on the rise
Discmania has clearly invested heavily in new product launches early in 2026. The new PD (No. 65, up 47 spots), new DD (No. 71, up 40), Essence (No. 80, up 41), and Logic (No. 51, also up 40) are all climbing rapidly.
These jumps suggest that the discs have only recently become widely available at retailers and that demand picked up quickly. For buyers keeping an eye on what Discmania is doing, this is worth noting. The DD3 (No. 14) and FD Jackal (No. 26) are still on the list, but the FD has dropped eight spots and shows negative momentum, which may indicate that interest is shifting toward newer models.

Three newcomers in the top 100
The ranking includes three discs marked as “NEW” in the change column: the Latitude 64 Fire (No. 86), Discraft Ares (No. 88) and the MVP Octane (No. 98). That means they weren’t on the list at all in the previous period, but have already climbed into the global top 100.
The Octane is a distance driver from MVP that has received a lot of attention, and it’s interesting to see it appear on the list this early in 2026.
The full table
The data collection for this ranking covers the period from January 12 to April 3, 2026, and was published on April 3, 2026.
Mobile tip: Rotate your phone sideways to view the full table.
| # | Momentum | Change | Manufacturer | Disc | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Stable | — | Discraft | Buzzz | Midrange |
| 2 | Stable | — | Axiom Discs | Crave | Fairway Driver |
| 3 | ↗ Positive | — | Axiom Discs | Hex | Midrange |
| 4 | Stable | — | Axiom Discs | Pixel | Putter |
| 5 | Stable | ▲1 | Innova | Destroyer | Distance Driver |
| 6 | Stable | ▼1 | MVP Disc Sports | Glitch | Putter |
| 7 | Stable | ▲2 | MVP Disc Sports | Trail | Distance Driver |
| 8 | Stable | ▼1 | MVP Disc Sports | Wave | Distance Driver |
| 9 | Stable | ▼1 | Innova | Mako 3 | Midrange |
| 10 | Stable | — | Innova | Wraith | Distance Driver |
| 11 | ↗ Positive | ▲1 | Kastaplast | Berg | Putter |
| 12 | Stable | ▼1 | Axiom Discs | Envy | Putter |
| 13 | ↗ Positive | ▲2 | Discraft | Zone | Midrange |
| 14 | ↗ Positive | ▲2 | Discmania | DD3 | Distance Driver |
| 15 | Stable | ▼1 | Innova | Firebird | Fairway Driver |
| 16 | ↘ Negative | ▼3 | Innova | Mamba | Distance Driver |
| 17 | Stable | — | Axiom Discs | Time-Lapse | Distance Driver |
| 18 | Stable | ▲1 | Axiom Discs | Insanity | Fairway Driver |
| 19 | Stable | ▲1 | Axiom Discs | Proxy | Putter |
| 20 | ↗ Positive | ▲3 | Axiom Discs | Pyro | Midrange |
| 21 | ↗ Positive | — | Innova | Aviar Putter | Putter |
| 22 | Stable | ▲2 | Discraft | Zeus | Distance Driver |
| 23 | Stable | ▲3 | Discmania | P2 (new) | Putter |
| 24 | ↗ Positive | ▲4 | Infinite Discs | Emperor | Distance Driver |
| 25 | Stable | ▼3 | Innova | Thunderbird | Fairway Driver |
| 26 | ↘ Negative | ▼8 | Discmania | FD (Jackal) | Fairway Driver |
| 27 | ↗ Positive | — | Innova | Leopard | Fairway Driver |
| 28 | ↗ Positive | ▼3 | Innova | TeeBird | Fairway Driver |
| 29 | ↗ Positive | ▲6 | Kastaplast | Reko | Putter |
| 30 | ↗ Positive | ▲9 | Latitude 64 | Pure | Putter |
| 31 | ↗ Positive | ▲1 | Discraft | Hades | Distance Driver |
| 32 | Stable | ▼2 | Latitude 64 | Diamond | Fairway Driver |
| 33 | ↘ Negative | ▼4 | Innova | Leopard 3 | Fairway Driver |
| 34 | ↗ Positive | ▲60 | Kastaplast | Falk | Distance Driver |
| 35 | Stable | ▼2 | MVP Disc Sports | Tesla | Fairway Driver |
| 36 | Stable | ▼5 | Innova | Tern | Distance Driver |
| 37 | ↗ Positive | ▼3 | Innova | Valkyrie | Fairway Driver |
| 38 | Stable | — | Latitude 64 | River | Fairway Driver |
| 39 | Stable | ▲5 | Kastaplast | Guld | Distance Driver |
| 40 | ↗ Positive | ▲10 | Axiom Discs | Tempo | Midrange |
| 41 | Stable | ▼1 | MVP Disc Sports | Detour | Midrange |
| 42 | Stable | ▼6 | MVP Disc Sports | Watt | Putter |
| 43 | Stable | ▲9 | Innova | Aviar 3 | Putter |
| 44 | Stable | ▼2 | Innova | Beast | Distance Driver |
| 45 | Stable | ▲1 | MVP Disc Sports | Reactor | Midrange |
| 46 | ↗ Positive | ▲72 | Kastaplast | Impa | Distance Driver |
| 47 | ↘ Negative | ▼10 | Axiom Discs | Bokeh | Fairway Driver |
| 48 | Stable | ▼3 | RPM Discs | Piwakawaka | Midrange |
| 49 | ↗ Positive | ▲2 | Innova | Roc | Putter |
| 50 | Stable | ▼9 | Thought Space Athletics | Construct | Distance Driver |
| 51 | ↗ Positive | ▲40 | Discmania | Logic | Putter |
| 52 | Stable | ▼5 | MVP Disc Sports | Photon | Distance Driver |
| 53 | Stable | — | Goto Disc Golf | Gong | Uncategorized |
| 54 | Stable | ▼5 | Westside Golf Discs | Harp | Midrange |
| 55 | Stable | ▲1 | Dynamic Discs | Convict | Fairway Driver |
| 56 | ↘ Negative | ▼13 | Discmania | Tactic | Midrange |
| 57 | Stable | — | Latitude 64 | Grace (Royal Prototype) | Uncategorized |
| 58 | ↘ Negative | ▼10 | Innova | Fox | Midrange |
| 59 | Stable | ▼1 | Discraft | Undertaker | Fairway Driver |
| 60 | ↗ Positive | ▲23 | Discmania | MD3 | Uncategorized |
| 61 | ↗ Positive | ▼2 | Discraft | Z-Nuke | Distance Driver |
| 62 | Stable | — | Latitude 64 | Sapphire | Distance Driver |
| 63 | Stable | ▲1 | Goto Disc Golf | Bongo | Uncategorized |
| 64 | ↗ Positive | ▲8 | Axiom Discs | Simon Line Balance | Midrange |
| 65 | ↗ Positive | ▲47 | Discmania | PD (new) | Distance Driver |
| 66 | Stable | ▼6 | Kastaplast | Svea | Midrange |
| 67 | ↗ Positive | ▲10 | Discmania | CD1 | Fairway Driver |
| 68 | Stable | ▼1 | Discmania | Magician | Fairway Driver |
| 69 | ↘ Negative | ▼14 | Innova | Roadrunner | Fairway Driver |
| 70 | ↘ Negative | ▼9 | Innova | Pig | Midrange |
| 71 | ↗ Positive | ▲40 | Discmania | DD (new) | Distance Driver |
| 72 | ↗ Positive | ▼2 | Discraft | Heat | Fairway Driver |
| 73 | Stable | ▲3 | Discmania | Link | Putter |
| 74 | Stable | ▼6 | Latitude 64 | River Pro | Fairway Driver |
| 75 | ↗ Positive | ▼10 | MVP Disc Sports | Nomad | Putter |
| 76 | ↗ Positive | ▲2 | Latitude 64 | Fuse | Midrange |
| 77 | Stable | ▼6 | MVP Disc Sports | Resistor | Fairway Driver |
| 78 | Stable | ▼9 | MVP Disc Sports | Inertia | Fairway Driver |
| 79 | Stable | ▼4 | Discraft | Anax | Distance Driver |
| 80 | ↗ Positive | ▲41 | Discmania | Essence | Fairway Driver |
| 81 | Stable | ▼2 | Divergent Discs | Kraken | Fairway Driver |
| 82 | Stable | ▼2 | Disctroyer OÜ | Starling | Distance Driver |
| 83 | Stable | ▲3 | Discmania | MD1 | Midrange |
| 84 | Stable | ▼2 | MVP Disc Sports | Atom | Putter |
| 85 | Stable | ▲3 | Discraft | Roach | Putter |
| 86 | Stable | NEW | Latitude 64 | Fire | Midrange |
| 87 | Stable | ▼2 | Westside Golf Discs | Sword VIP Air | Distance Driver |
| 88 | Stable | NEW | Discraft | Ares | Uncategorized |
| 89 | Stable | — | MVP Disc Sports | Servo | Fairway Driver |
| 90 | ↗ Positive | ▲3 | Innova | Shark | Midrange |
| 91 | ↗ Positive | ▲14 | Discmania | P1 (Maniac) | Putter |
| 92 | Stable | ▲8 | Kastaplast | Stig | Fairway Driver |
| 93 | ↗ Positive | ▲14 | Divergent Discs | Lawin | Distance Driver |
| 94 | Stable | ▼4 | Innova | Gorgon | Distance Driver |
| 95 | ↗ Positive | ▲1 | Latitude 64 | Saint Pro | Fairway Driver |
| 96 | ↗ Positive | ▲3 | Dynamic Discs | Judge | Putter |
| 97 | Stable | ▲1 | RPM Discs | Kotuku | Midrange |
| 98 | ↗ Positive | NEW | MVP Disc Sports | Octane | Distance Driver |
| 99 | ↘ Negative | ▼25 | Discmania | Enigma | Distance Driver |
| 100 | Stable | ▲10 | Discmania | Sensei | Putter |
What does the list say about disc golf in 2026?
There are some clear patterns in this overview. First, putters and midranges dominate the top of the list in a way that may surprise those who assume everyone is chasing maximum distance. Of the top 10, three are midranges and two are putters – only three are distance drivers.
This suggests that most players understand that controllable discs sell better than pure distance machines, especially since beginners and amateurs make up the majority of the market.
Second, “True Flight” is the most commonly used flight category[1] across the entire top 100. These are discs that fly relatively straight without excessive turn or fade. That makes sense – people want discs that do what they expect them to do.
Finally, it’s worth remembering that The DiscList measures global sales, and national preferences may look somewhat different. Kastaplast and Latitude 64 are Scandinavian brands and likely have a stronger position in Europe than the global ranking alone suggests. Still, the overall trends – classics holding their ground, new releases making rapid jumps, and Axiom and MVP building a massive global following – are likely valid as well.

Read also: The 10 best-selling discs of 2025
Source: The DiscList, global ranking, data window January 12 to April 3, 2026.
[1] Flight categories: Straight Flight describes discs that fly relatively straight with minimal turn and fade. Assured Fade refers to discs that hold their line before finishing with a reliable, pronounced fade. Progressive Turn describes discs that gradually turn to the right (for right-handed backhand throws) during flight. Early Turn means the disc begins turning early in the throw and is often suitable for lower arm speeds or roller lines. Lockdown Fade refers to very overstable discs that move quickly and forcefully to the left. Unknown means The DiscList has not classified the flight category for that model.





