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How Much Does Archery Cost in Phoenix?
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How Much Does Archery Cost in Phoenix?

✍️ Archery Ranges USA
πŸ“… 7/10/2026
⏱️ 3 min read
Outdoor archery range with a compound bow in the Sonoran Desert with saguaro cacti

I want to give you the real answer before anything else, because it's not what most cost guides lead with: not one of the 10 active archery listings in ARC's Phoenix directory publishes a drop-in price. Zero. That's a genuine finding, not a gap we're glossing over, and it's worth understanding why before you start calling around, sourced from ARC's Phoenix directory.

Why doesn't Phoenix have any published archery pricing?

A mix of business types where flat per-visit pricing doesn't really apply, plus a state-run public facility that prices through the Arizona Game and Fish Department rather than a business website.

Look at what actually makes up Phoenix's directory. The Ben Avery Shooting Facility complex, four listings' worth, is a public agency-run site, and public ranges often price through day-use or annual permit systems rather than a simple per-session fee posted online. AZJOAD and Papago Archery Association are club-style operations where fees often depend on age, session count, or membership tier, the kind of thing that gets quoted on a call, not posted flat. And Phoenix Rod & Gun Club is a general shooting club where archery specifically isn't even confirmed to have dedicated lanes, so a price for it wouldn't be reliable even if we found one.

Which Phoenix ranges are most likely to give you a straight number when you call?

Ross Outdoors and Arizona Archery Club, both commercial pro-shop operations with lessons, are the most likely to have a fixed rate they can quote on the spot.

Ross Outdoors, at 407 S 17th Ave, and Arizona Archery Club, at 1115 W Deer Valley Rd #2186, both run as retail-style businesses with pro shops attached. Commercial ranges like these are generally the fastest to get a real number from, since they're set up for walk-in customers, unlike a public agency complex or a club that prices per-family.

Modern air-conditioned indoor archery range with Southwest design and a recurve bow

What should you ask when you call?

Whether there's a flat drop-in rate, whether equipment rental is included or extra, and whether a first lesson requires a separate booking fee.

Since nothing is published, the goal of your call is to build the price picture yourself. Ask for the walk-in lane rate first, then ask what a lesson costs on top of that, then ask about equipment rental if you don't own a bow. For the Ben Avery complex specifically, ask the Arizona Game and Fish Department directly, since day-use and annual pass structures at state-run outdoor facilities commonly differ from what a private business would quote you.

Phoenix archery pricing, honestly

RangePublished Price
Ross OutdoorsNot published
Ben Avery Shooting Facility complexNot published; contact AZ Game and Fish
AZJOADNot published
Arizona Archery ClubNot published
Papago Archery AssociationNot published
Phoenix Rod & Gun ClubNot published; archery lanes unconfirmed
Full Draw BowhuntersNot published
3D foam coyote target on a saguaro cactus desert trail

So what should you actually do?

Skip trying to research a number online, it genuinely isn't there yet for this market. Call Ross Outdoors or Arizona Archery Club first if you want the fastest path to a real quote, since both are set up as walk-in commercial ranges. For the Ben Avery complex, go straight to Arizona Game and Fish. When we confirm real numbers for any of these listings, they'll be updated here, not before.

See Best Archery Ranges in Phoenix for how these ranges compare beyond price, browse ARC's Phoenix directory page, and read The Complete Guide to Archery in Phoenix.

Browse every listed range across Arizona.

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#Arizona#Phoenix#Archery Cost