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Archery Care

Longbows · Ranked by CareScore™

Best Longbows for Hunting

Hunting weights flip the priorities: a draw-weight ceiling that clears big-game minimums and reflex/deflex performance lead, because cast and quietness kill — length matters less when you're threading timber.

Who this is for: Traditional bowhunters who need legal poundage, quiet performance and a packable profile.

The short answer

The best longbow for hunting is the Southwest Archery Scorpion 68" Longbow with a CareScore of 67.1/100 at $249, ahead of the Damon Howatt (Martin Archery) Savannah (64.1).

Ranked by the published CareScore v1.1.0 methodology with weights re-tuned for this buyer — June 2026 data.

Top Pick — Hunting

Southwest Archery Scorpion 68" Longbow

Very Good$249
67
CareScore

Southwest Archery's only one-piece longbow borrows the dymondwood, tiger wood, white oak, and padouk mix from its Tigershark recurves, and it's easily the best-looking riser under $250. Reinforced tips mean it'll take a Fast Flight string, and the box includes a stringer, rest, and actual instructions. One real problem: when we checked in June 2026, all sixteen draw-weight and hand variants were sold out at the manufacturer.

Max draw
60 lb
Build
One-piece-laminated
Price
$249
Length
68"
Widest entry-level draw range here: 25 to 60 lbs, both hands Reinforced tips rated for Fast Flight and Flemish strings
64
CareScore

The Savannah is the bow trad hunters point to when they explain why reflex/deflex matters. Built in the Damon Howatt facility in Walla Walla, it's 62 inches, weighs a scant 1 lb 1 oz, and pulls 40 to 65 pounds. The r/d profile stores energy without the wrist-slap of a straight D-bow. It's $825 with a straight inlay, $875 curved, and you don't buy one off a shelf anymore — you reserve a build slot and wait five to seven weeks.

Max draw
65 lb
Build
Hybrid-reflex-deflex
Price
$825
Weight
1.06 lb
Reflex/deflex profile that defined the genre — fast, quiet, minimal hand shock Lightest published mass weight in the category at 1.06 lbs

OMP's 68-inch workhorse in hard maple and walnut, with a multi-laminate handle, reinforced tips, and Fast Flight compatibility. MSRP says $279.99 but nobody pays that — Bowhunters Superstore had it at $193 to $207 depending on weight when we checked. The 8 to 8¾ inch recommended brace is unusually tall for a longbow, which quiets it down at the cost of a little speed.

Max draw
55 lb
Build
One-piece-laminated
Price
$192.99
Length
68"
Street price of $192.99-$206.99, a third off the $279.99 MSRP Fast Flight compatible reinforced tips at a budget price

The shortest and cheapest bow in this group, and arguably the most interesting. The Black Ridge 62 is a one-piece hybrid with a deflex profile, hard maple core laminations, phenolic tips, and satin black glass. At 62 inches it's the only entry-level longbow here that won't fight you in a treestand or a ground blind, and the hybrid geometry means less hand shock than the 68-inch D-bows it undercuts on price.

Max draw
55 lb
Build
Hybrid-reflex-deflex
Price
$209.99
Weight
1.45 lb
Cheapest bow in the category at $209.99 62-inch length suits blinds, stands, and shorter archers
58
CareScore

Lancaster's house brand took the Sage name everyone knows from the recurve world and put it on a 68-inch one-piece longbow. Dymondwood, hard maple, and oak under black fiberglass, phenolic-reinforced tips, and a crowned shelf. At $229.99 and 1.23 pounds on the scale, it does exactly what a first longbow should: teaches you to shoot a stick without emptying your wallet.

Max draw
55 lb
Build
One-piece-laminated
Price
$229.99
Weight
1.23 lb
Published mass weight (1.23 lbs) — rare honesty at this price point Phenolic-reinforced limb tips on a $230 bow

Henry Bodnik's 60-inch hybrid is the hot rod of this group: bamboo limb cores with a carbon layer under crystal-clear glass, a Merbau and Makassar riser, multilayered Mycarta tips, and a low pistol grip. It's built in Germany, carries a 30-year warranty, and at 60 inches it draws and hits like bows half a foot longer. US street price is $699 at Kustom King; ordering direct from Bearpaw runs $798 and the direct listing was sold out when we checked.

Max draw
60 lb
Build
Hybrid-reflex-deflex
Price
$699
Length
60"
Carbon-and-bamboo limbs in a 60-inch package that's genuinely quick 30-year Bodnik Bows warranty
54
CareScore

The Montana's been Bear's longbow since the late '90s, and it hasn't changed much because it hasn't needed to. You get a hard-rock maple riser, white maple limbs under black fiberglass, a mild reflex profile, and a leather-wrapped grip with a leather shelf rest. At $529.99 it costs roughly double the import D-bows, but it ships with a D97 Flemish string and it's the only bow in this group you can buy off the shelf in almost any weight, right now.

Max draw
60 lb
Build
One-piece-laminated
Price
$529.99
Length
64"
Slight reflex and tapered limbs take the sting out of the draw compared to a straight D-profile Ships with a D97 Flemish-twist string — no day-one upgrade needed

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