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Five Stand

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    Five Stand

    Shotgun Sports — NSCA


    Five Stand is the Swiss Army knife of clay target sports—offering more variety than trap or skeet but without the course changes and walking required for sporting clays. You get 25 targets from five fixed stations, with six to eight strategically placed machines throwing everything from screaming rabbits to towering chandelles.


    Overview

    Five Stand emerged in the 1980s as sporting clays gained popularity in America. Range owners needed something that offered sporting clays' variety without the space requirements and constant course changes that made traditional sporting clays expensive to maintain. The solution was brilliant in its simplicity: put shooters at five fixed stations with multiple trap machines arranged around them.

    A typical Five Stand session has you rotating through five shooting positions, taking five targets at each station for a 25-target round. Unlike skeet where you know exactly what's coming, or trap where everything goes roughly the same direction, Five Stand keeps you guessing. The menu card at each station tells you the sequence, but targets can come from any direction—high, low, crossing, quartering, or bouncing along the ground.

    What sets Five Stand apart from its clay shooting cousins is the perfect balance of predictability and chaos. You know the sequence but not the exact flight path until you see it. This makes it excellent training for hunting situations where birds don't follow skeet house rules. The sport has grown steadily, with most gun clubs now offering Five Stand alongside their trap and skeet fields.


    Disciplines & Variations

    Variation Description Governing Body
    NSCA Five Stand Standard 25-target format with specific trap placement rules and target presentations NSCA
    Wobble Five Stand Uses oscillating traps for less predictable target angles, common at smaller clubs Local clubs
    Sub-gauge Five Stand Competition classes for 20-gauge, 28-gauge, and .410 bore shooters NSCA
    Youth Five Stand Modified target distances and presentations designed for younger shooters USA Clay Target
    Flurry Five Stand Multiple simultaneous targets creating more challenging presentations Various

    NSCA Five Stand is what you'll encounter at most serious competitions, with standardized rules about trap placement and target types. Many clubs run their own variations—some use fewer traps to save money, others add specialty presentations like poison bird sequences. Youth programs often modify distances and eliminate the most difficult targets to keep kids engaged. Sub-gauge competitions are growing as shooters look for new challenges beyond the standard 12-gauge domination.


    Equipment

    Required Gear

    Item Budget Option Competitive Option Notes
    Shotgun $400-800 (pump/semi-auto) $1,500-4,000+ (O/U) Over/under preferred for different chokes per barrel
    Choke Tubes $30-50 each $150-300 each Skeet, Light Modified, Modified are most useful
    Shells $8-12/box target loads $12-18/box premium 1oz or 7/8oz, #8 or #7.5 shot
    Eye Protection $15-30 shooting glasses $100-200 (interchangeable lenses) ANSI Z87.1 rated minimum
    Hearing Protection $20-40 electronic muffs $200-400 premium electronic Electronic allows range commands
    Shell Bag/Vest $25-60 basic bag $100-300 shooting vest Needs to hold 25+ shells accessibly
    Range Bag $30-80 soft bag $150-400 hard case Organize gear and protect equipment

    Optional Gear

    • Gun Case: Soft cases work fine for local shooting, but hard cases protect your investment during travel
    • Shooting Stool: Some ranges allow them between stations—helpful for older shooters or long league sessions
    • Recoil Pad: Aftermarket pad reduces felt recoil for high-volume practice sessions
    • Shell Catcher: Prevents empties from hitting other shooters, required at some indoor ranges
    • Barrel Towel: Quick cleaning between rounds, especially important in dusty conditions

    Start with a reliable shotgun and basic safety gear before worrying about premium accessories. A $600 semi-auto with good chokes will outshoot a $3,000 over/under in the hands of someone who practices regularly. Save the fancy gear until you're sure you'll stick with the sport and understand what features actually matter to your shooting.


    Rules & Scoring

    Five Stand scoring is beautifully simple: hit the target and score one point, miss and score zero. Each shooter gets two shots per target, so you can break it with either the first or second shot for full credit. No partial scoring, no style points—just dead bird or lost bird.

    A complete round consists of 25 targets total—five targets at each of the five stations. Shooters rotate as a squad, moving from station 1 to 2 to 3 and so on after everyone has completed their five targets. The sequence at each station typically starts with single targets, then moves to report pairs (second target launches when you fire at the first) or true pairs (both targets launch simultaneously).

    Safety protocols are non-negotiable. Actions must remain open and guns unloaded except when you're the shooter in the designated shooting box. Everyone wears eye and ear protection at all times. The range officer controls the session and has absolute authority—when they say cease fire, everything stops immediately.

    Key Rules Newcomers Need to Know:

    • Only load shells when you're in the shooting station and it's your turn
    • Gun must be shouldered when firing—no hip shooting allowed
    • Two-shot maximum per target, then move on regardless of result
    • Rotation moves clockwise: station 5 goes to station 1, everyone else moves up one

    Getting Started

    Before Your First Match

    Find a local club through the NSCA website's club locator or ask at your gun shop—most areas have at least one club within driving distance. Call ahead and ask about beginner-friendly sessions or instruction. Many clubs offer orientation sessions that cover safety rules and basic techniques before you jump into regular competition.

    Most ranges rent shotguns if you don't own one, though selection might be limited to basic pumps or semi-autos. Bring your own eye and ear protection if possible, as rental gear is often worn out. Some places include shells in their session fee, others charge separately—ask when you call.

    At the Range

    Arrive early your first time to get familiar with the layout and complete any required paperwork. Watch a squad shoot before your turn if possible—seeing the sequence helps enormously. Don't be shy about asking questions; Five Stand shooters are generally helpful to newcomers who show proper safety awareness.

    Range commands are standardized: "Load" means put shells in your gun, "Pull" calls for your target, "Unload" means extract all shells and show clear. When not shooting, keep your gun action open and muzzle pointed downrange or skyward. Never cross the shooting line with a closed action.

    Your First Competition

    Start with club-level events before attempting registered tournaments. Entry fees typically run $35-50 for a 25-target event, plus shells if not included. Arrive 30 minutes early for registration and squad assignment. Bring more shells than you think you need—it's embarrassing to run short mid-round.

    Expect to shoot poorly your first few times. Breaking 15 out of 25 is respectable for a beginner. Focus on safety and following range commands rather than your score. Most clubs have classification systems that group shooters by ability, so you won't be competing directly against the local hotshots until your scores improve.


    Costs

    Category Starter Competitive
    Initial Equipment $500-1,200 $2,000-5,000
    Per Session (25 targets) $15-25 $15-25
    Annual (casual shooter) $800-1,500 $2,000-4,000
    Annual (serious competitor) $2,000-3,500 $5,000-8,000

    Hidden Costs to Consider:

    • Choke tube upgrades ($200-600 for a quality set)
    • Travel to major tournaments (gas, hotels, entry fees)
    • Gun modifications and gunsmithing ($300-1,000 annually for serious shooters)
    • League fees and club memberships ($100-500 annually)
    • Shell prices fluctuate significantly—budget extra during shortages

    The ongoing expense is shells, not equipment. A dedicated Five Stand shooter might burn through 3,000-5,000 rounds per year between practice and competition. At current prices, that's $1,200-2,000 just in ammunition. Club memberships often provide modest discounts on targets and shells, paying for themselves if you shoot regularly.


    Where to Shoot

    The NSCA club search tool (nsca.nssa-nsca.org/club-search) is your best starting point for finding Five Stand near you. Search by ZIP code and distance to see clubs in your area. The database includes contact information, facilities available, and whether they welcome non-members.

    Many trap and skeet clubs have added Five Stand fields over the past decade. If the nearest dedicated Five Stand is too far, check with local shotgun clubs—they might offer it on specific days or know of closer options. Gun ranges in urban areas sometimes have indoor Five Stand setups, though these typically use shorter distances and softer targets.

    State sporting clays associations maintain lists of member clubs and often coordinate traveling leagues that visit different venues. The USA Clay Target League focuses on youth programs but can point you toward youth-friendly clubs if you're getting kids started.


    Governing Bodies

    Organization Role Website
    NSCA Primary sanctioning body, maintains rules, classifications, and records nsca.nssa-nsca.org
    USA Clay Target Youth programs and high school leagues usaclaytarget.com
    State Associations Regional tournaments, club coordination Various (.org domains)

    NSCA membership ($45-65 annually) gets you official classification, score tracking, and eligibility for registered tournaments. Their insurance coverage and standardized rules make them the obvious choice for serious competitors. USA Clay Target focuses on introducing youth to shooting sports through school programs—valuable if you have kids interested in the sport.

    State associations vary widely in activity level and benefits. Some organize traveling circuits with season-long competitions, others just maintain club lists and basic coordination. Check what's active in your region before joining multiple organizations.


    The BGC Take

    Five Stand hits the sweet spot for most shooters—enough variety to stay interesting without the complexity and expense of sporting clays. You'll improve faster than trap or skeet because you're seeing diverse target presentations, but you won't spend half your day walking between stations or waiting for course changes.

    The learning curve is manageable if you've shot any clay sports before, steep if you're coming from rifle or pistol disciplines. Plan on six months of regular practice before you're consistently breaking 20+ out of 25. The good news is improvement comes quickly once you understand how to read target lines and establish proper hold points.

    This sport rewards thinking shooters more than natural athletes. The guy with perfect technique but no course management gets beat by the veteran who knows exactly where to look and when to move. That makes it more accessible to older shooters and those without lightning reflexes, though it also means there's always something new to learn.

    The Five Stand community tends to be welcoming and helpful, probably because most of us came from other shooting disciplines and remember being the new guy. You'll find more practical hunting advice and less ego than some competitive shooting sports. If you want to improve your wing shooting without burning through sporting clays money, Five Stand is your answer.


    See Also

    • Sporting Clays - The more complex cousin with constantly changing courses
    • Skeet - Fixed target presentations from two houses
    • Trap - Single targets thrown away from the shooter
    • Find Events - Upcoming Five Stand tournaments and leagues

    Last Updated: January 28, 2026


    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club Editorial Team


    Join the Discussion

    Have you tried Five Stand yet, and if so, how'd it compare to your expectations coming from trap, skeet, or regular clay shooting?

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