Section 8: Safety Considerations
Throw Safety
A player must not throw when there is a reasonable chance of striking another player, a spectator, course staff, or any non-player. The player is responsible for waiting until the fairway and the area around the target are clear of personnel before releasing the throw. Failure to do so is both a courtesy violation and, where injury results, a serious incident subject to TD and PDGA review.
Course Hazards
- Players are responsible for being aware of natural hazards: water, cliffs, dense brush, wildlife, and uneven terrain
- Risk acceptance for retrieving discs from hazardous areas is the player's responsibility; no penalty applies to declaring a disc unsafe to retrieve and accepting the lost-disc penalty
Lightning and Severe Weather
The TD has authority to suspend play for lightning, severe wind, hail, or other conditions hazardous to players. PDGA recommends compliance with local lightning detection and the standard "30-30 rule" — suspend play when thunder follows lightning by 30 seconds or less, resume only after 30 minutes of no lightning or thunder.
Heat and Hydration
Long PDGA tournament rounds are physically demanding. Players carry their own water in most events; TDs typically arrange water stations on long courses. Heat-related illness is a recognized course hazard and players are expected to monitor their own condition.
Disc Safety
- Damaged discs (cracked, gouged, broken) must not be returned to play in PDGA-sanctioned events
- Sharp-edged discs are not PDGA-approved and may not be used in competition
- Caddies and spectators retrieving thrown discs do so at their own risk
Spectator Awareness
Spectators are positioned by the TD or the card to maintain safe sightlines and clear fairways. Players must verify the fairway is clear before throwing; spectators must remain alert to play around them. PDGA majors typically employ rope-line management and dedicated marshals on signature holes.