Guide

How to choose a hockey stick

By Hockey SauceUpdated June 2026

A hockey stick is the one piece of gear that touches every shot, pass, and puck battle you'll ever take. Get it right and the stick disappears in your hands. Get it wrong and you're fighting it all game.

Here's the whole decision, start to finish: flex, kick point, length, blade pattern, grip, and the right age group. No filler. Whether you're a player buying for yourself or a parent buying for a kid, this is the order to think it through.

Flex: the number that matters most

Flex is how many pounds of force it takes to bend the shaft about an inch. Lower flex bends easier — it loads faster, whips harder, and rewards a quick release. Higher flex is stiffer — it takes more strength to load but pays you back with power on slap shots and one-timers.

The starting rule of thumb: roughly half your body weight in pounds. A 150 lb player starts around a 75 flex. Then adjust. Stronger or a power shooter? Go up. Lighter, younger, or a quick-release player? Go down. It's a starting point, not a law.

One thing that trips people up: cutting a stick down raises its effective flex (a few points per inch), because a shorter shaft is harder to bend. Add an extension and it softens slightly. So if you're between flexes and plan to cut it, lean to the softer number.

  • Too stiff is the most common mistake — you can't load it, so shots die.
  • Too soft and your shots feel mushy and inaccurate, with no zip on hard shots.
  • When in doubt, go a touch softer. Easier to load beats can't-load-at-all.

Kick point: where the power lives

Kick point is where the shaft stores and releases energy. Low kick loads down near the blade for a fast, quick release — best for snapshots, wristers, and players who shoot in traffic off the rush. Mid kick loads through the middle of the shaft for more loaded power — best for slap shots and one-timers from distance.

Hybrid or variable kick points try to adjust to the shot you're taking. There's no single best kick point — it comes down to where most of your shots come from. A quick-release winger and a point-shooting defenseman want different sticks.

Brand lines map cleanly once you know the code: Bauer Vapor and CCM's quick-release lines run low kick for a snappy release; Bauer Supreme runs mid kick and is built for power, slap shots, and one-timers; Bauer Nexus sits in the balanced middle. Don't pick a line by name — pick it by kick point.

Length: chin to nose, then tune

Stand in your skates. The stick should reach somewhere between your chin and your nose. In bare feet, aim a touch higher to account for skate height. That's the baseline most players land on.

From there it's preference and position. A longer stick gives reach and leverage — useful for defensemen poke-checking and players who want a longer one-timer windup. A shorter stick gives tighter puck control and a quicker release in close — favored by dangly forwards.

Remember the flex tradeoff: every inch you cut stiffens the stick. If you cut two inches off a 75 flex, you're effectively playing closer to an 85. Buy with the final length in mind, not the box length.

Blade pattern and grip: the quick version

Blade pattern (curve) affects how the puck sits and releases. A mid or heel curve is the safe, do-everything choice and what most players should default to. Deeper toe curves help toe-drag shooters and quick wrist shots but make backhands and saucer passes less forgiving. If you're not sure, a moderate mid curve almost never feels wrong.

Grip versus clear is just the shaft coating. Grip has a tacky finish that locks your bottom hand in place — good if your hand slides or you want consistent placement. Clear (gloss) lets your hand move freely for hand-over-hand reach and faster slides. It's genuinely personal; there's no performance winner, so go with what feels right when you handle one.

Age and size group: start here for kids

Sticks come pre-flexed by age group, and flex ranges roughly track size: Senior sits around 75–110, Intermediate around 55–70, Junior around 40–50, and Youth around 20–35. These are ranges, not hard lines — a big 12-year-old may already be in an Intermediate, a small adult might be happiest in a stiff Intermediate or soft Senior.

For parents, the move is to match flex to the kid's weight (half body weight as a start), not their age on a calendar. Then check length against the chin-to-nose rule. Buy for who they are now — a stick that's too stiff or too tall trains bad habits and kills their shot.

Resist the urge to size up to last. Kids grow, but a stick that's three flexes too stiff today is unusable today, and they'll be playing with it all season. Our youth sizing guide breaks down the weight-to-flex math by age.

Budget: what your money actually buys

Stick prices span a wide range, and the jump from entry to elite is real but not linear. The cheapest tier is usually heavier, with more fiberglass in the layup and a less refined balance — totally fine for a beginner or a growing kid you'll replace in a season.

The mid tier is the sweet spot for most rec and beer-league players: most of the weight savings and a true low or mid kick point, without the top-end price. The elite tier buys the lightest builds, the most consistent flex profiles, and the crispest release — worth it for high-level players who'll feel the difference, overkill for a once-a-week skater.

This is exactly where comparing across retailers pays off. Last year's elite model, discounted, often beats this year's mid-tier stick on both performance and price. Hockey Sauce tracks every stick across Pure Hockey, Hockey Monkey, Ice Warehouse, Perani's, Pure Goalie, and Goalie Monkey so you can see what the same stick costs everywhere at once. The affiliate links don't change what you pay — or which sticks we'd actually recommend.

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