The Darts Score Calculator helps players, referees, and casual scorers keep accurate tallies during games (501, 301, Cricket, etc.), compute remaining checkout combinations, track averages (three-dart average), and enforce common rules such as the bust rule and finishing on a double. It’s ideal for practice sessions, pub games, league play, or improving strategy by showing best checkout options.
Casual players, league competitors, referees, dart coaches, and practice partners who want quick, reliable scoring and checkout guidance for 01 games (501, 301), Cricket, and training drills. Not a replacement for official match refereeing but a helpful scoring assistant.
Remaining score:
remaining = starting_score − cumulative_scored
Three-dart average (per turn):
average = (total_points_scored / total_darts_thrown) × 3
Bust rule: If a player scores more than the remaining points, or reduces remaining to 1 when double-finish is required, or finishes without a double (if required), the turn is a bust and the score reverts to the value at turn start.
The calculator identifies practical checkout routes (common play) by recommending targets that leave a double finish. For example:
The tool prioritizes common, simple routes (prefer triple sections and simple double finishes) and can show alternative lines if a preferred bed is missed.
Problem: Player starts at 501. First three-dart turn: 20, 20, 20 (T20 = 60). Second turn: 20, 18, 18 (total 56). Third turn: 180. Show remaining and suggested checkout when near finish.
Step 1 — Track cumulative score:
Turn 1: 60 → remaining = 501 − 60 = 441.
Turn 2: 56 → remaining = 441 − 56 = 385.
Turn 3: 180 → remaining = 385 − 180 = 205.
Step 2 — Suggested targets (remaining 205):
Common approach: T20 (60) → remaining 145; then T20 (60) → remaining 85; then ideal: T15 (45) → remaining 40 → D20 to finish on next turn OR other sequences. Calculator will show best routes and safe plays.
The calculator includes quick-reference checkouts: e.g., 170 = T20 + T20 + Bull; 167 = T20 + T19 + Bull; 164 = T20 + T18 + Bull; 161 = T20 + T17 + Bull; 160 = T20 + T20 + D20; 100 = T20 + D20 or T20 + 20 + D20 (if needed) — the tool lists practical and alternative lines.
Problem: Remaining = 84, double-finish required.
Suggestion: T20 (60) → remaining 24 → D12 to finish (two-dart finish). Alternative: S16 (16) → D34 is invalid, so prefer safe T20 then double 12.
1. Can the calculator handle Cricket?
Basic Cricket scoring can be supported, but this primary module focuses on 01 games (501, 301). Advanced Cricket features (marks, open/close rules) can be added when needed.
2. How does the bust rule work?
If a turn leaves the player with a score that cannot be finished legally (e.g., 1 when double-out required) or exceeds the remaining score, the turn is a bust and the player's score reverts to the value at the start of the turn.
3. What counts as bull?
Outer bull (25) and inner bull (50). Inner bull (50) is treated as a double for finish rules in most leagues.
4. How is three-dart average calculated?
average = (total points scored ÷ total darts thrown) × 3. For example, 135 points scored in 6 darts → (135/6)×3 = 67.5 average.
5. Does it suggest safe plays?
Yes — it can suggest safer alternatives that avoid awkward finishes (like leaving 1) and favor common doubles the player is comfortable with.
6. Can I track multiple players?
Yes — the calculator supports multiplayer legs and will track each player's score, averages, highest checkout, and legs/sets won.
7. What if I enter totals instead of per-dart sectors?
Totals are accepted for scoring and averages, but per-dart sector input enables more precise checkout suggestions and practice analytics.
8. Can I export match history?
Many implementations provide CSV or printable match summaries including turn logs, averages, and checkout stats for record-keeping.
9. How does it handle 170+ finishes?
Maximum standard checkout is 170 (T20+T20+Bull). Scores above 170 cannot be checked out in a single visit; the calculator shows that a finish requires multiple turns and recommends best sequences.
10. Is this a replacement for an official scorer?
No — this tool is an aid for speed and accuracy. Official match refereeing and league rules should prevail in sanctioned competition.
This Darts Score Calculator is intended for practice, casual match scoring, and strategic guidance. It does not replace official refereeing in sanctioned events. Recommendations are based on standard checkout logic and common league rules; verify local competition rules (double-in, double-out, master-out) before relying on automated advice.
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