Professional dartboards are made from sisal fibers, which come from the agave plant, not from horsehair as commonly believed.
Dartboards Are Made From Plant Fibers, Not Horsehair
If you've ever stood in a pub aiming at a dartboard, you might have heard the claim that it's made of horsehair. It's one of those "facts" that gets passed around like a good story, but here's the truth: dartboards are made from sisal fibers, which come from the agave plant.
No horses, no pigs, no camels. Just plants.
The "Bristle" That Fooled Everyone
The confusion started with the term "bristle dartboard." When the first commercial bristle dartboards appeared in England in the 1930s, people naturally assumed "bristle" meant animal hair - like pig bristles or horsehair. The word spread, and suddenly everyone "knew" that dartboards were made from animals.
But here's the twist: The "bristles" in a dartboard are actually compressed sisal fibers. The term stuck around even though it has nothing to do with actual animal bristles.
What Is Sisal, Anyway?
Sisal comes from the Agave sisalana plant, a spiky tropical species native to Africa and South America. The same plant family that gives us tequila also gives us dart-stopping power. The leaves are harvested and processed to extract long, tough fibers - the same material used for making rope.
These fibers get compressed into dense boards that can take thousands of dart impacts. What makes sisal perfect for dartboards is its self-healing property. When a dart pierces the board, the fibers spread apart. When you pull the dart out, they close back up, leaving minimal damage.
Why the Myth Persists
Part of the reason this myth won't die is that it sounds plausible. Dartboards do have a slightly hairy texture when you look closely. The word "bristle" reinforces the animal connection. And let's be honest - "made from horsehair" is more interesting dinner party trivia than "compressed plant fibers from an agave."
But the truth is actually cooler. A dartboard is a marvel of natural engineering: plant fibers so tough and resilient that they can self-repair after being stabbed thousands of times. Try getting that from horsehair.
What About Old-School Dartboards?
Before sisal became the standard, dartboards were made from various materials - compressed paper, cork, even wood. Some sources claim early boards used horsehair, though there's no solid evidence that animal fiber boards were ever mass-produced.
Today, if you're playing on a quality dartboard at a tournament or decent pub, you're playing on sisal. It's the global standard, prized for durability and that satisfying self-healing action.
So next time someone tells you dartboards are made of horsehair, you can set the record straight: they're made from the same plant family that brings us tequila. Which, coincidentally, is often consumed near dartboards.