Are your club members now playing too much golf?

golf club membership

As new figures reveal the demand for tee times is as strong as ever, a GCMA Insights episode of the Golf Club Talk UK podcast asked whether the numbers could usher in a conversation about membership structures…

This article is part of GCMA Insights – topical content for golf industry professionals, discussing the things that matter to those who work in golf clubs.

Do clubs need to look at different membership options to combat the demand for tee times on their courses?

As new figures from BRS Golf revealed member and visitor participation remain sky-high following the Covid pandemic, an influential golf industry podcast asked whether clubs should look at member numbers and have “conversations about membership types” if the increases continue.

Appearing on the latest GCMA Insights edition of the Golf Club Talk UK podcast, BRS Golf’s Karen Moss and Kevin Murray revealed 2023 is set to break the record for the highest number of rounds played by club members in the UK and Ireland.

The company, which provides tee booking services for more than 1,500 clients, processed 7.3 million member rounds between July and September this year and nearly 21 million member rounds in the year to date.

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Those figures are six per cent up on last year, 17 per cent up on 2021, 22 per cent on 2020 and an astonishing 93 per cent up on 2019.

In terms of visitor spend through Golf Now, September was the sixth successive month where more than £1 million in course revenue was generated with a total of 356,000 bookings, and 737,000 rounds played, so far in 2023. That number is 14 per cent up on the same time last year.

Podcast host Leighton Walker asked how much further those numbers could keep moving forward unless clubs can increase membership numbers.

He said: “Are we just seeing people playing more and more? Do we think that clubs might start to now look at member numbers as being something that needs a little bit more focus and attention?”

“Are people having trouble getting on their own golf course at times? Are we in that nice point at the moment where everything still works but, if these numbers keep moving forward, does it become an issue?”

Moss replied: “I think it’s going to open up conversations about membership types as well – clubs having more insight into who’s actually playing the most rounds, who’s getting the most use out of their membership.

“Because it might be a case here for more seasonal-style memberships for some people rather than year wide so that everybody gets use of the course and there’s a good balance between member and visitor play.”

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Murray added: “You’ll probably find that with golf clubs that have multiple membership categories those who pay the least play the most.

“There was one golf club in particular and whenever they did some analysis of their tee sheet and those who played it was all people who were retired and on the over-65 membership subscriptions.

“They were booking the tee times seven days in advance, when they became available – the same tee time and playing every week.

“I can’t remember what the average price per round was when they broke it down but they’ve started to alter their member subs based on the back of that. The over-65s might get a bit of a shock when it comes to membership [renewals].”

Moss said BRS Golf looked every year at the average rounds played per member and, last year, saw an increase in the number of rounds played per person. She added this would probably be the case in 2023 as well.

“I would bet it is,” said Murray. “Then it goes back to pressure on the tee sheet to get people out, to get people seeing value in their membership.

“But if you’re going to ask any greenkeeper in the country, do they want their golf course to be filled all day every day? Not one of them would say yes. You’d struggle to guarantee the quality of the golf course in the golf season if you can’t keep working on it.

“It’s a bit of a Catch-22. It’s hard to say no to a new member but, at the same time, is a potential current member annoyed that the greens have been hollow-tined in the middle of July?”

You can listen to the Golf Club Talk UK podcast on the player in this article, or by clicking here.


This article is part of GCMA Insights – topical content for golf industry professionals, discussing the things that matter to those who work in golf clubs.

Get involved in the debate. To join the GCMA, click here, or to organise a call with a member of the GCMA team, just complete this form and we’ll be in touch!

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