Is golf more expensive than ever? It’s complicated

A look at the truth behind the cost of golf today, includes quotes from SLRG’s Jon Last.

How much did you pay for your last round of golf?

If you played Sharp Park, just south of San Francisco — the only seaside municipal course in the country designed by Alister MacKenzie — your green fees topped out at $86. That’s roughly one-fifth of what it costs to play Pasatiempo, the next nearest public-access MacKenzie layout, 50 miles down the coast.

The two courses share a designer but differ starkly in conditioning, atmosphere, clientele and ranking. The nearly $350 price gap reflects that. Yet for all that separates them, the properties represent just two points on a spectrum that extends far in either direction, from $5 junior rates at the local muni to north of $1,000 at the highest end. That vast range is one hallmark of a game that is booming as never before.

Between 2019 and 2025, golf participation in the United States swelled by 41 percent and is now closing in on 50 million participants, according to the National Golf Foundation (NGF), which counts participants as people who played either on a green-grass course or at an off-course facility such as a range or simulator venue. Annual rounds played have reached record numbers. But that headline figure obscures another statistic worth sitting with: market research shows that 7 to 8 percent of golfers account for approximately 80 percent of total spending in the game. The boom is real, but it is not evenly distributed, an imbalance that helps explain what has happened to prices.