The Golf Industry Report (GIR) compiles many of the game's key data points in a single publication and is intended to provide the most holistic view of the business of golf and the health of the game within the U.S. to stakeholders and the media.
Current Findings
Golf’s participation base remains stable, with an estimated 24.2 million people (ages 6-plus) who played golf on a course in 2018 (a slight increase from 23.8 million a year earlier). Almost as many people play off-course forms of the game, with 23 million hitting golf balls with clubs at golf-entertainment facilities like Topgolf and Drive Shack, indoor simulators and driving ranges.
With 9.3 million people exclusively playing golf off-course, the game's overall participant pool has increased 4-percent to 33.5 million.
There were 434 million rounds of golf played in 2018 (a 4.8-percent year-over-year decline attributable in part to the third-wettest year on record nationally dating back to 1895).
Despite the negative weather impact on the nation’s top outdoor, pay-to-play participation sport, there are 14.7 million people who didn't play golf last year but say they are "very interested" in playing golf on a course. This untapped demand helped contribute to the 2.6 million beginners who picked up the game in 2018.
The total U.S. golf course supply declined by 1.2-percent, with the opening of 12.5 new 18-hole equivalent golf courses and 198.5 course closures. Closures have outweighed new openings nationwide since 2006, an ongoing correction of supply and demand within the market that followed an unsustainable 20-year building boom during which more than 4,000 courses opened, boosting the U.S. supply by 44-percent.
The U.S. remains the best-supplied golf market in the world with 14,613 facilities and 16,693 courses (more than 75-percent of which are open to all players, the highest public-to-private ratio in history).
Other 2018 highlights from the Golf Industry Report:
Golf’s total reach of about 107 million people in the U.S. is comprised of 33.5M total golf participants plus approximately 74M who watched and/or read about golf, but didn’t play on or off course (this represents more than one-third of the U.S. population (age 6-plus) and is a 10-percent increase from 2017.
Juniors (6-17) and young adults (18-34) comprise approximately 35-percent of all on-course golfers, with 2.5 million junior participants and 6.1 million young adults.
There are 5.7 million women who played golf on a course in 2018. Women account for 23-percent of the on-course golfer base and 44-percent of off-course only play.
Newcomers to golf are increasingly diverse: 31-percent are female, 26-percent are non-Caucasian, and 62-percent are under the age of 35.
The number of golfers age 65-and-over increased almost 17-percent to 4.2 million in 2018. This number should continue to increase as the balance of Baby Boomers cross this milestone.
There are more than 20 million committed golfers who account for approximately 95-percent of all rounds-played and spending.
Golfers played an average of 17.9 rounds in 2018.
The average price paid for an 18-hole round at public golf facilities is $35.
For further information and context on the 2019 Golf Industry Report, please visit www.thengfq.com/2019/04/ngf-releases-2019-golf-industry-report. NGF members can download a copy of the full report at NGF's new website: www.ngf.org/report/golf-industry-report.
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