Golf Tournament Fundraiser: Step-by-Step Guide with Ideas

Tee up fundraising success with a fun golf tournament fundraiser! These events are great for targeting donors who may be willing to give more to your organization. They can also help you introduce your organization to a new audience. Read on to learn the steps it takes to start a golf tournament fundraiser, as well as some tips to make your event a success.

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Golf Tournament Fundraiser: Step-by-Step Guide with Ideas

6 million people in the age group 18 to 34 play golf. And US golfers are said to have an average household income of $125,000. What does it mean for your organization? A successful golf tournament fundraiser can easily bring revenue from $5,000 to over $100,000, depending on the size of your organization!

The success of these events is twofold. Supporters who attend this type of event are able and willing to spend large amounts, and these events can be pretty simple to run for an organization.

Your golf fundraiser can include as many or as few of the ideas we will mention in this article.  We have included eight steps to start your own golf fundraiser, along with a few extras to add to your event to raise more funds for your organization.

Before we dive into the steps, first let’s look at how golf tournaments can help nonprofit fundraising.


Golf Tournaments for Nonprofit Fundraising

A golf tournament is one of the most lucrative fundraising events for nonprofits. You’ll have countless chances to raise money through event registration, add-ons like raffles and auctions, sponsorships, and in-person donations.

For more flexibility for your supporters, you can also host a virtual golf tournament fundraiser.  Your players can play from any golf course anywhere and you can end the event with a virtual session enjoying raffle contests and fun games together. This also cuts down on your event budget.

There are a few golf tournament types you can try with your event – 

  • A scramble is great if you have more beginners participating in your event.
  • Stroke plays are for your organization if you’re going to have a large donor base coming to your event.
  • Match plays work if you’d like your donors to play in teams.
  • Try a Best ball event if you want to encourage beginners to join in on the fun, too.

Whatever your choice, be sure to devise a pricing strategy for your event that maximizes revenue. You’ll need to come up with ticket pricing as well. Use an event-ticketing system that allows you to add multiple ticket tiers for sponsorships, individual and team entry, raffle tickets, and more.

Donorbox Events lets you create an event page including a powerful ticketing form. You can add unlimited ticket tiers, set a ticket quantity and purchasing deadline, calculate the tax deductibility of ticket tiers, and more. Our ticketing forms are also embeddable on your website. Your purchasers automatically receive a receipt along with a digital copy of their tickets.

Here’s an example of a successful golf tournament fundraiser created using Donorbox Events. They raised over $25,000 in ticket sales with this event. Click here to take a complete look at it including the ticket tiers.

donorbox golf tournament event page

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For other sporty fundraising ideas, check out our blogs on dodgeball tournament fundraisers and cornhole fundraisers!


8 Steps to Start a Golf Tournament Fundraiser 


1. Pick the location and date

Your team’s first job is to choose a location and date for your upcoming golf outing. Most event planners recommend you set your fundraising goals and budget before deciding on a site and date. But golf tournaments are a bit different because the highest cost of this type of event is the use of the golf course. Your location may also determine how many foursomes you can include and how much money you will be able to raise.

When determining where to hold your event, it is vital to find a location that does not make your event ticket price unattainable for most of your donors. Visit your donor database to determine how much people have been willing and able to donate to your organization for an idea of what prices seem reasonable. If you can find a location that will give your organization a discount, that is great, but since so many nonprofits hold golf outings, there is a lot of competition, so many golf courses do not see the need.

Another thing you may want to think about is whether golfers will want to play the course you have chosen. Golfers can be very particular about where they want to play. If you hold your golf outing at a private club that most people cannot play on their own, there may be a better chance that you attract high-income donors to your event. At the same time, the price for private clubs is understandably higher.

The date and time of your event will likely be determined by when the location of your choosing is available. It is best to research when neighboring nonprofits are holding their events and do your best not to choose the same date. 


2. Set your fundraising goal

Once you have decided on the location for your first golf outing, you need to develop a realistic fundraising goal and budget. Your fundraising office should decide what you need to raise from this event, but afterward, your team can play a more significant role in determining how to raise these funds.

Your organization’s past fundraising successes and failures should help determine how much a golf fundraiser will bring into your organization. Past events may also give you a better idea of how well live and silent auctions do with your donor base.

Pro tip: Once you set a fundraising goal, make sure to add a goal meter to your donation page. It’s the perfect way to keep your fundraiser focused on the target, keep your team motivated towards the goal, and share your fundraising progress with donors and prospective donors. Goal meters create a sense of urgency when you are close to reaching your target!

Check out this live example where they added the goal thermometer to encourage more gifts for their annual golf cup.

Example of an organization using Donorbox to raise funds for a golf tournament fundraiser.

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2.1 Expenses

After the golf course, other expenses for the event will include –

  • Food and drinks
  • Signage
  • Tickets
  • Advertising
  • Prizes

In addition to signs that promote your event and nonprofit, you can add signs at each hole. These signs can be used to promote your organization’s mission and gain sponsorships to raise more funds during the event.

The cost of these items can be as little or as much as you choose. Many golf tournaments include a fundraising dinner or lunch. The location you have selected should offer the cost of renting a room for this part of your event. Food should be part of this cost as well since most golf courses will not let you bring in outside caterers.


2.2 Revenue

Revenue for your event can also come from several different sources –

  • Ticket sales
  • Sponsorships
  • Silent and live auction
  • Games
  • Selling products like merchandise 

3. Recruit enough volunteers

If your nonprofit decides to hold a golf tournament, it is essential not to do it yourself. It takes a lot of people to run a successful golf fundraiser!

Recruit volunteers who are interested in your mission. Bonus points if they know a thing or two about golf!


3.1 Planning team

It is best to develop a fundraising team of volunteers to help plan and run this type of event. There are several different directions your golf outing can go, and you probably have a few volunteers or more who have attended and even run golf outings themselves. Find at least five people to help plan this event, and put them in charge of specific areas of the planning process.

Pro tip: The first people you consider should be your board members. See who would be interested in joining the planning committee. Board members should have connections to other leaders in your community. Thanks to these connections, board members can help sell tickets and find sponsors and auction items for your golf tournament.


3.2 Event volunteers

In addition to your planning committee, you will need even more volunteers on golf day. Volunteers are needed to run the games at each hole, help golfers around the course, and run your fundraising dinner and auctions. If you can find companies willing to offer corporate volunteers for your event, take them up on their offer. 


4. Create a theme

As we mentioned earlier, there are many golf tournaments out there, so you may want to help yours stand out by creating a theme. Golf fundraisers for women can have a tea party or spa theme. Golf fundraisers for men can get their theme ideas from movies like “Caddyshack” or “Tin Cup.” Other theme ideas can be based on your nonprofit’s mission.

Finding a theme that best fits your organization can be fun and an excellent chance to show your creativity. It can also bring a bunch of new donors to your event who like the theme you have chosen.

Check out how this organization created a fun “Star Wars” theme for their golf fundraiser! They used Donorbox Events to sell sponsorships.

Example of an organization hosting a "Par Wars" themed golf fundraiser using Donorbox Events.

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5. Decide on other fundraising games

Ticket sales will only cover the cost of the golf course and food, so it is necessary to include several different fundraising games and ideas in your event. If your event includes a dinner or lunch, you can choose this time to have a silent or live auction. These auctions can add hundreds or even a few thousand to your revenue, depending on the items. This is where your fundraising team really comes in handy. Before sending your team out to find auction items, give them a list of items that will have the best chance of raising money at your event.

Pro tip: Golfers love golfing at private clubs. If your event is being held at a private club, ask for a foursome donation to include in your auction. Be sure to ask around at all the other private clubs for foursome donations as well.

Auctions are not the only way to raise additional funds during your golf outing. Your event can raise more money by adding a one-on-one contest or giving golfers the chance to buy unlimited mulligans.


6. Find sponsors

Another way to raise funds for your event is through sponsorships. Company sponsorships should be customized for each business you contact.

If a large corporation is willing to support your nonprofit with a substantial donation, you can offer them a naming sponsorship. The entire event can be named the John B and Sons Golf Tournament for … Nonprofit. This allows the company additional advertising opportunities and social impact status in your community.

Other companies can support your golf event with a ‘hole’ sponsorship. This can be offered for a few hundred dollars in exchange for their name and logo being added to signage on a particular hole. Companies may pay more for hole sponsorships at the putting contest or hole-in-one holes. It is best practice to find a different sponsor for each hole. You can even offer the company the chance to set up a table at the hole to share their goodies.

Check out how this organization used a Donorbox donation page to sell sponsorships. They added tons of different sponsorship levels so sponsors of any size could get involved! They also clearly outlined the benefits of each level right on their donation page.

Organization using Donorbox to sell sponsorships for their golf tournament fundraiser.


7. Promote your event

No one will come to your event if you do not advertise, so find ways to promote your event wherever possible! Here are some promotion tactics to keep in mind –


7.1 Online ticket sales

One of the easiest ways to promote a golf tournament is by creating an event page online and adding your ticket levels to it. It’s easy to share your online event page – all you need to do is add the link to your social media accounts and share it via email to help people buy tickets easily.

The first step would be to choose an online event-ticketing solution that will help you create an event page and a ticketing form in simple steps. Donorbox Events makes this easy!

Read this step-by-step guide to start using Donorbox Events in only a few simple steps, and watch this short video to see it in action!

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7.2 Printed tickets

If your golf tournament is the largest fundraiser for your organization, and it includes a dinner and auction afterward, you may want to sell printed tickets to make it more formal. This may also help when selling only the dinner tickets to those not interested in golf.


7.3 In-person invites

Your fundraising team will be essential when selling tickets to your golf tournament. Most golf tournaments sell tickets as foursomes. The best way to sell these foursomes is by word of mouth and personal invites. It is a lot harder to say no to a friend or colleague than to an email or social media post. Ask your fundraising team to find at least the number of foursomes that cover your event’s cost. This way, your nonprofit’s budget does not suffer if the event is not as successful as you had hoped.


7.4 Social media and newsletters

Social media is the best way to create momentum around any upcoming event. You can create an event page for your fundraiser on Facebook. That’s the easiest way to share updates, invite your friends and family, see who’s interested in the event, and more. Do link your event to any online campaign you’re running to provide an easy way to buy tickets and make donations.

If you already have a monthly/weekly newsletter for your nonprofit, all you have to do is add info about your fundraiser to your next mailing. 


8. Find a photographer

Golf tournaments provide great photo opportunities. This is especially true if your nonprofit has chosen a theme and event attendees are dressed up. Donors are having fun, your nonprofit is promoting its mission, and sponsors are advertising across the golf course. The chance of getting a usable photograph for your website and your sponsors’ websites is high. Past event photographs are also a great way to encourage more new attendees at upcoming golf events. Finding a professional photographer may be a reasonable cost to include in your event budget


7 Exciting Golf Fundraising Ideas to Raise More Money

Golf fundraising calls for creativity. While there are several fundraising games every nonprofit does at golf tournament fundraisers, you can stand out in the crowd if you look for ways to promote your mission or build on a theme.


1. Sell mulligans

Mulligans are one of those things that pretty much every golf tournament offers. Mulligans are a second chance to swing, and golfers can buy as many as they want before or during the game. Selling mulligans is an excellent way to raise a little more funds with limited effort.

You will need volunteers to sell these mulligans on the course. Unless you have a strategy in place to sell online tickets for mulligans -and raise more! The below event-ticketing form example includes a dedicated ticket tier to sell mulligans for their annual mini-golf tournament.

selling mulligans event page

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2. Hole-in-one contest

The excitement of having a hole-in-one cannot be topped. Your nonprofit can include a hole-in-one game on one or more holes. This will give players an even greater thrill with a cash prize if one of them gets a hole-in-one on that hole.


3. Putting contest

Putting contests are another easy way to raise additional funds before or after your event. Your nonprofit can set up a game on the putting green for all golfers and their families to take part in. People buy tickets to play this game, and the top three winners can win a prize.


4. Caddie auction

As we have mentioned, it is essential to be creative when finding volunteers for your event. A Caddie Auction can be an excellent opportunity to recruit volunteers and raise additional funds at your next golf tournament.

Ensure you have enough caddies for all teams and auction them off one by one before the game. A caddie auction can bring in a few thousand dollars if your event is large enough.


5. Virtual golf events

Virtual golf tournaments can be a chance for supporters to raise funds while doing their favorite pastimes. You can choose a day and connect with courses in the area to give your supporters a discount, or you can ask golfers to create their own peer-to-peer campaign and ask for pledges.


6. Beat the pro

Golfers can be very competitive. Your golf tournament can appeal to golfers in your area with the addition of a Beat the Pro hole. Ask the golf club for a professional golfer to stand at one hole at your event. Golfers can bet that they can beat the pro. If they win, they double their money. If the pro wins, your organization wins the bet.

Golfers who are not so competitive can pay the pro to hit their ball and improve their score. Your nonprofit will receive that payment as well.


7. Mini-golf tournaments

Golf tournaments may not be the right event for your organization. If that is the case, your nonprofit could hold a mini-golf tournament to get families and kids involved in your fundraising efforts. Sell tickets online to families or groups of friends. You can still sell sponsorships for each hole and hold hole-in-one and putting games to raise more funds.


Final Thoughts

Golf tournaments can be an excellent way to raise funds and promote your organization with a new donor base. Golf is not cheap. Donors who love the game and attend these events can generally afford to make more significant donations to your organization.

Holding a golf tournament will take additional volunteers to plan and run the event successfully. Or you can go virtual and use a tool like Donorbox to easily embed your donation form on your virtual event-hosting platform like Airmeet to raise additional donations during the event.

However you decide to host your golf tournament fundraisers, remember that Donorbox is there to help you! Our Events feature makes it simple for you to set up an online event page, sell tickets, manage your purchasers’ data, and more. In addition, we also offer a number of other powerful products to elevate your fundraising and donor management efforts – explore them on our website.

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Want more tips and ideas for your fundraising events? Find hundreds of them at the Donorbox Nonprofit Blog. Subscribe to our newsletter – and we’ll send a collection of our best resources (blogs, podcasts, webinars) to your inbox every month!

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Kristine Ensor is a freelance writer with over a decade of experience working with local and international nonprofits. As a nonprofit professional she has specialized in fundraising, marketing, event planning, volunteer management, and board development.

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