In the not-so-distant past, and still all too common today, booking a round of golf meant picking up the phone. You would call the pro shop, wait on hold, and hope to catch the head pro or an assistant who could squeeze you in. The process was (and is) slow, imperfect, and, if we are honest, a little charming.
Fast forward a few decades, and that simple act of securing a tee time is now undergoing a dramatic transformation. Technology is racing into golf, driven by a wave of younger, tech-savvy operators who entered the game during COVID and are now leading in an AI-driven era. Golf is cool again, and with that comes better technology.
The Era of Phone Calls and Paper Tee Sheets
Before the internet reshaped the industry, tee sheets were literal sheets: paper grids taped to the counter in the golf shop. Staff filled them in with pencils. Booking a round required a phone call or a friendly in-person chat. Regulars often had preferred slots, and who you knew or how early you called could make all the difference.
It was not efficient, but it was personal. There was a rhythm to it, a sense of belonging. Golfers developed relationships with the staff who handled the bookings. That connection was part of the game itself.
The Digital Dawn
By the late 1990s and early 2000s, the first digital tee sheets emerged. Software systems replaced clipboards, allowing pro shops to manage reservations on computers for the first time. Soon after, online tee time platforms appeared. GolfNow, TeeOff, EZLinks, and others began bringing the process directly to consumers.
These early marketplaces held tremendous promise. They had the potential to help both golfers and the golf industry by increasing visibility, improving efficiency, and simplifying access. It was the start of something big, but the business model behind it would later reshape the industry in ways few anticipated.
The Age of Aggregation and Consolidation
As online booking gained traction, GolfNow began to acquire many of the smaller aggregators that had found regional success. Over time, this wave of consolidation created a near-monopoly over online tee time distribution, giving one company outsized leverage over pricing, visibility, and access.
GolfNow discovered a highly lucrative model through barter (trading tee times for inclusion in the marketplace) which quietly took a significant toll on golf courses. Those courses who recognized the impact eventually opted out, choosing to go it alone. What remained in many regions was extremely fragmented inventory.
Over time, this fragmentation eroded GolfNow’s role as a true aggregator, reducing its relevance to primarily deal-driven golfers searching for deep discounts. The original hope for full visibility across courses never materialized.
As a result, golfers today still find themselves bouncing between multiple sites and apps, each showing only a fraction of what’s actually available. Over time, they’ve become conditioned to only consider a handful of familiar courses, simply because exploring beyond them is too impractical.
The golf industry never reached the level of unification that Google Flights brought to airfare: a single, complete, transparent marketplace. Convenience has improved somewhat, but true visibility never did. And while golf’s popularity keeps growing, the inefficiencies in how players find and book tee times will eventually catch up with the game.
The Perspective Problem
Here lies a fundamental issue: most people working within the golf industry haven’t booked a tee time themselves in years. They’re not the ones refreshing pages, juggling apps, or even camping out overnight in parking lots (yes, that actually happens). That lack of empathy for the golfer’s experience is stalling innovation.
What they don’t know is that one friend in the group who always books for the foursome is tired. They have seen how easy it is to reserve a flight or a dinner reservation, and they cannot understand why golf still feels so clunky and disjointed.
So many of today’s new golf-tech innovators are simply frustrated golfers solving their own pain points, and that is exactly the perspective the industry needs to welcome.
The AI Question
As artificial intelligence begins influencing every corner of consumer technology, golf’s next frontier feels inevitable: conversational booking.
Imagine saying, “Book me an early tee time tomorrow in Orange County under $120,” and an AI assistant instantly handling the rest.
It is a compelling vision, and it is already starting to happen. Chatbots and voice interfaces are improving fast. For golfers who value simplicity or accessibility, it could be transformative.
But AI alone will not replace the modern marketplace. It will enhance it.
Why the Marketplace Still Matters
Golfers do not just want to book. They want to browse, compare, and discover. They want to see photos, ratings, and prices. They want to explore, not just transact.
Golfers crave variety. Playing the same rotation of courses again and again makes the game feel stale, and when that happens, participation drops. Marketplaces bring discovery back into the experience, helping golfers uncover new courses that would otherwise not make it onto their radar.
A purely conversational interface cannot replace that visual, interactive experience. The future is not a choice between AI and user experience. It is the combination of both.
The next great golf marketplace will use AI to personalize recommendations, automate discovery, and anticipate a golfer’s needs, all while relying on clean design, comprehensive data, and a frictionless experience that keeps both golfers and courses in sync.
Fixing What Is Broken
Before that future can take shape, the industry must first repair the fractured digital foundation it stands on. Today, golf’s online infrastructure remains splintered. The major marketplaces show only a fraction of the total inventory and have evolved into discount platforms rather than true aggregators.
The result is a system that frustrates golfers and hurts a course’s bottom line. Instead of empowering play, it hides availability, adds fees, and trades away value that should stay between the golfer and the course. The very system designed to make golf more accessible has, ironically, made it harder for golfers to play and for courses to thrive.
The industry needs a single, modern foundation that unites all courses and tee sheets under one transparent system that works for everyone.
A truly open marketplace would give golfers full access to every available tee time, without added fees or artificial barriers. For courses, it would mean greater visibility, control, and the ability to connect directly with players on their own terms.
When that happens, friction goes down, play goes up, and the game grows stronger.
A Post-Pandemic Inflection Point
The COVID-era golf boom brought millions of new players into the game, many booking online for the first time. But as that surge cools, the industry faces a new kind of test.
The path forward is about removing friction, so the game stays strong even when demand softens. Now is the time to modernize golf’s digital foundation and build tools that make playing easier, not harder.
Conclusion: Where Golf Goes Next
The evolution of tee-time booking mirrors the story of golf itself, a balance between tradition and innovation. From paper tee sheets to cloud systems, from phone calls to AI, each step has aimed to make the game more inclusive and connected.
Now, as we stand on the edge of another technological leap, one truth remains clear: the heart of the tee time booking experience should be a modern, unified marketplace that serves both golfers and courses.Because when booking golf becomes effortless, the game itself grows stronger.
