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Golf Pro Shop Revenue From Apparel: A Margin Math Walkthrough

February 27, 2026 8 min read By Sarah Caldwell
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Table of Contents
  1. What Wholesale Margins Actually Net
  2. What a No-Inventory Print Model Nets
  3. Revenue Math by Club Size
  4. Where the Hybrid Model Wins
  5. A Real-World Annual Plan
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

Golf pro shop apparel is supposed to be a profit center. At most clubs, it isnt — wholesale buys, dead stock, end-of-season markdowns, and back-room storage all eat into the realized margin. Run the numbers honestly and most clubs net $5-7 per piece after losses, not the $15-20 the sticker price suggests. A no-inventory print-on-demand layer changes the math. Here is the walkthrough.

What Wholesale Margins Actually Net

A typical club polo costs $22 wholesale and retails at $60. The headline margin is 63 percent. The realized margin is much lower because of three drags:

Run the math: a $22 wholesale polo retailed at $60, sold 75 percent at full and 25 percent at $40 average clearance, nets about $32 per piece after the markdown drag. Subtract carrying cost and the realized margin is closer to $26-28 per piece, not $38.

What a No-Inventory Print Model Nets

Print-on-demand inverts the model. The club sets retail at $45-55, the platform base price is $20-25, the per-piece margin is $20-30. The piece prints when a member orders it. Zero dead stock, zero markdowns, zero carrying cost.

The realized margin per piece is lower than the wholesale headline ($25 vs $38) but the realized margin per piece is higher than the wholesale realized ($25 vs $26-28). And the inventory risk is zero. For events, womens cuts, plus sizes, junior, and accent colors — pieces that historically never reached the floor — the model is a pure margin add.

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Revenue Math by Club Size

MembersAnnual purchase rateMargin per itemAnnual apparel margin
150 members2 items / year$12$3,600
300 members3 items / year$12$10,800
500 members3 items / year$12$18,000
500 members + events3 items + 4 event drops / year$12 + $10 event$25,000-$45,000
1,000 members + events + staff3 items + 4 events + staff turnover$12 + $10 event$45,000-$75,000

The event line is the killer. Member-guest, club championship, charity outing, opening day — each drop adds $2K-$6K in margin to a 300-member club with almost no operational lift because it runs through the digital storefront with no leftover inventory.

Where the Hybrid Model Wins

The clubs that maximize apparel revenue run both layers: a tight physical wall for the impulse buys and a digital pro shop for the long tail and events. The physical wall holds 20 SKUs in two sizes deep. The digital pro shop holds the other 200 SKUs in every size and color.

Member walks in, buys a polo off the wall. Member opens the email a week later, buys a junior camp polo for their daughter through the digital shop. Member shops the member-guest drop, picks up the embroidered quarter-zip. Same club, three transactions in 30 days, with only the first one touching back-room inventory.

A Real-World Annual Plan

For a 400-member private club running the hybrid model:

The hybrid model roughly doubles realized apparel margin at the same membership without doubling the work, because the digital layer carries itself once the storefront is built.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much profit does a golf pro shop make on apparel?

Headline wholesale margins look like 60 percent but realized margins after dead stock, markdowns, and carrying cost are closer to 40-45 percent. A no-inventory print-on-demand layer nets $10-15 per piece with no inventory risk and can roughly double total apparel margin when run alongside a tight physical wall.

What is the average annual apparel revenue for a country club pro shop?

A 300-member club typically nets $15K-$25K in apparel margin annually from the physical wall. Adding a digital pro shop and event drops can push that to $35K-$45K. Larger clubs (700+ members) regularly clear $60K-$100K when both layers are running.

What is the biggest cost most pro shops miss?

Dead stock is the largest hidden cost. Roughly 20-30 percent of a wholesale apparel buy sells only at clearance, eroding the headline margin. A no-inventory print layer for womens cuts, plus sizes, junior, and event apparel eliminates that drag because nothing prints until it sells.

How quickly can a pro shop see results from adding an online store?

Most clubs see meaningful order volume within 30 days of launch if they email the member list and put a QR code at the counter. The first event drop (member-guest, opening day, charity outing) typically delivers the breakthrough revenue moment.

Sarah Caldwell
Sarah CaldwellCrossFit and Functional Fitness Coach

Sarah owns a CrossFit affiliate and coaches HYROX teams in her off-hours. She has been in the functional fitness space for nine years and writes about box-life logistics, custom team apparel, and the new wave of hybrid training.

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