Golf Sponsorship - Sponsor Pro Golfers & Influencers (page 6)
Golf's fan base over-indexes on high earners and luxury buyers, making golfers some of the most commercially valuable athletes brands can sponsor. The roster spans PGA Tour regulars, LIV crossovers like Bryson DeChambeau, and a fast-growing pool of golf content creators who've built large social followings around the game's lifestyle pull. Browse 782 golf athletes and influencers open to brand partnerships on OpenSponsorship.
From discovery to signed deliverables, brands use OpenSponsorship to run measurable creator campaigns with less overhead. Here is how this category stacks up — plus platform-wide benchmarks from 2,500+ brand users and 25,000+ creator profiles.
753 athletes
Browse and filter golf athletes on OpenSponsorship — audience, location, platform, and more.
Typical social post range
$430–$4,100 among creators in this list (from listed pricing).
Average audience size
About 70K followers on average across this list — use filters to go bigger or smaller.
Strongest platform
Instagram leads this category.
Top markets
United States, United Kingdom, Canada.
7x average ROI
Brands use OpenSponsorship for discovery, proposals, and contracts — 8,000+ deals across 40+ countries.
Post rates on OpenSponsorship's golf roster run $410 to $4,000 on average, depending on the athlete's following and deliverables. Niche and local golfers, who make up the majority of the 782 profiles, tend to price in the lower hundreds per post; names with national or global reach command the upper end. Every profile lists its own rates so you can compare before committing.
Instagram is the dominant platform, with 584 of 782 golf athletes active there; TikTok follows with 90 and YouTube with 45. Audiences concentrate in the US (500 athletes), UK (49), and Canada (20), and they skew toward adults with high household incomes, consistent with golf's demographic profile. Activation opportunities are steady year-round since there's no single condensed event window the way fight sports have.
Luxury goods, financial services, automotive, travel, and premium apparel are the core verticals. Golf's affluent demographic also pulls in wealth management, insurance, and B2B tech brands that rarely find this income concentration anywhere else in sports. Common formats are social posts, product placement in course and range content, ambassador deals, and co-branded outings. A growing share of deals involve golf content creators rather than tour professionals, particularly for lifestyle and apparel brands.
The US accounts for 500 of 782 golf athletes on OpenSponsorship, with secondary pools in the UK (49) and Canada (20). You can filter by country, state, or city to target a specific market, which is useful for regional financial services firms, auto dealers, and hospitality brands where the golfer's local audience matters more than total follower count.
Average followings run about 74K across the golf roster, but most profiles sit well below that. The niche and local tiers account for 691 of 782 athletes combined; 70 sit in the regional band, 10 at national scale, and 11 with international or global reach. The smaller-profile majority is often where brands find the strongest engagement per dollar, particularly in premium niches where the audience cares deeply about the topic.
Create a profile, connect your social accounts, and set your rates. Brands searching the golf category can find you directly and send proposals without going through a manager. A complete profile with current stats and clear pricing draws more interest. Tour professionals, club players with strong local followings, and golf content creators are all active here, so there's a place regardless of where you compete.