The Clubhouse is your golf network — organized, searchable, and built for the way golfers actually use their connections. At its simplest, it's a place to stay in touch with the people you already play with.
Day-to-Day Coordination
Create a group message with your regular foursome. See who's free this weekend. Coordinate a trip without the chaos of a group text that's already doing fifteen other things. The Clubhouse handles the logistics of staying connected to the golfers in your life — without the noise.
But the Clubhouse is designed to be more than a group chat with a green color scheme. It's a structured network built around the way golf relationships actually work: through shared courses, mutual connections, and the slow accumulation of rounds played together over time.
Before connecting with members or arranging reciprocal rounds, take a few minutes to read our guide to being a great member of The Clubhouse. It covers how to introduce yourself, message with intention, and make the most of what the network offers.
The Reciprocal Round System
At the heart of the Clubhouse is a reciprocal round system that turns your membership into a key. If you're open to hosting guests at your club, you can designate yourself as a host on your profile. If you're interested in playing other private courses as a guest, you can browse clubs on the network and mark the ones you'd love to get on.
When two members are mutually interested in each other's clubs — you want to play theirs, they want to play yours — STIMP recognizes the match and gives you both the opportunity to connect. No awkward cold outreach. No wondering if the ask is appropriate. Just a warm introduction built on shared interest.
When two members are mutually interested in each other's clubs, STIMP recognizes the match. No awkward cold outreach — just a warm introduction built on shared interest.
A Relationship Sport
Golf has always been a relationship sport. The connections you make on a course, in a locker room, or over a post-round drink have a way of turning into business introductions, new friendships, and doors opening in unexpected places. The Clubhouse gives that network structure — a place to meet serious golfers outside your immediate circle, expand your reach into new clubs and geographies, and build the kind of relationships that tend to show up when it matters.
Looking to develop a relationship with a sponsor at a club you're hoping to join? Your path to that introduction might already be one or two connections away.
The connections that tend to matter most are the ones made slowly, through shared rounds and honest golf conversations. The Clubhouse gives those connections a place to live.
A Virtual Country Club
Think of the Clubhouse as a virtual country club. The people inside have been referred, verified, and are here for the same reasons you are — to play more golf, connect with better people, and get more out of the game they love.
There's no algorithm deciding who you should meet. Just a community of golfers worth knowing, and a system designed to help you find them. The quality of that community depends entirely on how each of us shows up within it — which is why we ask every member to read our guide before engaging.