Four New Hole-In-One Traditions to Replace Ace-Maker Paying for Bar Tab
News

Four New Hole-In-One Traditions to Replace Ace-Maker Paying for Bar Tab

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

Four New Hole-In-One Traditions to Replace Ace-Maker Paying for Bar Tab

Golf has some odd traditions. Near the top of that list is how players who make a hole-in-one have to foot the bill for the impending celebration in the clubhouse after the round. 

This concept, which dates back at least 100 years, is taken to the extreme in Japan. About 40 percent of the country’s golfers—some four million people—pay around $65 USD per year for hole-in-one insurance to receive around $3,500 worth of coverage for celebration expenses. 

The expectation is that golfers making an ace should pay not just for drinks but lavish gifts like push carts, rangefinders and more for their playing partners, likely exceeding the insurance coverage. 

That level of hole-in-one insurance for individual golfers is not as prevalent in other parts of the world, but it definitely exists. Join a private club in the U.S. and it’s possible, if not likely, that the option exists to pay a small monthly fee that goes into a hole-in-one pool so there are no additional out-of-pocket expenses for the lucky golfer. A lot of clubs make the cost a part of a member’s monthly dues. 

Look, I don’t want to be a curmudgeon—making an ace is really cool and it’s a blast to celebrate them. It’s so unlikely (12,500-to-1 odds for mere mortals) that it’s worth making a big deal of every one. 

Enjoy that accomplishment however you want. 

But doesn’t it seem a little dated for a golfer to make a hole-in-one and then feel obligated to immediately open a tab? 

If anything, it should be the other way around. 

The tradition is also centered around alcohol, which has become progressively less popular with millennials and younger generations. A recent Gallup report showed 62 percent of adults 35 and younger drink alcohol, down from 72 percent a decade ago. On average, those who drink are drinking less. 

I think it’s time for some new, fully inclusive and more reasonable traditions that can take hold over time. 

Here are four ideas that make more sense than our current custom.

Hole-In-One Clubhouse Party

The average golf course sees about 10 to 15 aces per year, although that can vary by a wide margin depending on the course and how many rounds it hosts. The average is one ace per 3,500 rounds. 

What if everyone who made an ace over the course of the golf season contributes $100 each for a combined hole-in-one party to take place after a tournament? 

You have $1,000 to $1,500 for food and drinks on top of whatever the tournament entry fee is for everyone else. 

The ace-makers still pay for the celebration—but it’s a shared cost where one person isn’t buying drinks. 

Maybe for northern courses this tournament comes at the end of the golf season. For other facilities, maybe it comes during the member-guest or another important event. It can stand alone as an outing to honor all the aces for the year or be combined with something else. 

This idea works better for private clubs but could easily work with public courses as well. 

It’s a reasonable amount of money for those who make a hole-in-one, there is a party to celebrate their ace, everyone who plays in the tournament gets to enjoy it in whatever way they want (drinking alcohol, eating, just spending time with friends or however else they want) and, if people who made a hole-in-one don’t want to pay to participate, they don’t have to feel pressured to do it. 

The Hole-In-One Tip Jar

One of the problems with my first idea is that making an ace warrants an immediate celebration. 

My second idea takes a stab at incorporating more traditional hole-in-one customs through a new take on the insurance system. 

In short, golf course communities—regardless of stature—collectively fund hole-in-one bar tabs through a tip jar. 

At nicer clubs, you could put the jars (waterproof, of course) out on each par-3 and have someone come around and collect the money at the end of each day or throughout the day. 

If security is an issue, a hole-in-one tip jar can be in the pro shop with a clear explanation about why the money is being collected. Clubs could give golfers the option to round up their green fee each time they play—or provide incentives, like offering free range balls for a year if you donate to the tip jar and then make a hole-in-one. 

Every time an ace is made, the golfer who made the hole-in-one gets a course credit that has to be used that day on food and drink. The course assigns maximum credit amounts and how many witnesses have to be present for the hole-in-one to count toward the program. 

The same golfers who give to the program will be among the ones who benefit from it. And if they aren’t, golfers who donate can rest easy knowing their spare change went to a good cause. 

Playing Partners/Golf Friends Pay for Hole-In-One Plaque

Any golfer who makes an ace will want to remember the moment with a plaque that includes their scorecard, the ball used for the shot and all the shot info (course, hole, yardage). 

These plaques can run $150 to $250 depending on the style and size. 

I like the tradition where playing partners and close golf friends are responsible for gifting that plaque. It’s affordable for everyone who has to pay and is meaningful to the person who makes the ace. 

You could even personalize it by including a photo of the whole group that played. 

In the case of a golfer making a hole-in-one while playing alone or in a smaller group, other friends who weren’t there at the moment could come up with the plaque together. 

It’s straightforward and wouldn’t happen immediately after the ace but it’s a nice gesture. 

The Buddy (Trip) System

Let’s say you consistently play golf with a certain group of friends. 

Wouldn’t it be cool if the friend who makes a hole-in-one is responsible for planning the next buddies trip? 

There are so many variations to this system that can make it fun. 

Maybe losing (or winning) a bet during a normal round requires an extra $5 payment to a pool to fund dinners on the trip. Maybe the trip is only a golf weekend within driving distance—or maybe the group goes to a place like Ireland. 

This is a way more positive outcome for someone who makes a hole-in-one—they get to pick the destination and what courses their group is going to play. But at the same time, they are responsible (within reason) for the main logistics involved. Everyone else just shows up, pays their share and enjoys the trip. 

For most golf friend groups, an ace might only happen every handful of years, if that. The certainty of having a buddies trip on the docket for an ace is a fun storyline to have. 

What other new traditions should be incorporated into golf’s hole-in-one culture? Let me know below in the comments.

For You

For You

News
Apr 25, 2024
Myrtle Beach Classic YouTube Qualifier Is An Interesting Concept That Doesn’t Quite Deliver
Golf Technology
Apr 25, 2024
Skillest is Reimagining Golf Instruction
Golf Bag Carts
Apr 25, 2024
Forum Member Review: Clicgear Model 4.0 Golf Push Cart
Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean is a longtime golf journalist and underachieving 8 handicap who enjoys the game in all forms. If he didn't have an official career writing about golf, Sean would spend most of his free time writing about it anyway. When he isn't playing golf, you can find Sean watching his beloved Florida Panthers hockey team, traveling to a national park or listening to music on his record player. He lives in Nashville with his wife and dog (of course the dog's name is Hogan).

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm

Sean Fairholm





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Deji Oguntonade

      1 month ago

      i think the golf club should pay by providing that flight with a bottle of champagne- after all, its also a feather to their own cap having such a feat occurring their club. Also they can make the best of that opportunity by posting that celebration in the media.

      SWING WITH PURPOSE: motivational nuggets to achieve your HOLE-IN-ONE
      https://issuu.com/dejioguntonade/docs/issuu_swing_with_purpose_test?fr=sNTA2NDcyMTI0MTk

      Reply

      Larry

      1 month ago

      As a 4-time acer I have bought drinks for our group consisting of 12-32 golfers. I think the tradition sucks. I like and agree with Dennis and Eric’s idea.

      Reply

      Jack

      1 month ago

      Best idea I saw was that the club has a mug labelled appropriately and it’s given to the person who gets the hole in one. He/she can ask every member to fill it once with their favourite drink. After they leave it’s put back behind the bar for the next lucky golfer. Everyone enjoys the celebration and no one has to get another mortgage.

      Reply

      Jerome Chabrillat

      1 month ago

      So.. what happens if the acer does not buy a drink for half the county? Does he get chased away and thrown stones at? He gets a day in Golf Court and gets sent to jail? If I ever ace, I’d gladly offer a drink to my playing partners but that’s it.

      Reply

      Michael scherman

      1 month ago

      Well, I have loved the game over 40 yrs now, close to several aces but never had one. That being said, I’ll admit golf is a luxury for me, financially impossible to play 3-4 times a week and settle for a few times a month. I would be put on the spot and embarrassed that I am not in position to pay a bar tab for others. If I do ace one someday, I hope I’m playing alone.. not everyone can afford such a old and archaic “gesture”

      Reply

      Jesse

      1 month ago

      I started a hole in one group at my club last year. If you are in the foursome and in the group you would pay the player who made a hole in one $1/yard. If there are 3 other people in your foursome part of the group then multiply it by 3. We’ve had 3 hole in one players since the start of last year. He/she then has ample money to buy all the drinks and still take a little home. We currently have 15 people in the group.

      Reply

      Butch

      1 month ago

      I like the plaque idea. I made my only ace as a teenager, my dad made had a trophy made for me. Great memory.

      Reply

      Ni

      1 month ago

      I would be happy to buy drinks if I ever get an ace, but only for witnesses…

      Reply

      GONERIGHTAGAIN

      1 month ago

      So many things. Don’t know what is going on over here, getting very CC centered. Around Christmas you guys were hawking a play at local country clubs scam site, then $70 hats, last week saying dress code’s are keeping people out of playing golf, and now this.
      Outside of the last two suggestions why would anyone at a public course put $ in a pool for a hole in one clubhouse party or an ace tip jar?
      Also 10-15 aces happen at courses each year? Find that dubious.

      Reply

      Paul Callahan

      1 month ago

      Dubious? Which way – more or less? My local muni (Bellevue, WA) averages about 15 aces a year on about 70+k rounds a year. In two consecutive years about ten years ago the totals were 29 and 30.

      Reply

      Hckymeyer

      1 month ago

      We have a standing wager amongst our normal guys. If anybody makes an ace each memeber of the group owes him $50. Then whoever made it still picks up the bar tab.

      Reply

      GONERIGHTAGAIN

      1 month ago

      When we were younger, the rule was that if anyone hit a hole in one, the rest of the foursome had to do whatever the guy wanted to do for the rest of the day. Run down to AC, go out to a steakhouse in Manhattan, etc. Twenty plus years later, still haven’t had any of us hit one

      Reply

      Dennis

      1 month ago

      Only playing partners should be involved. They should rework the ace maker in some way. Nothing expensive just a small gesture of commendation.

      Reply

      Will

      1 month ago

      I agree with BH & Eric’s comments. Maybe when golf was new, those who squeezed a nickel so hard that the buffalo hollered, didn’t want to spring for the $.03 that a beer cost at that time – hence, voted to have to the celebrant pay for the drinks. Or, maybe the only good golfers were the weathly ones, so let him buy us drinks…

      Reply

      Timothy Secor

      1 month ago

      I really dont get what im reading here……this is a total waste of space on this site. Is this where MGS is headed? opinion pieces that make no sense whatsoever?? Couple this with the survey i just received and the first question was “how do you identify”….and im bout ready to really limit my time on this site…..come on guys, do better

      Reply

      Jimmy

      1 month ago

      Oh no! They asked how you identify? Sorry to hear that.

      Did you respond with “snowflake?”

      Reply

      BH

      1 month ago

      I never have understood why the guy that got the ace gets punished. Seems like a real “golf” thing to do. Like the monks on Monty Python. Why can’t his buddies buy him a round and we’re good? Or a celebratory stogie? Top shelf, of course. No Swishers up in here.

      Reply

      Eric MacKinnon

      1 month ago

      I agree with BH. “Hey man, congratulations!” and a beer or two (on them) would suffice. I’m pretty low-key when it comes to that kind of stuff.

      Reply

      TvGuyJake

      1 month ago

      Or take him to a local cat-house for some ‘no guilt’ side action. Who would know?

      Reply

      Steventank

      1 month ago

      hole in one in China and some other Asia countries means bankrupt

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    News
    Apr 25, 2024
    Myrtle Beach Classic YouTube Qualifier Is An Interesting Concept That Doesn’t Quite Deliver
    Golf Technology
    Apr 25, 2024
    Skillest is Reimagining Golf Instruction
    Golf Bag Carts
    Apr 25, 2024
    Forum Member Review: Clicgear Model 4.0 Golf Push Cart
    ENTER to WIN 3 DOZEN

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls

    Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls
    By signing up you agree to receive communications from MyGolfSpy and select partners in accordance with our Privacy Policy You may opt out of email messages/withdraw consent at any time.