CharityGolfEvent.com

Free resource

Keep the fundraising target visible while the event changes.

Plan income, costs, sponsor revenue, prize costs, fees, and fundraising targets.

Field note

The budget should protect the fundraising goal, not just record transactions. Experienced organizers look at net funds raised early and often.

Golf fundraisers can feel successful while quietly losing margin. A full field, donated prizes, and a busy raffle table are all good signs, but they only matter if the costs are visible and the fundraising target is protected.

Use the budget as a decision tool, not just an accounting sheet. When a cost appears, ask whether it improves the event, helps sponsors, or increases funds raised. If it does not do one of those things, it needs a real reason to stay.

Printable resource

Download the matching PDF checklist with owner fields, field notes, and repeat-organizer reminders.

Download PDF

What this prevents

Gross revenue can hide the actual fundraising result.

Sponsor income, player fees, and auction revenue get tracked separately.

Costs are harder to control without a shared target.

How to use it

  1. 1

    Set fundraising target

  2. 2

    Estimate income

  3. 3

    Estimate costs

  4. 4

    Track commitments

  5. 5

    Report net funds raised

What experienced organizers learn

Separate committed income from hoped-for income. It changes how brave you can be with costs.

Put a real number beside donated items, even when they are in-kind. It helps tell the event story later.

Track fees and print costs. They are small individually and annoying in aggregate.

Mistakes worth avoiding

Celebrating gross revenue without checking net funds raised.

Counting sponsor conversations as committed income.

Letting food, prizes, printing, and payment fees sit outside the event budget.

Printable checklist

Use this as a working list. Add owners and dates before you share it with the committee.

Download PDF

Income

  • Player entries
  • Team packages
  • Sponsorships
  • Donations
  • Auction and raffle income

Costs

  • Course or green fees
  • Food and beverage
  • Prizes
  • Printing and signage
  • Payment processing fees

Controls

  • Set fundraising target
  • Track committed vs expected income
  • Approve costs before purchase
  • Record donated value

Reporting

  • Gross income
  • Total costs
  • Net funds raised
  • Top sponsor contributions

Income categories

Track the channels that usually drive the event total.

  • Player entries
  • Team packages
  • Sponsorships
  • Donations and auctions

Cost categories

Separate fixed event costs from optional upgrades so decisions are easier.

  • Course fees
  • Food and beverage
  • Prizes
  • Print and signage

Event reporting

Use the budget to tell a clearer story after the event.

  • Gross revenue
  • Net funds raised
  • Sponsor contribution
  • Next-year notes

More organizer resources

Use these free planning pages to shape the event before the platform does the heavier lifting.