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A Pro Shop’s Guide to Custom Golf Bag Margins
Country club and daily-fee pro shops that stock custom-branded bags are running a retail business inside a membership business, and the margin math matters as much as it does in any other retail category. Custom bags carrying the club crest sell at a premium over generic stock bags, but only if the pro shop buys at the right landed cost and prices with a clear margin target.
Here is a realistic look at how landed cost, resale price, and margin line up across our product styles at MOQ-level ordering.
Understanding landed cost at MOQ
Our pricing runs $65–$145/unit at our 25-unit minimum order quantity, with the range driven by bag style (stand bag versus cart bag versus tour staff bag) and decoration method (heat-transfer versus embroidery). Pro shops ordering above the 25-unit minimum, particularly at 75-plus units, typically move toward the lower end of a given style’s range, which directly improves margin without changing the resale price.
Setting resale price by style
Golf retail typically supports a keystone-plus markup on branded pro shop merchandise, especially for club-crested items members cannot buy anywhere else. Because a custom bag with the club logo is not a commodity item, pro shops can generally price above what a generic big-box bag of similar spec would command.
| Product Style | Landed Cost (at MOQ) | Typical Resale Price | Gross Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sunday/Carry Bag | $65–$85 | $150–$190 | ~55–60% |
| Stand Bag | $80–$110 | $190–$250 | ~55–58% |
| Cart Bag | $95–$130 | $220&ndash$300 | ~55–58% |
| Tour Staff Bag | $115–$145 | $280–$375 | ~55–60% |
Ordering strategy to protect margin
The biggest lever a pro shop has over margin is order consolidation. Rather than placing several 25-unit orders across a season, consolidating into a single larger order (75–150 units across styles) lowers per-unit landed cost and reduces the administrative overhead of managing multiple mockups and shipments. Seasonal reorders ahead of member events, tournaments, and holiday gifting windows are the most common pattern among our pro shop accounts.
Timing matters too. Placing a consolidated order 6–8 weeks ahead of your peak selling window — typically member-guest season, the club championship, or the holiday gifting stretch — gives you enough runway to clear our standard 3–4 week production window with buffer for shipping, without carrying excess inventory through the slow months. Shops that reorder reactively, after a display case runs empty, tend to either pay rush costs or lose weeks of sell-through waiting on stock.
Mixing styles to serve your full membership
A single-style order rarely covers a membership’s full range of needs. Most pro shop programs stock a Stand Bag and a Cart Bag as core inventory, add a Tour Staff Bag as an aspirational premium item near the register, and keep a small run of Sunday/Carry bags for guest passes or junior clinics. Spreading a consolidated order across these styles, rather than concentrating the full quantity in one SKU, tends to move faster off the shelf because it matches how members actually shop — some buying for themselves, others buying as gifts.
Choosing for Your Order
Plan your season’s bag inventory as one consolidated order where possible, and price each style with the keystone-plus benchmarks above as a starting point, adjusting for your specific membership and local market. Request a quote with your expected annual volume and we can model landed cost across styles. Learn more about working with us on the about page, or browse more retail guides on the blog.