Spring golf course scene with camera, phone, and laptop showing social content and analytics, promoting golf course social media tips to build excitement for the spring season.

How Golf Courses Can Build Spring Hype on Social Media

In Pro Shop Playbook by Giraffix Golf

Before we go platform-by-platform, build your spring content around these “hype drivers”:

  • Course progress: first mow, first roll, bunker work, signage going up
  • Conditions: greens update, cart rules, range hours, frost delays (clear + consistent)
  • Tee time urgency: opening week tee sheet reminders, twilight returns, “limited spots”
  • Leagues & events: registration opens, early bird perks, weekly reminders
  • Membership: spring member nights, amenities, “new member” story highlights
  • Pro shop & F&B: new arrivals, spring menu, featured drinks, specials
  • People: staff back on the grounds, member reunions, first rounds of the year

Now—here’s how to tailor that to each platform.


Facebook Tips (Best for local reach + events + leagues)

Facebook is still the king for community-based golf marketing.

What to post

  • Event posts (leagues, scrambles, opening day specials) with clear CTAs
  • Course updates (cart rules, frost delay, hours) in simple graphic form
  • Weekly tee time reminders (“Weekend spots available—book now”)
  • Album recaps from last season + “Spring is coming” throwbacks

Best tactics

  • Pin a spring post: “2026 Spring Info: Hours, leagues, opening dates, booking link”
  • Use Facebook Events for leagues/outings and invite followers
  • Post in local/community groups (when allowed) with a tasteful “course is open” update
  • Boost one high-performing post per month (ad spend optional)

Quick win idea

  • Spring Opening Week” post series: 5 posts in 5 days (conditions + shop + range + tee times + league signup)

Instagram Tips (Best for brand vibe + visuals + Reels)

Instagram is how you make your course look premium and shareable.

What to post

  • Reels: sunrise/sunset shots, greens roll, pin placements, quick drone clips
  • Carousel posts: “5 reasons to play here this spring” + “what’s new”
  • Stories: daily updates (cart rules, tee time reminders, pro shop drops)
  • Highlights: “Spring 2026” highlight with all key info saved

Best tactics

  • Keep visuals consistent: same color tone, clean typography, strong photo/video
  • Use Story stickers: polls (“Front 9 or back 9 first?”), questions, countdowns
  • Make a “Hole of the Week” reel series (quick and repeatable)

Quick win idea

  • First Tee Friday” weekly Reel: 8–12 seconds of the first tee + a simple caption: “Weekend is calling.”

TikTok Tips (Best for reach + personality + behind-the-scenes)

TikTok is not about perfection. It’s about real. Use it to show what golfers never see.

What to post

  • Behind-the-scenes: “greens crew at 6AM,” “first cut of the season,” “range picker POV”
  • “This is your sign to play golf this weekend” type clips with trend audio
  • Quick educational bits: “What a frost delay means” / “Why carts are restricted”
  • Fun moments: staff intros, league energy, first birdie reactions

Best tactics

  • Hook fast: first 1–2 seconds should show the course or something satisfying
  • Keep it short: 7–15 seconds works great
  • Don’t overthink text overlays—simple is better

Quick win idea

  • Spring Course Glow-Up” series: before/after bunker work, tee box cleanup, first green-up.

YouTube Shorts Tips (Best for evergreen visibility)

Shorts is a sleeper platform for golf courses—especially for search and long-term reach.

What to post

  • Drone flyovers (short cuts)
  • “Hole spotlight” clips with yardage and a quick visual
  • “Today at the course” highlight montage
  • Tournament recap clips

Best tactics

  • Title your shorts like golfers search: “Best Par 3 at [Course Name]” / “Spring conditions at [Course Name]”
  • Repost your best Reels/TikToks here (same vertical format)

Quick win idea

  • Upload 1 short per week for 8 weeks starting before opening day.

Bonus: Google Business Profile Tips (Huge for local discovery)

Not a “social” platform, but it’s where golfers decide fast.

What to post

  • Weekly updates: “Spring hours,” “Range open,” “Book tee times”
  • Offer posts: “Twilight special,” “League registration open”
  • Photos: 3–5 fresh photos per month minimum

Quick win idea

  • Weekly post every Monday: “This week at the course” (hours + events + booking link)

A Simple Spring Posting Schedule (Easy + Effective)

If you want a clean cadence that works:

Weekly

  • 1 Reel/Short video (conditions or vibes)
  • 2 photo posts (events, shop, tee times)
  • 3–5 Stories (quick updates + reminders)

Daily (optional)

  • One 10-second “course today” clip on Stories

Consistency beats volume. Every time.


The Real Secret: Make Spring Feel Like a Season, Not a Date

Courses that win spring don’t just announce that they’re open. They build anticipation like a countdown: progress, people, conditions, events, and a steady drumbeat of “this is going to be a great year.”