Today · Apr 1, 2026
Marriott's Golf Academy Is Smart Brand Strategy Disguised as a Tee Time

Marriott's Golf Academy Is Smart Brand Strategy Disguised as a Tee Time

A golf school promotion doesn't sound like brand news... until you realize Marriott is quietly building an experiential moat that most owners will never benefit from and most competitors can't replicate.

So Marriott is offering free lodging at Grande Vista for anyone who books a multi-day golf school, throwing in TaylorMade gift cards worth up to $300, waiving equipment rental fees, and bundling spa discounts on top. And your first reaction is probably "okay, it's a golf promo, why do I care?" You should care because this isn't a golf promo. This is Marriott doing what Marriott does better than almost anyone... building experiential programming that locks guests into the ecosystem before they even realize they're locked in. The Golf Academy charges $625 for a one-day school and $1,749 for three days, and when you add the lodging, the rounds, the lunch, the club fitting, the kid-learns-free upsell, you're looking at a guest who just spent three days fully immersed in Marriott-branded everything. That guest isn't comparison shopping on their next trip. They're booking through Bonvoy. That's the play.

Here's what I find fascinating and a little maddening about this. Marriott's Global Golf Division manages 45 courses across 14 countries, more than 1,000 holes, 1.5 million rounds a year, over 55 years of institutional knowledge in golf hospitality. That is an asset base that no other hotel company can replicate overnight. And they're using it not just to sell tee times but to create multi-day, high-spend guest experiences that blend instruction, wellness, family programming, and accommodations into something that feels curated (and I use that word deliberately, even though I usually mock it, because in this case they've actually earned it). When 90% of high-net-worth travelers say wellness matters in their booking decisions, and industry data shows 9 out of 10 golfers plan to spend the same or more on golf travel in 2026, Marriott isn't guessing. They're reading the market correctly.

But let's talk about the Deliverable Test, because this is where the story gets complicated for most of the Marriott portfolio. This program lives at Grande Vista in Orlando. It requires PGA career professionals, Trackman launch monitors, V1 Pro video analysis, dedicated instruction space, a resort with enough F&B infrastructure to bundle daily lunch, and a spa operation robust enough to cross-sell treatments. How many properties in Marriott's system can actually deliver this? A handful. Maybe two handfuls if you're generous. Which means the brand gets to market "Marriott Golf Academy" as a halo across the entire portfolio while the actual experience exists at a tiny fraction of properties. I've seen this pattern before... a brand builds something genuinely excellent at three or four showcase locations, promotes it as if it represents the whole flag, and every owner at a 200-key Courtyard in a secondary market gets to explain to guests why their property doesn't have a golf academy. The brand gets the positioning. The individual owner gets the expectation gap.

And here's the part the press release left out. Those "free lodging" nights at Grande Vista? That's inventory Marriott is using to drive golf school enrollment, which means those rooms aren't available for revenue bookings during those periods. If you're the ownership entity at Grande Vista (Marriott Vacations Worldwide, which is technically a separate company from Marriott International, a distinction that matters more than most people realize), you're subsidizing an experiential program that benefits Marriott International's brand positioning. The economics of that arrangement are... interesting. And by interesting I mean someone should be asking very specific questions about how the room cost is allocated, who absorbs the displacement revenue, and whether the golf school tuition plus ancillary spend actually exceeds what those rooms would have generated at market rate. I'd want to see those numbers. I suspect they work, honestly, because Orlando in shoulder season has plenty of inventory to play with. But "I suspect they work" is not the same as "the owner reviewed the math and agreed." Those are two very different sentences.

What Marriott is really doing here is proving a thesis that the rest of the industry should be watching closely. Leisure is outperforming business travel (Marriott's own Q4 2025 data showed leisure and group up 4% and 2% respectively while business travel RevPAR declined), and the brands that can offer genuine experiential programming... not a lobby activation, not a playlist on Spotify, actual multi-day programming that creates memories... are going to capture a disproportionate share of that leisure wallet. Marriott just signed a record 94 deals in the Caribbean and Latin America. They're opening JW properties with all-inclusive models. And they're running golf academies that cost $1,749 for three days of instruction. This is a company that understands the difference between selling rooms and selling experiences. The question for every other brand is: what's YOUR version of this? Because "elevated lifestyle" on a mood board isn't going to cut it. Not when your competitor is handing someone a TaylorMade driver and a swing coach and two free nights. That's not a mood board. That's a memory. And memories book repeat stays.

Operator's Take

Here's the thing about experiential programming... it works, but only if you can actually deliver it. If you're an owner at a resort property with amenities (golf, spa, F&B infrastructure), look at what Marriott is doing here and ask yourself why you're not bundling your own version of multi-day programming that locks guests in for 48-72 hours instead of hoping for a one-night booking. The math on ancillary spend over a three-day stay versus a single night is not even close. If you're at a select-service or limited-service property, don't chase this... it's not your fight. But DO pay attention to the expectation gap it creates, because guests are going to start asking why your Marriott property doesn't feel like the one they saw on Instagram.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
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Source: Google News: Marriott
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