This Australian Golf Brand Just Brought Its Under-$1 Trial To U.S. Golfers — And It's Slashing Tour-Grade Ball Prices By Over 50%
A small Aussie company that built a member base on premium 3-piece urethane balls at near-cost is now offering U.S. golfers a trial of the same membership for under $1 — at $24/dozen vs the $55+ pro shop standard.

An Australian golf brand operating out of a warehouse on Australia's Gold Coast is doing something that's caught the attention of U.S. golfers — and could put real pressure on the dominant American golf ball brands.
Punters Golf, founded by entrepreneur Lachy Waldon, has just brought its Birdie Pass membership to the U.S. market. The model lets golfers buy premium 3-piece urethane balls for $24 a dozen — a price point that sits roughly 55% below the suggested retail of comparable balls at most American pro shops and big-box retailers.
What's grabbing attention isn't just the price — it's how easy the brand is making it to test the offer. For the first time, U.S. golfers can trial the entire Birdie Pass membership for under $1, with two weeks to decide whether to keep it or cancel.
Try the Birdie Pass for under $1. 14 days. Cancel anytime.
Under $1 today unlocks the full membership — order tour-grade urethane balls at $24/dozen for two weeks. If it's not for you, one-click cancel before day 14 and you're never charged a cent more.
Why an under-$1 trial?
The trial mechanic is unusual for the U.S. golf ball market, where the dominant model has been "buy a sleeve, hope you like it." For a category where a single dozen of premium balls now retails at $55–$60, asking customers to commit upfront has become a real friction point.
"We knew U.S. golfers were sceptical — fair enough, we're a small Australian brand they've never heard of," Waldon said. "So instead of asking them to trust us, we figured we'd put a dollar of their own money on the table and let the balls do the talking."
The trial works simply: under $1 charged today activates the Birdie Pass for 14 days. During that window, members order tour-grade balls at $24/dozen — paying for shipping and the dozens themselves separately, but at member pricing. There's a four-dozen cap during the trial period to prevent abuse, but full members face no order limits.
If the customer doesn't cancel before day 14, the membership converts to the standard $69/year. Waldon's team sends a reminder email three days out — a self-imposed standard the brand says cuts post-charge complaints to "near zero."
Why now?
The U.S. launch comes at a moment of growing frustration among American golfers, with premium tour-grade balls retailing at price points that have pushed weekend players to the brink.
Pro V1s — long the default for serious club golfers — now retail at $54.99 per dozen at most U.S. retailers, with some pro shops charging upwards of $60. Comparable models from other major brands sit in similar territory.
For a regular weekend golfer who loses two or three balls a round, the math gets uncomfortable fast.
Industry estimates suggest the average American club golfer plays through 12–18 dozen balls per year — meaning a Pro V1 player can spend $700+ annually on balls alone. The Birdie Pass appears to be positioned squarely at this pain point.
The math: a golfer who plays through 15 dozen balls a year and switches from $55 retail balls to the Birdie Pass would save approximately $396 in their first year — even after paying the $69 annual membership fee.
What the balls actually are
Industry observers were initially sceptical that a $24 ball could match the performance of a $55 one. But the published specifications sit firmly in the premium tier.
- Construction3-layer (core, mantle, urethane cover)
- CoverTour-grade urethane
- Dimples332 (tour-spec pattern)
- Compression92–95
- Weight45.6–45.9g (within USGA legal limits)
- Diameter42.6–42.8mm (within USGA legal limits)
- ManufacturingBuilt to USGA size and weight standards
Waldon has been transparent about where the balls come from. "The construction was never the issue," he said. "We could match the major brands on the spec sheet from day one. The factories that make premium tour balls supply multiple brands — the materials and machines are the same. The difference is what gets layered on top in marketing and retail markups."
What the brand is careful not to claim, however, is formal USGA conforming status. "We're built to USGA standards on every measurable dimension," Waldon noted. "But we don't carry the formal certification — that process is structured around brands paying for tournament sponsorships, and we don't play that game. Players in USGA-sanctioned tournaments should always check the official Conforming Ball List."
See the full Birdie Pass details →How the trial works, step by step
The brand has structured the trial to be transparent — what they call "no surprise charges" — and the process is straightforward:
"I outdrove guys playing $90 balls"
Independent feedback appears to back the company's claims. The Birdie Pass currently has over 1,000 verified five-star reviews on the Punters Golf website. While most existing members are Australian — the brand's home market — early U.S. members are reporting similar results.
The mental side appears to be a recurring theme in customer feedback. Multiple reviewers have noted that the lower price-per-ball has made them more willing to take aggressive lines on the course — playing the shot they actually want to hit, rather than the conservative one they can afford to lose.
How the model works
Unlike traditional golf ball subscriptions — which lock customers into recurring deliveries — the Birdie Pass operates more like a Costco membership.
Members pay $69 once a year (after the optional under-$1 trial period). That unlocks the $24/dozen rate for the duration of their membership. They then order whatever quantity they want, whenever they want, from one dozen to fifty.
There's no minimum order. No delivery schedule. No lock-in beyond the annual term. Standard shipping rates apply on top of the membership, with most U.S. orders arriving in 3–5 business days from domestic fulfillment.
The Pass auto-renews each year at $69 unless cancelled, though Waldon said members are emailed before any renewal and can cancel at any time through their account or by contacting customer support.
The catch (because there's always a catch)
There are a few. The Pass is only available through the Punters Golf website — members won't find Birdie Balls on the shelves at PGA Superstore, Dick's Sporting Goods, or any other American retailer. By design.
"The whole point of the model is to cut out the retail markup," Waldon explained. "The moment Birdie Balls hit a pro shop shelf, the price has to go up to give that pro shop their margin. So we keep it direct. That's the only way the math works."
There's also the slightly uncomfortable reality that this is, ultimately, a small Australian business going head-to-head with American multinationals whose marketing budgets dwarf most independent golf brands' annual revenue.
And while the balls are built to USGA size and weight standards, they aren't on the official USGA Conforming Ball List — meaning players in USGA-sanctioned tournaments should verify rules eligibility before competition use. For the recreational and casual round players who make up the bulk of American golf, that distinction rarely comes up.
Whether the model holds up at U.S. scale — and whether the major brands respond with their own discount tiers in coming years — is an open question. But for the over 1,000 golfers already in the club globally, the bet appears to be paying off.
Limited U.S. Launch Window
Punters Golf has set aside 500 founding U.S. member spots at the introductory under-$1 trial rate. As of this week, 153 of those spots remain available. After the founding window closes, the Pass will continue at the standard $69/year — but the under-$1 trial offer will not.
The question for any American golfer reading this is straightforward: how much are you currently spending on golf balls each year, and does the Birdie Pass math look like a fair trade?
For the average weekly Pro V1 player, the company calculates the Pass pays for itself in just under two dozen balls. Everything purchased after that point represents a net saving compared to traditional pro shop pricing.
And with the under-$1 trial, the cost of finding out is, well, less than a dollar.
Try the Birdie Pass for under $1.
14 days. Cancel anytime.
$24/dozen tour-grade balls · 3-piece urethane · made to USGA size and weight standards
Ships from U.S. fulfillment · No subscription tricks · Cancel in one click








