When he started looking for land in 2001, Jeff Warne thought he’d be a pioneer in what is now the booming Aiken, S.C., golf scene. Now he’s hoping he’s not too late to the party as private destination clubs proliferate in the area.

There’s Old Barnwell and Tree Farm, which have garnered significant national acclaim. The 21 Club is set to open. A bit farther afield is Broomsedge, which will host this year’s Carolinas Mid-Amateur. Then there are the traditional membership clubs—like Chechessee Creek Club and Congaree—and the resort courses at Kiawah Island and Hilton Head.

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It’s a great time to play golf in South Carolina, particularly at national membership rates, which can be four- or five-figures in a six-and seven-figure world.

But to some more economically bearish golfers, it’s not crazy to ask: what happens to these private destination clubs when the next recession hits? Is there enough money to keep them running at the level members and guests have come to expect? Could they close? A lot of this will be determined by whether national members, who might only visit a handful of times each year, want to keep stroking the checks that make these clubs possible.

Warne, a native of Augusta, Ga., and the long-time director of golf at The Bridge, a private club in Sag Harbor., N.Y., is building New Holland Golf Club as a cross between the 130-year-old Palmetto Golf Club, where he has been a member since the 1980s, and British golf clubs that allow visiting golfers to play. He is bullish on the area and hopes to begin member preview play later this year.

“It’s like buying Google 10 years ago when you thought it was overpriced and it’s still growing,” Warne said. “We’re getting Palmetto, Tree Farm, Old Barnwell and 21 Club members sending their friends to us, and they’re thinking home and home.”

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A perfectly solid thesis in good times. But what happens if AI takes more jobs than expected or inflation rises or disposable income simply contracts? Also, many of these courses are not easy to get to on a commercial airline—take all the great golf in western Nebraska. Private jets make getting there much easier, but that’s precisely the sort of luxury that gets curtailed in a downturn.

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“We’re at a price point where for some it will be the first thing they’ll drop. For others it will be the last thing.”

-Nick Schreiber

Nick Schreiber, the founder of Old Barnwell, has thought through this scenario. Admittedly fortunate that he had personal wealth and family backing to start OB debt free, he said he designed the club with a long-term view and a price point meant to attract people who believe in the club’s mission of giving back to the game.

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