Used Golf Balls (Replay)

17m
American golfers lose 300 million balls a year — and all those bad swings are someone else’s business opportunity. Zachary Crockett hits the links.

Press play and read along

Runtime: 17m

Transcript

Struggling to see up close? Make it visible with Viz. Viz is a once-daily prescription eye drop to treat blurry near vision for up to 10 hours.

The most common side effects that may be experienced while using Viz include eye irritation, temporary dim or dark vision, headaches, and eye redness.

Talk to an eye doctor to learn if Viz is right for you. Learn more at Viz.com.

The Economics of Everyday Things is sponsored by LinkedIn Ads. The best B2B marketing gets wasted on the wrong people.

When you want to reach the right professionals, use LinkedIn Ads, the platform that has the highest B2B ROAs of all online ad networks.

Spend $250 on your first campaign on LinkedIn Ads and get a free $250 credit for the next one. Just go to linkedin.com/slash economics.
Terms and conditions apply.

By his own admission, LaShawn Wanegatunga is no Tiger Woods. I've been, let's say, a struggling golfer for a long time.

Passed a lot of golf balls.

In fact, you might say that Wannegatunga is an expert in losing golf balls. He loses around six of them every time he goes to the course.

His shots end up in the woods, somewhere in the rough, or at the bottom of a pond. And as it turns out, that's not much worse than most golfers fare.

On average, golfers lose four to five balls around.

If you're a really bad player, that number goes up. If you're a really good player, that number goes down.

When you consider that more than 25 million Americans golf each year, well, that is a lot of golf balls. By one estimate, golfers in the U.S.
lose 300 million golf balls every year.

If you could find them all and lay them end to end, the line of golf balls would stretch from New York City all the way to Hong Kong. For golfers like Wani Gatunga, this is an expensive problem.

Buying new balls can add up. And for the golf courses, all those lost balls are a never-ending environmental nuisance.
So golfers and courses would both like to recover those lost balls.

And if you're willing to brave the alligators, rusty beer cans, and murky waters, there's money to be made.

When you dive, it looks like just pearls, just the white spot just showing. You can do it every three months and load up 20,000 golf balls, almost guaranteed.

For the Free Economics Radio Network, this is the economics of everyday things. I'm Zachary Crockett.
Today, used golf balls.

As any golfer knows, new golf balls don't come cheap. On the low end, you can buy a dozen for $20 or so.
But a lot of golfers don't mess around with the low end. They like the good stuff.

At the highest end, we could call them the tour level performance golf balls. So these are balls like the Provi-Wan, the Callaway Chrome Soft, the Taylor-Made TP5.

Again, that's LaShawn Wanigatunga. These balls would cost, on average, $50 a dozen.
The best golf balls work out to around $4 to $5 each.

If you have a bad day out on the links, you can easily hack away 20 or 30 bucks worth of balls in a few hours. And when you lose one, you can't spend a whole lot of time looking for it.

If you're playing a competitive tournament, then I believe it's three minutes or something like that.

If you're playing with a group of friends, it's until your buddies start yelling at you saying, hey, come on, let's keep things moving. The etiquette is even if it's a $5 ball, just move on.

But thrifty golfers golfers have another option. They can go online and buy used golf balls for a fraction of the price.

Now, people have been foraging for lost golf balls for more than 100 years. In the early 1900s, so-called ball hawkers would train dogs to find balls.

They'd sell them for 10 cents apiece at the clubhouse.

Most of these entrepreneurs didn't have permission from the courses to romp around on the greens, and they were seen as petty thieves.

Over the years, a few businesses made deals with courses to collect and sell lost balls. But it wasn't until the early 2000s when the used golf ball market really took off.

I think a few things happened, right? The advent of the internet and e-commerce, and at the same time, the technology behind golf balls increased and it made the golf balls much better.

One golf ball in particular really changed the game. The titlist Pro V1.

Its solid core construction and urethane coating made it more consistent and durable than other golf balls. And soon, other equipment makers started to compete for the high end of the market.

After the Pro V1 was launched, a lot of the golf ball manufacturers started using better material, better technology in making sure the cover of the ball was really insulated.

So what that meant was when a golf ball was lost or when it went in the water those balls will last a really long time without it being damaged or without the performance being impacted today it's estimated that used golf balls are a 200 million dollar industry more than a dozen companies now retrieve clean and sell them on the internet the biggest of those companies is called pg golf they sell around 50 million used balls every year through their website lostgolfballs.com pg Golf is owned by the same conglomerate that owns Titalist, the maker of the Pro V1.

So they get to sell the same balls over and over again.

But the rest of the used ball market is fragmented, made up of much smaller companies with names like Golf Ball Planet, Golf Ball Monkey, and Golf Ball Nut.

In addition to being a struggling golfer, Wanne Gutunga runs one of those companies himself. It's called Two Guys with Balls.
He got into the business seven years ago.

I was hanging out in the garage of a neighbor who lived down the street. He had a bunch of golf balls that he had collected playing golf.

And we were looking at the balls and thinking, what do we do with all these balls? Juane Getunga set up a simple website and started selling them.

When we started, the way we got our golf balls was by finding golf balls when we played golf. But that was not sustainable when we needed thousands of golf balls.

So, Wanne Gatunga started working his way up the used golf ball supply chain. I'd go to golf courses and ask them who retrieves your golf balls.
Can you put me in touch with them?

What he found was a large and thriving ecosystem of people who make a living hunting and diving for golf balls.

We had like 30,000 golf balls in the garage.

That's coming up.

The Economics of Everyday Things is sponsored by SurveyMonkey. Look, we get it.
You can hardly go anywhere or do anything these days without hearing about AI this or AI that.

And if you're like most people, when it comes to AI, you're impressed, but have a few concerns. But what if AI was used not as a tool to replace people, but as a way to help understand people better?

AI from SurveyMonkey is designed to do just that.

From crafting the perfect survey, which is harder than you might think, to analysis that digs deep, finds patterns, and surfaces trends quickly, SurveyMonkey's powerful suite of AI capabilities makes it faster and easier than ever before to get insights from real people, helping you make confident decisions for your business.

Try it today at surveymonkey.com/slash economics.

The Economics of Everyday Things is sponsored by Rula. Finding a therapist online is hard enough, but finding one who actually takes your insurance, that's even harder.

Rula is a healthcare company that makes accessing affordable, high-quality mental health care easier.

They partner with over 100 insurance plans and match users with licensed in-network therapists and psychiatrists nationwide based on their goals, preferences, and background.

No long long wait lists, no frustrating back and forth, just personalized care that fits.

Plus, Rula sticks with you throughout your journey, checking in to make sure your care is helping you move forward. Appointments are often available as soon as tomorrow.

And with most patients paying just $15 per session, and sometimes even less, it's care that actually fits your budget too.

Thousands are already using Rula for therapy that's high quality, accessible, and covered by insurance. Visit rula.com slash everyday to get started.

After signing up, you'll be asked how you heard about them. Let them know this show sent you.
That's rula.com slash everyday.

Because mental health care should work with you, not against your budget.

The economics of everyday things is sponsored by Acorns. So many people are focused on where their money is today.

Acorns is the financial wellness app that cares about where your money is going tomorrow. And with Acorns Potential Screen, you can find out what your money is capable of.

Acorns is a smart way to give your money a chance to grow. Sign up now and Acorns will boost your new account with a $5 bonus investment.

Join the over 14 million all-time customers who have already saved and invested over $27 billion with Acorns. Head to acorns.com slash economics or download the Acorns app to get started.

Paid non-client endorsement. Compensation provides incentive to positively promote Acorns.
Tier 2 compensation provided.

Potential subject to various factors such as customers' accounts, age, and investment settings. Does not include Acorns fees.

Results do not predict or represent the performance of any Acorns portfolio. Investment results will vary.
Investing involves risk. Acorns Advisors LLC, an SEC registered investment advisor.

View important disclosures at acorns.com/slash economics.

Todd Hutchinson spent more than 20 years working as an executive in the tobacco industry.

To unwind, he'd go for walks on the golf course behind his house in Florida, and he started finding so many golf balls that he decided to change careers.

I own the company of Ballhawker. We're a recovery and recycling company for golf balls.

The recovery process begins with a contract. Hutchinson typically signs a two-year agreement with a golf course, giving him the exclusive right to collect balls on their land.

Ballhawker now has deals with 70 golf courses in Florida. They get a little money, but not much.

I normally pay them 12 cents a ball.

But Hutchinson says that most courses aren't motivated by the money. The courses that we have, that means very little to them when your members have to give a million dollars just to join up.

The more valuable service is the free cleanup, because we're not talking about a few golf balls here and there. On many courses, there are tens of thousands of them at any given time.

You can just sit there for 20 minutes just digging in one pile of golf balls. It's like a graveyard.
Hutchinson and his crew visit each course three to four times per year.

On each visit, they can collect anywhere from 20 to 40,000 balls. Some of those are sitting right out in the open, in the woods or on preserves next to the green.

But the real halls come from the water. Most people are right-handed, so golf balls tend to go right.
If the lakes are on the right-hand side, you're going to load up.

Some companies use tractors to recover golf balls from the water, but most of them, like Ballhawker, enlist the services of freelance golf ball divers.

This type of diving is not for everybody. If you do commercial diving in the sea, at least you can see what you're working on, right? But this, you don't see.
It's just blind diving.

And it spooks a lot of people. Divers are hooked up to floating oxygen tanks called hookahs.

For several hours, they repeatedly dive down into the cloudy water, scraping the bottom of the pond with a lobster trap. Each two-minute dive can yield 300 golf balls.

That's not the only thing they find.

We're cleaning out the ponds. Not just golf balls, but trash.
I mean, cell phones, umbrellas, old dial phones. Someone throw a bong in.
We find so many clubs, it's crazy.

I guess some family got in an argument, a man and a wife, and I was pulling clothes out of the lakes that were still on hangers. I mean, it's amazing, a whole wardrobe.

Hutchinson says he pays his divers the same thing he pays the course, 10 to 12 cents per ball. On a good day, a diver can recover 7,000 balls and earn around 800 bucks.

Divers who retrieve golf balls full-time can make six figures a year, but it's dangerous work. In recent years, at least half a dozen divers have died while attempting to retrieve golf balls.

One of those divers was William Rainierson. He was working for Bawhawker when he drowned at Ponte Vedra Inn and Club in 2021.
Bawhawker was later fined $56,000 by OSHA.

for failing to follow proper safety procedures. Hutchinson says he now employs someone full-time to monitor the divers from land, but conditions in the water still pose a threat.

There really is no visibility on all the ponds.

Once you stir up the bottom, it starts coming up. So

basically

eight hours to 10 hours a day, you don't see anything. You're only going by fill.

That also means that divers can't see the threats that lurk beneath the surface. Hutchinson is a diver himself, and he's had a few hairy encounters with snakes and alligators.

So we were swimming and I was out there and I felt safe. And I go underneath the water and I hit something and I look up and what do I see? The silhouette of the lips.
You know, they're white.

Oh my.

So for safety, we have a paintball gun and we scare them off like that.

As well as creatures of the deep, companies like Hutchinson's have to contend with human rivals, people who hunt for balls on golf courses without permission.

They're known as night hawks, and collecting balls is something between a hobby and a side hustle for them. They try to play golf without buying any new balls.

Some of them donate their extras to junior golf programs.

There's a cottage industry of companies that sell products to these night hawks, special glasses, flashlights, and and binoculars that make it easy to spot balls.

For many golfers, these ball hunters are a nuisance, but Hutchinson says they're not really a threat to his business. In fact, he often works with them.

There's a lot of people that sell us golf balls that live on the courses. They also

can

subsidize their living by picking up golf balls and selling them to someone like me. You'll have guys bringing in golf balls constantly all the time, 5,000, 10,000.

Once Hutchinson and his team have finished scouring a course, the day's haul is put into giant tubs. Then, they're loaded up into a box truck.
We keep them in the 20-gallon trash cans.

They have holes in the bottoms because you don't want the water to sit there and stink up everything.

The smell is horrible. Then we'll bring them back to the shop.
From there, the balls are taken to a cleaning facility. I use a potato washer for the golf balls.

It will do 4,000 golf balls in five minutes. So you're constantly scooping.
I think it's 12 rollers that has brushes on them and it's just rotating them and cleaning them at the same time.

Once cleaned, the balls are sorted by brand and model. And that's no small task because each brand of golf ball might have up to 20 different models.
Other balls are one of a kind.

I have over 10,000 golf balls that I save with people's pictures or comments or whatever it may be. They may have gotten married.
It may be that are bachelor parties.

You see pictures of golf balls that you won't show your kids. You see a lot of crazy stuff.
The final stage is categorizing every used golf ball by condition.

Hutchinson can sell the highest-end balls, like Pro-V1s, for around $2 each online, around half the price they go for brand new.

Some of the bigger companies don't like that, but

when you're selling a product that costs $60 a dozen, brand new, and you're selling the same year and the same model golf ball for $30,

it's a win-win. For every million of these top-end balls sold, a company like Ballhawker might expect to make around $400,000.

But only around 20% of the recovered balls are in flawless condition. Most of them are a little little rough around the edges, and those tend to be sold wholesale to guys like LaShawn Wannegatunga.

Wannegatunga's company, Two Guys with Balls, bypasses the divers, the golf courses, the cleaning and the sorting, and buys pre-processed balls in bulk.

He pays a flat rate based on the brand and quality. I buy balls anywhere from

15 cents a ball going all the way to $1.25 for the top quality Provi one.

Gatunga says the economics are a win-win. He sells them on his website, netting a margin of around 50%,

and golfers get a more affordable alternative to buying new.

But no matter how much he sings the praises of used golf balls, some golfers will always be skeptical.

I think there will always be a group of golfers, regardless of skill level, who will feel that the used golf ball, you know, because it's used because it's been in the water for whatever reason, will not perform as well.

There have been a few informal experiments comparing the performance of used and new golf balls, and most of them have concluded that used balls don't really have any impact on a golfer's game.

But beyond the price savings, Wani Getunga says the real benefits of buying used is environmental. All these golf balls going into the water getting lost.
Golf balls don't degrade.

They're in there for a long time, so it's more sustainable to reuse, recycle, you know, everything in general, but I guess more so for golf balls.

And, you know, some of the golf balls that I get have probably gone through that process several times where it could well be that people who bought balls from me lost them and the divers who retrieved them sold it back to me and I sold it back to them.

For others, like Todd Hutchinson, it's all about the thrill of the hunt.

It's like Easter egg hunting. I promise you it is.

For the economics of everyday things, I'm Zachary Crockett.

This episode was produced by Sarah Lilly and mixed by Jeremy Johnston. We had help from Daniel Moritz Robson.

And I think one of us said, hey, we are just two guys with balls trying to sell some balls. And then that's kind of how the name stuck.

The Freakonomics Radio Network, the hidden side of everything.

Stitcher.

An extraordinary holiday starts at Paragold, the destination for luxury home. Elevate the season with unique heirloom-quality decor, gifts, hosting essentials, and more from design's best brands.

Shop our largest ever selection in store and online at paragold.com.

PNC Private Bank doesn't take unnecessary risks managing your wealth because we know that maintaining its integrity is important to you.

But as humans, we crave a little adrenaline, so our advisors have some ideas. Sometimes I book a hotel without reading the reviews.
Occasionally, when no one is looking, I double dip.

Once while driving, I came to a full stop for two seconds instead of three. However, you get your kicks, just know your wealth will remain steady and secure with us.

PNC Private Bank, brilliantly boring since 1865. PNC Bank National Association member FDIC.
We all take good care of the things that matter. Our homes, our pets, our cars.

Are you doing the same for your brain? Acting early to protect brain health may help reduce the risk of dementia from conditions like Alzheimer's disease.

Studies have found that up to 45% of dementia cases may be prevented or delayed by managing risk factors you can change. Make brain health a priority.

Ask your doctor about your risk factors and for a cognitive assessment. Learn more at brainhealthmatters.com.