How Much Disc Golf Course Design Owners Can Make: $299K–$25M EBITDA

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Description

You’re planning a US disc golf course design service, so owner income depends on project volume, scope mix, direct costs, payroll, and cash reserves In the researched five-year model, revenue grows from $1121M in Year 1 to $4694M in Year 5, with EBITDA from $299K to $2546M These are planning assumptions, not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or promised distributions


Owner income iconOwner income$115K + $299K–$2.55M
Net margin iconNet margin27%–54%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$1.12M–$4.69M
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyHard

Want to test your owner pay target?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, gross margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.



Can you check owner income in the financial model?

The dashboard in the Disc Golf Course Design Financial Model Template shows revenue, EBITDA, cash, payback, and owner take-home assumptions. Open the model to review the setup.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Owner pay capacity: tracked clearly
  • Revenue and EBITDA: on dashboard
  • Scenarios: low, base, high
Disc Golf Course Design Financial Model dashboard summarizes key KPIs, runway and cash position with a dynamic dashboard showing revenue, costs, margins and funding needs—investor-ready overview to avoid cash-flow blind spots.

What profit margin can a disc golf course design business earn?


A Disc Golf Course Design business can show a 71% gross margin in Year 1 and 79% in Year 5, but that is not the same as owner take-home. For the cost base behind that math, see What Are Operating Costs For Disc Golf Course Design?

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Gross margin drivers

  • 71% gross margin in Year 1
  • 79% gross margin in Year 5
  • 12% to 10% subcontracted labor
  • 5% to 3% consultation fees
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Profit margin caveats

  • 8% to 6% travel and site work
  • 4% to 2% permitting costs
  • 267% to 542% EBITDA margin
  • Do not treat pass-through materials as profit

How much can a disc golf course design business owner make?


A Disc Golf Course Design owner can make $115K in salary if they fill the Principal Landscape Architect role, plus possible profit distributions after reserves, taxes, debt, and working capital. In the researched model behind How To Write A Business Plan For Disc Golf Course Design?, revenue rises from $1.121M and $299K EBITDA in Year 1 to $4.694M and $2.546M EBITDA in Year 5.

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Owner earnings

  • $115K owner salary seat
  • $299K Year 1 EBITDA
  • $2.546M Year 5 EBITDA
  • Distributions depend on cash needs
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Key drivers

  • Complete more paid projects
  • Sell more 18-hole scopes
  • Control direct project costs
  • Improve staffing efficiency

How many disc golf course design projects are needed to pay the owner?


There isn’t one fixed project count for Disc Golf Course Design; it depends on contract size, gross margin, payroll, marketing, and the owner’s pay target. In the researched model, break-even hits after 5 months, but you still need enough project revenue to cover $99K fixed overhead before wages, $305K Year 1 payroll, $45K marketing, and 29% direct and variable costs. Seasonality and municipal procurement can slow cash even when annual demand looks fine.

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Cost stack

  • $99K fixed overhead before wages
  • $305K Year 1 payroll
  • $45K marketing budget
  • 29% of revenue goes to variable costs
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Cash timing

  • Break-even occurs after 5 months
  • Owner pay needs revenue, not one project count
  • Municipal procurement can delay cash receipts
  • Seasonality can stretch the cash gap



What drives owner income most?

1

Completed Projects

$1.1M-$4.7M

More completed projects lift revenue from $1.121M to $4.694M, so this is the biggest swing in owner take-home.

2

Scope Mix

$95-$170/hr

Pushing more work into 18-hole layouts and retainer work lifts rates from $95 to $170 per hour and raises revenue per project.

3

Gross Margin

71%-79%

Direct costs fall from 29% to 21%, so each point saved drops straight into EBITDA.

4

Labor Utilization

120-280h

Billable hours run 120 on 9-hole work and 280 on championship layouts, so fuller schedules spread payroll over more revenue.

5

Client Pipeline

$3.1K-$4.5K

Marketing spend climbs from $45K to $95K, while CAC falls from $4.5K to $3.1K, so a cleaner pipeline supports growth.

6

Overhead Control

$99K

Fixed overhead sits near $99K a year, and payroll rises from $305K to $745K, so reserve discipline protects take-home.


Disc Golf Course Design Core Six Income Drivers



Completed Projects


Completed Paid Projects

More completed paid projects usually raise owner income because this firm bills by project, so revenue only lands when work is finished and collected. If a signed job slips into the next quarter, cash flow and owner pay slip too. That makes completed work the cleanest read on near-term income, not just booked deals.

Here’s the quick math: the pipeline gets measured with marketing spend and customer acquisition cost (CAC), or what it costs to win one client. The plan moves from $45K budget and $4,500 CAC in Year 1 to $95K and $3,100 CAC in Year 5. Sales cycle length, municipal approvals, seasonal fieldwork, and install bottlenecks can push revenue into later periods.

Track Completion, Not Just Wins

Watch the full path from lead to paid finish. The key inputs are awarded jobs, start dates, install capacity, and billed completion. If start dates slip, the revenue forecast should move with them. Missed starts don’t erase demand, but they do delay the owner’s draw and can leave crews or subcontractors idle.

  • Track booked-to-finished conversion weekly.
  • Log approval lag by client type.
  • Measure start-date slippage by project.
  • Compare CAC against completed jobs.

Use pipeline health as a warning light. If marketing spend rises but completed jobs do not, the firm is buying backlog, not income. The goal is faster paid completion with steady margins, because project count drives revenue before most cost controls matter.

1


Average Scope And Fee


Average Scope and Fee

Larger scopes lift revenue fast because this work is sold by hours and deliverables. In Year 1, a 9-hole layout is 120 hours × $125 = $15,000, while an 18-hole layout is 280 hours × $150 = $42,000. By Year 5, those jobs price at $14,500 and $40,800, so the bigger lever is mix: more 18-hole work raises average contract value and supports owner pay.

The risk is scope creep. Redesigns, signage plans, destination planning, and construction management add income only when they’re priced in upfront. If they’re folded into the base fee, hours rise faster than cash, and profit per project falls even when the pipeline looks healthy.

Price the Extra Work

Track scope mix, hours per job, and effective hourly rate on every contract. The key inputs are hole count, design hours, fee per hour, and the share of 18-hole work; that mix rises from 30% to 60%. Using the stated assumptions, weighted contract value moves from about $23,100 to $30,280.

  • Quote add-ons before work starts.
  • Separate design and oversight hours.
  • Review unbilled revisions monthly.
  • Track 9-hole and 18-hole margins.

Here’s the quick rule: if a project adds site walks, redesign rounds, or installation oversight, the fee should rise with it. Otherwise, the owner is selling more labor without more take-home, and cash flow tightens because the team spends extra hours before the invoice catches up.

2


Gross Margin On Direct Costs


Gross Margin on Direct Costs

Owner take-home rises when price covers direct cost load. Here, that means design fees, installation management, and procurement markup must cover field labor, subcontractors, travel, materials, and permitting pass-through. Direct and variable cost load drops from 29% of revenue in Year 1 to 21% in Year 5, so more of each contract stays above the line for profit and owner draw.

Materials are not profit by themselves; markup is added price, margin is what remains after cost. At the provided revenue base, each 1 margin point is worth about $469K before overhead. If consultation hours, site visits, or subcontracted construction labor run hot, that gain disappears fast, so job-by-job cost control matters.

Protect Margin on Every Job

Track these inputs on every project: contract price, direct labor hours, subcontractor bills, travel, and permit pass-throughs. Then compare actual gross margin to the target tied to the 29% to 21% cost-load range. If markup is not collected on materials or management time, owner pay gets squeezed even when revenue looks strong.

  • Price markup before work starts.
  • Separate pass-through costs.
  • Review margin by project type.
  • Cut travel on low-fee jobs.
  • Hold subs to quoted scope.
3


Owner And Staff Utilization


Billable Utilization

Owner, designer, and project manager hours only pay you when they turn into billed work. With $305K payroll in Year 1 and $745K in Year 5, utilization decides how much of that labor cost gets covered by project revenue and how much leaks out of EBITDA and owner distributions.

Track billable hours divided by available hours each month. Scope CAD planning, field walks, site mapping, and project management before adding staff, because hours sitting between RFP wins still hit payroll. If the team is staffed ahead of signed work, profit drops fast and cash for owner pay gets tighter.

Price and staff to booked hours

Use a weekly cover check: booked hours, open proposals, and the next 30 days of billable capacity. If new hires come before enough signed projects, the break-even bar rises and idle payroll cuts into take-home income. Keep each role tied to a billable scope, not just a title.

  • Track billable hours by role.
  • Sell scope before hiring.
  • Watch gaps between RFP wins.
  • Protect owner draw with coverage.
4


Qualified Client Pipeline


Qualified Client Pipeline

When leads come from municipalities, parks departments, resorts, camps, schools, homeowners associations, and recreation facilities, income gets steadier. The big issue is timing: public-sector RFPs can pay well, but they often move slowly, so a weak pipeline creates stop-start revenue and leaves staff underused while fixed overhead keeps running.

Here’s the quick math: marketing spend rises from $45K to $95K, while customer acquisition cost (CAC) improves from $4,500 to $3,100. That means more qualified leads per dollar, less wasted proposal work, and better odds that awards land often enough to support owner pay.

Track Lead Quality, Not Just Volume

Measure each source by lead count, proposal count, award rate, CAC, and days from first contact to signed work. Referrals matter because they shorten trust-building and cut wasted proposal time. One clean rule: if the lead source does not lead to paid work fast enough, it is not a qualified pipeline.

  • Separate referrals from RFPs.
  • Track CAC at $4,500 to $3,100.
  • Watch award delays hit cash flow.
  • Keep staff tied to booked work.

What this estimate hides: slow public awards can still strain cash even when the pipeline looks busy. If proposals pile up but wins lag, revenue shifts later, payroll stays early, and owner draws get squeezed. So the goa l is not just more leads; it is faster, better-qualified leads that turn into signed projects.

5


Overhead And Reserve Discipline


Fixed Overhead And Reserve Discipline

$8,250 a month, or $99K a year, is the fixed overhead floor before payroll and marketing. That includes studio rent, CAD and GIS software, professional liability insurance, cloud tools, utilities, internet, and vehicle leases. Profit on paper is not owner pay; if overhead stays high, EBITDA gets trapped in the business instead of reaching the owner.

The cash test is tighter: the Month 6 minimum cash need is $823K. Reserves are not distributions, so early cash strain can block take-home even after accounting break-even. For this kind of project work, the owner can only draw safely when cash stays above the reserve floor and fixed costs are covered without leaning on new project timing.

Keep The Cash Floor Separate

Track three inputs every month: fixed overhead, reserve cash, and EBITDA. Use the cash floor as a hard stop for owner draws, and do not mix reserve money with profit. If studio rent, software, insurance, or vehicle leases rise, the owner’s paycheck should wait until the new monthly burn still fits the cash plan.

  • Measure overhead monthly
  • Hold $823K cash by Month 6
  • Block draws below the floor
  • Review lease and software costs

Here’s the quick check: if fixed overhead stays at $8,250 per month, every extra dollar of recurring cost lowers the cash available for the owner. The cleanest control is a weekly cash forecast that separates operating cash from reserves and shows when EBITDA can safely become take-home.

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Compare lean, base, and mature owner-income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Owner income shifts as the mix moves from smaller local builds to larger championship layouts and maintenance retainers. The bigger cases need more payroll and marketing, so they're not automatic.

Low, base, and high owner-income cases for planning cash, hiring, and growth.
Scenario Low CaseLean case Base CaseCore case High CaseUpside case
Launch model A lean year with mostly smaller builds and lighter staffing. A steady operating year with more championship layouts and a growing maintenance base. A stronger year with more big-course work and a heavier retainer book.
Typical setup Year 1 revenue is about $1.121M, gross margin is about 71%, and EBITDA is about $299K with $45K marketing and $305K payroll. Year 3 revenue is about $3.053M, gross margin is about 75%, and EBITDA is about $1.534M with $75K marketing and $475K payroll. Year 5 revenue is about $4.694M, gross margin is about 79%, and EBITDA is about $2.546M with $95K marketing and $745K payroll.
Cost drivers
  • 45K marketing
  • 305K payroll
  • smaller project mix
  • 12% subcontract labor
  • 8% travel
  • More championship layouts
  • 40% maintenance retainers
  • 75K marketing
  • 475K payroll
  • lower CAC
  • 60% championship mix
  • 75% maintenance retainers
  • 95K marketing
  • 745K payroll
  • higher project volume
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves $299,000Lean income $1,534,000Core income $2,546,000Upside income
Best fit Use this to stress-test a first-year launch with fewer championship jobs and slower close rates. Use this as the working case for budgeting, hiring, and day-to-day operating plans. Use this only if close rates stay strong and repeat work keeps rising; it is not the typical outcome.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or owner distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Owner take-home depends on whether the owner takes the $115K principal design role and how much EBITDA is distributed The model shows $299K EBITDA in Year 1 and $2546M in Year 5 That is pre-tax operating profit capacity, not guaranteed cash pay