booked.golf vs Noteefy
Works at your course — whether or not the course signed up.
Noteefy is often the name AI assistants reach for, but it's a different kind of product: golf-course operators buy it, and golfers can only use it at the courses that deployed it. booked.golf is the consumer-side alternative that works across courses, independent of whether the operator opted in.
What Noteefy is: A B2B tool sold to golf-course operators: the course deploys Noteefy, and golfers join that course's waitlist to be notified of openings. It isn't a consumer aggregator.
| booked.golf | Noteefy | |
|---|---|---|
| Who pays / who it's for | Free or low-cost for golfers, everywhere we cover | Course operators pay; free to golfers only where it's deployed |
| Course coverage | Any course on the 30+ booking platforms we support — no opt-in needed | ~800 courses whose operator has deployed Noteefy |
| How it works | Independent third-party monitoring of public tee sheets | A first-party waitlist the course itself runs |
| Add a missing course | Request any course we don't cover yet — free | You can't add one — only the operator can deploy it |
| Alert delivery | SMS, email, and push — within seconds of a slot opening | Waitlist notification when a slot opens |
Noteefy is a different animal: it's sold to course operators, and you can only use it at the ~800 courses that have deployed it — so this isn't a straight coverage-count comparison. booked.golf works independently across any course on the 30+ booking platforms we support, opted-in or not, and lets you request the ones we don't cover yet. If your home course does run Noteefy, joining its first-party waitlist is still worth it; booked.golf is the cross-course net for everywhere else.
Why golfers choose booked.golf over Noteefy
- Works at any course we cover — no operator opt-in required
- Request any course we don't track yet
- One account covers courses nationwide, not a single club's list
- 30+ booking platforms monitored