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Founded in 2012 by JD St-Martin and Guillaume Jacquet, Chronogolf is a Montreal software company providing cloud SaaS management systems for golf courses, including online tee time booking and POS operations. Prior to its acquisition, the enterprise raised $4.1 million to develop its subscription platform, which currently serves over 1,200 golf courses globally by streamlining pro shop, restaurant, and tee sheet operations. On May 30, 2019, the business was acquired by Lightspeed POS Inc., led by CEO Dax Dasilva, and subsequently rebranded as Lightspeed Golf to integrate with the parent company's broader commerce ecosystem. Following this transaction, the subsidiary contributes to a parent organization generating nearly $900 million in annual revenue while offering integrated solutions like kiosks and analytics. Recently, the platform established a strategic partnership with Whoosh in 2025 to optimize private club management.
Chronogolf has raised $2.0M across 1 funding round.
Chronogolf has raised $2.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Chronogolf has raised $2.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $2.0M Series B in July 2018.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 1, 2018 | $2M Series B | — | Boon Fund | Announced |
Chronogolf has raised $2.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Chronogolf's investors include Boon Fund.
Chronogolf is a SaaS platform providing cloud-based golf course management software that streamlines operations for golf courses worldwide. It offers tools like online tee time booking, tee sheet management, member management, point-of-sale (POS) systems, inventory tracking, event management, and marketing features to boost revenue and cut costs.[1][2][3][4] Serving over 1,800 golf courses and 2 million golfers, it facilitates nearly 15 million rounds booked to date, with adoption by more than 600 courses under Lightspeed post-acquisition.[1][5][7] The platform targets golf course operators and players, solving inefficiencies in booking, payments, and customer engagement through intuitive, mobile-accessible apps—no servers or IT overhead required.[1][4]
Founded in 2012 in Montreal, Canada, by a team of golf enthusiasts with strong technology backgrounds, including co-founder and former President JD Saint-Martin, Chronogolf emerged from PGA professionals aiming to align software with daily golf course operations.[1][2][3] Saint-Martin, who previously worked in venture capital at Teralys Capital and GE Equity, holds degrees from the London School of Economics and University of Ottawa.[2] The idea stemmed from leveraging web apps, cloud infrastructure, and mobility to connect courses and golfers seamlessly. Early traction built through intuitive tools like customizable tee sheets and online booking, leading to $4.1M in funding before its 2019 acquisition by Lightspeed, a commerce platform, which integrated it as Lightspeed Golf.[2][6]
Chronogolf rides the wave of SaaS digitization in niche leisure markets, particularly golf's post-pandemic recovery where operators seek contactless booking and data-driven revenue amid labor shortages and rising costs.[4][5][6] Timing aligns with cloud adoption in sports tech, enabling global reach for courses facing fragmented legacy systems. Market forces like golfer demand for mobile deals (via 1,800+ partner courses) and operators' need for unified POS/booking favor its model.[1][7] It influences the ecosystem by setting standards for integrated golf tech—now amplified by Lightspeed's 160,000+ commerce clients—boosting industry efficiency but highlighting consolidation trends through acquisitions.[2][6]
As Lightspeed Golf, Chronogolf is poised for expanded dominance in golf SaaS, leveraging parent company scale for AI-enhanced booking, deeper analytics, and global penetration beyond North America's 1,300+ courses.[5][6] Trends like personalized golfer experiences via apps, sustainable operations data, and e-commerce integration will shape growth, potentially hitting millions more rounds amid golf's booming popularity. Its influence may evolve toward full-stack venue management, influencing competitors like Golfsmash or Teebook while addressing UX pain points like cross-course exposure—solidifying its role from startup innovator to industry backbone.[4][6] This positions it as a resilient bet in recreational tech's steady ascent.