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Quick answer: The Performance Golf SF2 driver itself does not include a hidden subscription. The $299 charge that some buyers report comes from a separate offer — a “free trial” of the PG1 online coaching platform that’s typically pitched in a follow-up phone call after you buy the club.
If you don’t explicitly cancel that trial within 30 days, PG1 automatically bills a one-time $299 lifetime membership fee. This guide explains exactly how that works, how to avoid it, and what to do if you’ve already been charged.
If you’ve searched for “Performance Golf SF2 surprise charge” or “why did Performance Golf charge me $299,” here’s what’s actually happening.
If you’re still deciding whether the SF2 is the right upgrade for you in the first place, see our SF2 vs SF1 comparison before diving into the billing details below
PG1 is Performance Golf’s online instruction platform, featuring video lessons from coaches including Hank Haney. It is sold separately from the SF2 driver itself — the driver purchase and the PG1 membership are two different products with two different billing events.
The sequence buyers commonly report looks like this:
This is why so many buyers searching for SF2 driver complaints are actually searching about PG1 billing, not the driver itself. The two issues get conflated in reviews and forum threads, which causes confusion for new buyers trying to research the club.

No — but it’s a sales practice that creates legitimate confusion, and it’s worth understanding before you buy.
The $299 charge is disclosed in the terms of the trial offer, and Performance Golf has a track record of refunding the fee when customers escalate through customer service or file a complaint with the Better Business Bureau.
That said, “technically disclosed but easy to miss during a phone call” is exactly the kind of friction that generates search volume from anxious buyers — and it’s reasonable to want to avoid the situation entirely rather than rely on a refund process after the fact.
If you want the driver and have zero interest in the PG1 coaching platform, here’s the practical approach:
If you receive a call offering the “free trial,” a verbal “no thanks” should be sufficient, but if the representative pushes or the offer is ambiguous, ask them to confirm in writing (email) that no trial has been activated on your account.
Some buyers report that the PG1 trial can be bundled into the checkout flow itself via a pre-checked box or an “upgrade your order” step. Review your order summary before finalizing the purchase and uncheck anything related to PG1, coaching, or membership.
If you do end up enrolled in the trial — intentionally or not — don’t wait until the last day to cancel. Give yourself a five-day buffer in case cancellation requires a phone call during business hours.
Even with careful precautions, set a personal reminder to check your statement about six weeks after your SF2 order. If you see a $299 charge from Performance Golf or “PG1,” you’ll want to act quickly.
Purchasing the SF2 through a retailer rather than Performance Golf’s direct checkout funnel may reduce — though not necessarily eliminate — your exposure to the post-purchase upsell call, since the sales funnel is tied to Performance Golf’s direct customer database.
If the charge has already appeared on your statement, here’s the realistic path to resolution based on patterns reported by other buyers:

No — these are separate issues. The SF2 driver itself is backed by a 365-day, 100% money-back guarantee, which is unrelated to the PG1 membership trial. If you decide the driver isn’t working for your game within that window, that return process is independent of any PG1 billing situation.
However, if you were also enrolled in PG1, make sure you address that cancellation separately — returning the driver doesn’t automatically cancel a PG1 membership, and cancelling PG1 doesn’t affect your driver return eligibility.
Does buying the SF2 driver automatically enroll me in PG1? Not automatically through the standard checkout in most reported cases — the PG1 offer typically comes via a separate follow-up phone call after the driver purchase, though some buyers report seeing it bundled at checkout. Read your order confirmation carefully either way.
Is the $299 charge a one-time fee or a recurring subscription? Based on buyer reports, it’s described as a one-time “lifetime membership” fee rather than a recurring monthly charge — but it is only billed if the 30-day free trial isn’t cancelled in time.
Will Performance Golf refund the $299 if I didn’t mean to sign up? Buyers consistently report that escalating through customer service, and if needed the Better Business Bureau, results in a refund. It’s not automatic, but it has a track record of resolution.
Can I avoid this entirely by just not answering the phone? If you never engage with a follow-up sales call, you likely never get enrolled in the trial in the first place — but check your order confirmation regardless, since some reports suggest a checkout-stage opt-in as well.
Does the PG1 issue mean the SF2 driver is a bad product? No — these are two separate questions. The driver’s performance and the PG1 billing practice are independent issues, and you can evaluate the driver entirely on its own merits (see our full SF2 driver review) separately from the PG1 situation.
This article is based on aggregated buyer reports, BBB complaint patterns, and publicly available information about Performance Golf’s sales practices as of 2026. Always confirm current terms directly with Performance Golf before purchasing, as policies can change.