Africa is positioning itself for a stronger foothold in the fast-growing global golf tourism market with the launch of the Africa Golf Tourism Convention (AGTC) 2026, a new continental platform designed to connect African golf destinations directly with international buyers, investors, and tourism decision-makers.Scheduled for 18–21 August 2026 in Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa, the inaugural convention marks the first coordinated, pan-African attempt to structure golf tourism as a tradeable, investable segment of the continent’s tourism economy.While Africa boasts world-class golf courses across Southern, East, West, and North Africa, golf tourism on the continent has historically developed in silos—often driven by individual resorts or countries rather than a unified market approach. AGTC seeks to change that by creating a permanent business-to-business marketplace that brings together golf destinations, tourism authorities, tour operators, hospitality brands, airlines, investors, and policymakers.According to the organisers, golf tourism represents one of the highest-value segments within global travel, delivering longer stays, higher per-capita spend and strong spillover benefits for hospitality, aviation, transport and destination branding. Yet Africa has remained under-represented in global golf tourism circuits compared to regions such as Europe, North America, and parts of Asia.AGTC Founder Neo Peete says the convention is designed to unlock that latent value. He argues that Africa’s challenge has not been a lack of assets, but the absence of a credible platform to aggregate supply and engage the global golf tourism ecosystem in a structured way.The convention will be hosted at the Birchwood Hotel & OR Tambo Conference Centre, one of South Africa’s established business events venues, with a dedicated Golf and Demonstration Day at Serengeti Estates, home to a championship course designed by American golfer and Golf Hall of Fame inductee, Jack Nicklaus. The format combines conference sessions, curated networking, destination showcases, and experiential golf programming, mirroring successful global golf tourism trade models, but adapted to Africa’s realities.Institutional backing has already begun to emerge. The Gauteng Convention & Events Bureau (GCEB) has formally endorsed AGTC 2026, highlighting its alignment with Gauteng’s strategy to grow high-value tourism, business events, and international sporting attractions.GCEB Head Nonnie Kubeka says the convention strengthens Gauteng’s positioning as both a business events hub and a sporting destination, with the potential to generate tangible economic returns and employment opportunities. Gauteng has increasingly leaned into sports-led tourism as part of its destination strategy, and AGTC is expected to complement that approach.“As a province, Gauteng continues to demonstrate its ability to host international sporting and business events that drive economic growth and job creation. We are confident that AGTC will strengthen this momentum while positioning Gauteng – and Africa – more prominently within the global golf tourism marketplace,” Kubeka noted in a statement.The timing of the convention is also strategic. Gauteng will host the first-ever LIV Golf tournament on African soil in March 2026, an event that has already drawn global attention to South Africa and Africa’s golfing credentials. AGTC is designed to build on this momentum by creating a longer-term platform that extends beyond single events into sustained trade and investment relationships.Importantly, AGTC is not positioned as a South Africa–only initiative. Organisers say participation is expected from golf and tourism stakeholders across the continent, with destinations from Southern, East, West, and North Africa showcasing courses, resorts, and tourism experiences to international buyers and media.By framing golf tourism as an economic development tool rather than a niche leisure product, AGTC reflects a broader shift in how African destinations are rethinking tourism—focusing on yield, sustainability, and investment rather than volume alone.If successful, the Africa Golf Tourism Convention could mark a turning point in how the continent is integrated into global golf tourism flows, offering Africa a seat at a table it has long had the assets—but not the platform—to occupy.More information on the convention is available at Africa Golf Tourism Convention (AGTC)