A round of golf unfolds at an unhurried pace, marked by long walks, shared silences, and conversations that stretch well beyond the scorecard. That unique cadence is precisely where Gospel Golf has found its footing. Founded in 2024 by Kyler Krumpos, the Washington State-grown brand encompasses premium golf culture and Christian ministry, using the game as a vessel for purpose, stewardship, and faith-driven connection.
Golfers spend four or more hours together, often riding in carts, talking through life, work, and belief. “Golf is the best sport for testimony and stewardship,” Krumpos says. “What other sport involves you sitting with someone for hours, able to have conversations the entire time?”
Gospel Golf was designed as a conversation starter rather than a declaration. Krumpos notes that much of the apparel features a refined logo rather than overt messaging, intentionally inviting curiosity. “When someone asks about the outfit or the brand, it can open the door to a deeper exchange, one grounded in God, Christianity, and divinity, but delivered through authentic conversation and connection,” he explains.

Kyler Krumpos
Though the brand itself is young, Krumpos’s path to Gospel Golf was shaped over several years. With a degree in finance and early experience helping build a clothing business that later transitioned into manufacturing, he developed operational discipline before fully understanding the larger calling taking shape. While working alongside other Christian-based apparel initiatives in the background, he noticed a gap in the market. “I searched for Christian-based golf, but nothing existed,” he recalls. “I wanted to bridge that gap, but I sought suppliers first, refined product quality, and spent a year building a launch strategy that would present Gospel Golf as an established brand from day one.”
The company now operates with a full-time team, collaborates with nonprofits, and supports celebrity and charitable tournaments. Ten percent of profits are pledged to the Tim Tebow Foundation, a commitment Krumpos describes as an act of stewardship rather than strategy.
Product-wise, Gospel Golf delivers a full spectrum of golf lifestyle essentials, headcovers, towels, divot tools, and a comprehensive apparel line, positioned to compete on quality with established golf brands. Custom gear for nonprofits, schools, and organizations has become a key growth channel, enabling partners to raise funds while advancing their own missions.

Gospel Golf
The brand’s reach increasingly extends beyond commerce into ministry, with retreats, community gatherings, and international initiatives underway. “We didn’t want to be just a golf brand where you buy something and move on,” he explains. “We want to meet people and give opportunities with purpose.”
Despite the emergence of other Christian golf brands, Krumpos remains resolute about Gospel Golf’s role. Competition, in his view, signals momentum rather than threat. “How could anyone object to more conversations about Christ in the course? Golfers don’t need to wear our gear to encounter His presence; thousands are already talking about Him as they play,” he says, emphasizing that the brand exists to contribute to a broader movement, not to own it.
Less than two years in, Gospel Golf is still early in its journey, yet its trajectory reflects something rare in modern brand-building: a company scaling quickly into all 50 states and 7 countries, without losing clarity of purpose. “We’re just getting started,” Krumpos says. “It’s been exciting to see the doors God continues to open for us, and we’re just going to keep stepping through them.”
For Gospel Golf, growth is not measured only in units sold or markets entered, but in the lasting impact of the divine conversations sparked between tee to green, where faith meets fairway and business serves something far greater than itself.
