Your club deserves better than Facebook Groups
No algorithm deciding who sees what. No ads. No data mining. Just your club, your resources, your schedule, your way.
Start Free Browse all site types →What this club site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your club works.
Give people one clear place to understand the club, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the tools that make sense for members: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions fit this site type, so your club starts with the right pages, tools, and wording.
What your first site can include
Your first site can show what the group is, when it meets, how people participate, and where members find the practical details. Dates, duties, files, updates, and shared plans stay close together.
Your first setup
- Start with meeting dates, member directory, resource shelf, event ideas, and a simple announcement feed.
- Add categories that match how the club actually gathers or shares.
- Make the join path clear without pushing everything into a public social platform.
- Use the first month to move recurring links and decisions into the site.
What the site makes clear
Someone opening the site should see the group identity, schedule, participation path, and member resources. Returning members should find what is next, what to bring, what changed, and where to post an update.
- Member-only resource access
- Meeting and event structure
- Join path for interested people
- A private alternative to social media groups
The site is not an empty shell after signup. It opens with the tools that match this type of club and can be adjusted during onboarding.
Volunteer roles, event jobs, meeting prep, and follow-up tasks assigned clearly.
Meetings, events, deadlines, field trips, and reminders in one place.
Guides, rules, links, learning material, and member resources everyone can find.
Announcements, photos, updates, and recaps without depending on a public algorithm.
Start free for the first season, meeting cycle, or project. Upgrade later if the group needs more storage, domain polish, email, larger media archives, or heavier scheduling and member-management workflows.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated club site will help.
The social feed buries club updates
Meeting changes, resources, and event notes disappear under posts the club does not control.
Members miss the next thing
People want to participate, but they need a reliable place to see dates, duties, and what to bring.
Club resources are everywhere
Rules, links, guides, photos, files, and shared lists need a real home.
Everything your club needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Club Duties
Volunteer roles, event jobs, meeting prep, and follow-up tasks assigned clearly.
Club Schedule
Meetings, events, deadlines, field trips, and reminders in one place.
Club Resources
Guides, rules, links, learning material, and member resources everyone can find.
Club News
Announcements, photos, updates, and recaps without depending on a public algorithm.
Club Files
Forms, records, rosters, and reference documents with private access.
Group Buys
Coordinate shared orders, supplies, swaps, or buy/sell/trade needs.
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your club name.
Add your people
Invite members with a link or email.
Start with the right tools
Your starter pages and selected tools are ready when the site opens.
Simple pricing
Give the club a home it actually controls.
Start Free
- Club duties
- Club schedule
- Resource library
- Club news
- Private files
- Group buys
- Member roles
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Can a club have a public page and private member area?
Yes. The public page can explain the club while schedules, files, and member-only updates stay private.
Does it work for hobby clubs?
Yes. It fits hobby groups, local clubs, collector groups, volunteer clubs, and member-led communities.
Can leaders manage approvals?
Yes. Admins can control invitations, roles, and what members can post or edit.
