Phase 1 ESA Cost for Golf Course Properties

Quick Price Estimate

Typical Range: $2,000 - $4,500

Why Golf Course Properties Have Standard Pricing

Golf Course properties have medium environmental risk. Pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers

Environmental Risk: ModeratePhase 2 if RECs found

Key Risk Factors: Pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers

Pricing by Scenario

ScenarioTypical Cost Range
Standard property$2,000 - $4,500
Complex property$2,300 - $5,175
Property with known issues$2,600 - $5,850

What to Expect

Phase 1 ESA for Golf Course

A Phase 1 Environmental Site Assessment for golf course properties includes:

  • Historical records review - Sanborn maps, aerial photographs, city directories
  • Regulatory database search - Federal, state, and local environmental records
  • Site reconnaissance - Physical inspection of property and adjacent sites
  • Interviews - Current/past owners, operators, government officials
  • Report and opinion - Assessment of Recognized Environmental Conditions (RECs)

Timeline

Service LevelTurnaroundCost Impact
Standard2-3 weeksBase price
Expedited7-10 days+20-30%
Rush3-5 days+40-50%

Phase 1 ESA for Golf Course by State

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a phase 1 esa cost for a golf course?

Phase 1 ESA for golf course properties typically costs $2,000 to $4,500. This is consistent with standard property pricing.

Why do golf course properties have standard pricing?

Golf Course properties are considered moderate risk. Pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers

Do I need a Phase 2 ESA for a golf course?

Phase 2 ESA is typically not required for golf course properties unless the Phase 1 ESA identifies Recognized Environmental Conditions (RECs).

What to Include in Your Phase 1 ESA Request

When soliciting quotes from environmental consultants, provide the following to ensure accurate scoping and pricing:

  • Property address and APN — enables the consultant to pre-screen regulatory databases before quoting
  • Property size (acreage and building square footage) — larger sites require more reconnaissance time
  • Known or suspected environmental history — prior uses, USTs, spills, or remediation you’re aware of
  • Lender name and loan program — some lenders have specific report requirements (e.g., SBA, HUD, CMBS) that affect scope and who can sign
  • Required turnaround — standard is 2–3 weeks; rush orders (3–5 days) add 40–50% to cost
  • Target closing date — drives urgency and whether a reliance letter or update letter will be needed later

Getting quotes from at least two consultants is standard practice. Cheapest is not always best: a low quote from an inexperienced firm that misses a REC can cost far more in Phase 2 ESA and remediation than you saved on the Phase 1.

Typical Phase 1 ESA Timeline

StepDuration
Quote and contract execution1–3 days
Regulatory database search2–5 days
Site reconnaissance visit1 day (scheduled within 3–7 days)
Historical records review3–7 days (concurrent with database search)
Report drafting and review3–5 days
Final report delivery14–21 days total (standard)
Rush delivery5–10 days total

Under ASTM E1527-21, a Phase I ESA is presumed viable when conducted within 180 days prior to the acquisition or transaction date (not the site visit date). If more than 180 days pass between transaction and completion of key components, an update letter is required. CMBS and SBA programs each set their own independent validity windows (12 months and 1 year respectively).

Lender Requirements for Golf Course Properties

Risk Classification

Golf Course properties are classified as Medium environmental risk for Phase 1 ESA purposes — pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers.

What Lenders Require

Medium-risk property types typically require Phase 1 ESA when lender thresholds are met. SBA requires some form of environmental investigation for all commercial real estate collateral. For loans over $250,000, a Records Search with Risk Assessment is required; a full Phase I ESA is required when the NAICS code indicates an environmentally sensitive use or when the Records Search finds elevated risk. CMBS lenders require Phase 1 ESA for all properties in their loan pools. Fannie Mae multifamily programs may apply different scoping requirements depending on property type and risk profile, but lender discretion often results in requiring the assessment anyway for medium-risk uses. The Phase 1 ESA scope for medium-risk properties follows standard ASTM E1527-21 requirements; Phase 2 ESA is warranted if the assessor identifies RECs during the Phase 1.

Report Standards

All Phase 1 ESAs must follow ASTM E1527-21 — the current standard adopted in December 2022. Reports must be completed by a qualified Environmental Professional (EP) meeting the qualifications defined in the AAI rule. Lenders require the report to be addressed or include reliance language allowing them to rely on the findings. CMBS lenders typically require Phase I ESA within 12 months of loan origination. SBA accepts reports within one year of loan issuance. Under ASTM E1527-21, five time-sensitive components must be completed within 180 days of the acquisition/transaction date to invoke the innocent landowner defense.