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These membership organizations have the potential to save you money and send you on adventures.
These membership organizations have the potential to save you money and send you on adventures. (Photo: Courtesy AAC)

6 Outdoor Clubs Worth the Membership Fees

Whether you're looking for deals on gear or an inside line on your dream trip, the perfect group is just a click away

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These membership organizations have the potential to save you money and send you on adventures.
(Photo: Courtesy AAC)

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In years past, cyclists, skiers, hikers, and runners joined actual clubs—groups that met weekly or monthly to go outside and do things together. Those still exist, but there are also new kinds oforganizations for active pursuitstoday. These modern versions, many of which exist only online, require a membership fee to join, much like the clubs of yesteryear, but you don’t have to show up for 6 A.M. runs on a Saturday. Insteadyou get deals on trips and gear, along with access to guides, lodging, and other insider perks to chart your own adventure. And you can still go for that early-morningjogif you want.

Delmont Club

(Courtesy DelmontClub.com)

A couple of outdoor-industry veterans—including Mike Rogge, current editor of theSki Journal—got together in 2018 to form the , a members-only online organizationthat grants you access to some of the best deals in nature. It costs $55 a year to join, and you’ll get 15 to 50 percent off select products from gear brands, includingCatch Surf, Discrete Clothing, Forsake,Moment Skis, and Orage. You can also score discounts on Lake Tahoe sailing voyagesand guided ski trips to Japan and South America.

ReddyYeti

(Courtesy ReddyYeti)

(no relation to the coolers)was founded back in 2010 by a couple ofcollege friends who wanted to build their own boutique ski brand. Realizingthat there were already a bunch of similar businesses out there that needed exposure,their focus eventually shifted tohelping grow gear startups in the outdoor industry. By 2015, the founders had pivoted direction,becomingaclubthat offers its community of outdoor enthusiasts ways to supportsmall manufacturersand gainexclusive deals. Sign up for the $38 annual membership, and you’ll get access to products that are up to 50 percent off from some of the world’s fastest-growing independent companies, like the Sego Ski Co., Yerka, and more than 150 others. ReddyYeti also has a podcast that givesinsight into the stories behind those ventures.

American Alpine Club

(Courtesy AAC)

The is not a new, internet-driven group—it was formed in 1902 by climbers and conservationists who wanted to preserve public lands and the climbing way of life. The AAC is still doing that important work. But it also has perks for members that make the historic groupmore than worthy of being on this modern list. Pay your $80 annual-membership dues, and you’ll get discounts on gear from major climbing brands, special rates at climbing gyms all over the country, emergency-rescue and insurance benefits, deals on mountain guides, and access to the organization’svaried which includesreducedrates on European huts, a climber’s ranch in Wyoming’sTetons, and a campground in New York’sShawangunks.

Colorado Mountain Club

(Mikayla Brayden)

Another legacy organization isthe ,founded in 1912 to promote responsible outdoor recreation within the state. Its guidesleadthousands oftrips each year, from climbing fourteenersto backcountry skiing. Through the club, you can sign up for courses on wilderness first aid, introductory fly-fishing, or high-altitude mountaineering. You can also stay in backcountry huts maintained by the CMC. Additionally, itoffers member-only deals, such asup to 70 percent off select gear and climbing gyms, and adventure travel trips that extend way beyond Colorado—you can trekin Nepal, raft the Grand Canyon, or mountain-bikein Moab, Utah.Yearly membership costs $75 for an individual, $30 if you’re under the age of 30, or $115 for the whole family.

The Clymb

got its start in 2009 in Portland, Oregon, primarily as a gear site. It’s free to join, and once you offer up your e-mail address, you’ll receive daily messagesfeaturingenticing deals ranging from 50 to 75 percent off everything from skis, bikes, running shoes, and more. In 2013, the companypartneredwith Intrepid Travel to launch , which offers human-powered hiking, biking, and touring trips to places like Belize, Everest Base Camp, Iceland, and Utah, with respected outfitters and tour operators at slashed, members-only prices.

Get ϳԹ Pass

(Courtesy Get ϳԹ Pass)

If you’re going to a major national park this summer, you’re most likely looking for some adventures to do while you’re there. You might as well get a deal while you’re at it. That’s the idea behind the, conceivedin 2018 by an adventure-travelingcouple from the Tetons. Passes for individual parks are $14 and workfor up to five people. Each one offersdiscounts on horseback riding, rock climbing, whitewater rafting, and morein national parks including Yellowstone, Zion, Glacier, and Great Smoky Mountains. The best part? All the money from the pass goes toward programs aimed at getting kids into the outdoors.

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