If you’re one of the select few who can pony up the cash for a membership to President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago on tony Palm Beach (which starts at $200,000 with a one-time initiation fee plus thousands in annual dues), hoping to get a glimpse of the president or maybe even a selfie, you may not be in luck this season.

According to Vanity Fair, Trump’s Chief of Staff John Kelly has developed a "Mar-a-Lago strategy" to prevent Trump from getting advice from club members and friends. The plans, citing sources, include trying to keep Trump "out of the dining room."

PHOTOS: President Trump visits Palm Beach County

Trump visited Palm Beach nine times since November, many of the visits coming in the heart of Palm Beach’s season, which begins around the end of October. He was president for seven of the visits and president-elect for two of them.

Trump and first lady Melania at times popped in on fund-raisers at the club, or chatted with club members.

PHOTOS: Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago mansion on Palm Beach

In one memorable dinner there, on Feb. 11, as Trump and Melania were hosting Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his wife on the terrace, it was learned that the North Koreans had launched a missile. As staff members and heads of state huddled at the table, printed reports were passed around and examined by the light of cellphones or flashlights. The scene played out in front of at least 100 people, members or guests of The Mar-a-Lago Club. The Washington Post referred to the incident as an "open-air situation room."

One member of Mar-a-Lago even took a selfie with the man who apparently held the "nuclear football," a briefcase that holds information the president would use to authorize a nuclear attack.