The global competition among golf resorts continues to accelerate with the popularity of golf. It’s dizzying but exciting to reflect on the development happening both at golf’s most popular destinations and also new ones popping up. Dozens of new courses have entered our ranking of America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses since the last time we ranked the best golf resorts in the U.S. Just in the past two years, Black Desert Resort, Landmand, Fields Ranch at PGA Frisco, McLemore, Cabot Citrus Farms, to name a few, have opened its doors and debuted a top-100 public golf course.

The best resorts in golf—Pinehurst, Sand Valley, Bandon Dunes, Pebble Beach, Streamsong, Gamble Sands, The American Club, on and on—have unveiled either new 18-hole or short courses in the past three to four years. And more are set to pop up. That trickles down to multi-million-dollar course renovations, like at Harbour Town or Pasatiempo, and dazzling new lodging and amenities are following. It’s a true arms race that will continue as long as golfers are willing to pay hundreds of dollars in green fees and spend thousands on entire stays. We’re living in a moment where it’s never been better to be able to travel to these destinations—both iconic or new and modern—to enjoy the varied golf that we’re blessed with in this country.

The toughest part? Choosing where to travel to next. We tasked our course-ranking panelists, a group of 1,500-plus avid golf travelers, to score any resort they’ve stayed and played in the past five years on a score of 1 (awful) to 10 (perfect). The results are below.

We urge you to click through to each individual course page for bonus photography, drone footage and reviews from our course panelists. Plus, you can now leave your own ratings on the resorts you’ve stayed and played … to make your case why your favorite should be ranked higher.

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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From the tee at the par-3, third hole

Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

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The view from behind the third green

Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

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The approach to the famous par-4, 11th hole

Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

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The closing par 3 at Pasatiempo.

Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 75. Pasatiempo Golf Club Santa Cruz, CA 4.6 29 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Pasatiempo is arguably Alister MacKenzie’s favorite design. He lived along its sixth fairway during his last years. With its elaborate greens and spectacular bunkering fully restored by Jim Urbina, it’s a prime example of MacKenzie’s art. The five par 3s are daunting yet delightful, culminating with the 181-yard over-a-canyon 18th. The back nine is chock full of other great holes: 10, 11, 12 and 16 all play over barrancas. The storied course has hosted two USGA championships: the 1986 U.S. Women’s Amateur and the 2004 U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur. In 2014, Pasatiempo received a Golf Digest Green Star environmental award for its measures in dealing with drought. Today, water worries are in the past, in part because of a new storage tank that allows the club to capture and store recycled water. Urbina’s last greens restoration, completed in late 2024, has resurrected lost hole locations throughout the course, and the club will maintain them at slightly slower speeds to embrace the brilliant contours MacKenzie designed. The Inn at Pasatiempo, a past Golf Digest Editors’ Choice winner, is a charming lodging option with a retro 1950s facade, across the road from the front nine of one of MacKenzie’s finest designs.

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Lonna Tucker

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Lonna Tucker/Courtesy of We-Ko-Pa

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Lonna Tucker

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LONNA TUCKER

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 74. We-Ko-Pa Golf Club Fort McDowell, AZ 4.1 35 Panelists

We-Ko-Pa boasts two of the best public courses in the Phoenix/Scottsdale area, the Cholla and Saguaro, a previous honoree on Golf Digest’s 100 Greatest Public. The Coore and Crenshaw designs incorporate all the typical traits of a desert course while maintaining a traditional, walkable feel. The Saguaro features wide, forgiving fairways and greens situated close to the following tees. Similar to Coore and Crenshaw standouts like Bandon Trails, Sand Hills, Friar’s Head and Old Sandwich, We-Ko-Pa is a vibrant expression of the unique site, tracing its natural movements and siideslopes and providing 360-degree views of four surrounding mountains: Superstition, McDowell, Mazatzal and the Four Peaks.

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Brian Walters

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 73. Boyne Highlands Harbor Springs, MI 4 12 Panelists

The Highlands, located in Harbor Springs, offers four 18-hole layouts, including the Heather course, which is a former member of our 100 Greatest and 100 Greatest Public lists. The Robert Trent Jones Sr. design sits at the base of the resort’s ski slopes and offers a stern ball-striking test, with tree-lined doglegs and water hazards demanding accuracy. The resort also just opened a new putting course, the Doon Brae, for yet another golf offering.

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Courtesy of the Boulders Resort & Spa

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Paul Severn

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Peter Malinowski

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Peter Malinowski

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 72. The Boulders Club Carefree, AZ 3.8 17 Panelists

The recently renovated, sandstone-faced Curio by Hilton lodging is fully integrated into perhaps the most dramatic rock formations in Arizona, which also served as backdrops to holes on two Jay Morrish-designed courses, the North and South. The South is a par-71 championship course known for its natural beauty and intricate layout among the Sonoran Desert foothills. As players navigate boulder formations and elevation changes throughout their rounds, they are likely to spot some unique wildlife: bobcats, coyotes and even javelina lurk among the scenic desert terrain. In June 2022, the course broke ground on a four-month bunker and greens renovation project. The greens, in addition to being expanded to their original shape and size, were resurfaced with TifEagle Bermuda. The older of the two 18-hole courses at the Boulders, the North Course presents stunning views of Black Mountain as it weaves throughout the rugged desert landscape. The North, also designed by Morrish, boasts bentgrass greens and several holes that are nestled tightly within ancient rock formations.

View Course 1 / 7 Myrtle Beach

JD Cuban/Golf Digest

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JD Cuban/Golf Digest

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JD Cuban/Golf Digest

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JD Cuban/Golf Digest

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JD Cuban/Golf Digest

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JD Cuban/Golf Digest

7 / 7 caledonia-golf-and-fish-club-ninth-hole-16632 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 71. Caledonia Golf & Fish Club Pawleys Island, SC 4.1 27 Panelists

Caledonia was Mike Strantz’s first solo design in 1994, and his creativity shines on this golf-only, oak-dotted, sand-dune parcel abutting the marshes and rice paddies of Pawley’s Island. The design is ordered and composed, twisting low through the heavy tree canopy while setting up classic hole strategies into angled greens. There are touches of Pete Dye and just enough quirk to suggest something more intense and experimental brewing under the surface. Two musts: The chowder at the turn, and a drink on the porch behind the 18th hole. A stay-and-play at Caledonia and its sister course, True Blue, also designed by Strantz, should be at the top of your list for Myrtle Beach getaways.

View Course 1 / 1 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/9/100-greatest-public-new-additions/80 - Firestone South Course View From 55th Hole Balcony.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 70. Firestone Country Club Akron, OH 4.1 8 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Golf design is about transforming land. Sometimes it’s a native piece of soil, and in other cases, the subject is an existing course. In the late 1950s, Robert Trent Jones was hired to take a somewhat benign and toothless layout built in the 1920s for employees of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company and toughen it up for the 1960 PGA Championship, much like what he did in turning Oakland Hills South into a “monster” prior to the 1951 U.S. Open. At Firestone, he added dozens of bunkers, closed off green fronts, lengthened it to over 7,000 yards and installed several new water hazards. If complaints from the pros about its difficulty were an indication, the remodel was a profound success. Over the decades, the tree-lined South Course, still a demanding tournament venue, has gained the respect of the best players who appreciate its unambiguous demands and ability to identify the best ball-strikers. Now it’s accessible to the public, who can reserve rooms and rounds through new stay-and-play packages. View Course 1 / 1 Trump-National-Doral-Blue-Monster-1793

Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 69. Trump National Doral Miami, FL 4.1 15 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The linchpin of the famous four-course complex previously known as Doral Golf Resort, the Blue Monster had hosted a PGA Tour event annually from 1962 to 2016. The fearsome layout was designed by Dick Wilson in 1962 and set the template for the modern south Florida course with lakes galore, deep bunkers and greenpads elevated above the fairways for drainage and aerial target golf. Several questionable renovations in the 1990s and early 2000s moved it away from the original Wilson look, and the design was lost for a period of time. Always intended to be a course presenting shot-making demands for good players, the Blue Monster was given added bite by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner through the creation of new slopes and ridges on several holes and the excavation of new lakes on the par-3 15 and drivable par-4 16 to add more excitement to the finish. But they wisely left the legendary 18th nearly untouched. Why mess with history? The changes were completed shortly before the PGA Tour took the course out of its annual location. View Course 1 / 1 coeur-dalene-fourteenth-13861

Quicksilver Studios

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 68. The Coeur D’ Alene Golf & Spa Resort Coeur D Alene, ID 3.8 17 Panelists

Coeur d’Alene Resort Golf Course, just 30 minutes from Spokane, Wash., is known for its floating green and is one of the best golf experiences in the Pacific Northwest. A classic mahogany boat can take resort guests across the lake to the golf course, where guests are met by their forecaddie, who typically has the guest’s clubs already loaded on the luxurious carts. Carts feature a cooler, a trash can, heated seats, a trunk and ball washer. Plus, a massage therapist is available on the range to provide a warm-up massage in case you’d like one. View Course 1 / 2 2017-ec-resorts-the-americas-carolinas-pine-needles-resort.jpg

Dom Furore

2 / 2 Bailey Davis

Chris Keane

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 67. Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club Southern Pines, NC 4.3 34 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Pine Needles used to lurk quietly in the Pinehurst background before the USGA chose to put it in their regular women’s championship rotation. It got another big boost in 2017 after Kyle Franz reworked portions of the course, putting the Pinehurst touch on the borders, cross hazards and bunkers. Though it lacks the intimacy and connectivity of its sister course, Mid Pines, with the holes wandering far afield due to a being part of a 1920s residential development, it’s grown into a big, championship worthy course (most recently hosting the 2019 Senior Women’s Open and 2022 U.S. Women’s Open) with arguably the best set of greens after No. 2. View Course 1 / 1 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/9/100-greatest-public-new-additions/86 - Edgewood-Tahoe-Golf-Course-Nevada.jpg

Brian Walker

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 66. Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course Stateline, NV 4.1 12 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Edgewood Tahoe is one of golf’s most televised courses as the annual host of the American Century Championship. It also holds the distinction of being the only course in Nevada to have held a USGA championship, hosting a U.S. Senior Open and a U.S. Amateur Public Links in the 1980s. Once a member of Golf Digest America’s 100 Greatest Courses, Edgewood Tahoe is as telegenic as they come with fairways framed by stately pines, greens flanked by sparkling ponds and several holes positioned on Lake Tahoe, including the final three. At over 6,000 feet elevation, the ball flies roughly 10 percent further than sea level. View Course 1 / 1 2017-ec-resorts-the-americas-ca-ojai-valley-inn.jpg

Aidan Bradley/Courtesy of Ojai Valley Inn & Spa

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 65. Ojai Valley Inn Ojai, CA 3.8 6 Panelists Situated between Santa Barbara and Los Angeles is the idyllic Ojai Valley Inn and golf course. Originally opened in 1923, the resort and golf course perfectly embody the laidback California lifestyle as the property sits in a stunning lush mountain valley with breathtaking views. The luxury resort boasts a 31,000-square-foot luxury spa, Michelin-star dining sourced with homegrown ingredients and access to a George C. Thomas Jr. and Billy Bell original golf course. Famous for their work at courses such as Riviera, Los Angeles Country Club and Bel-Air, Thomas’ and Bell’s spectacular original design was unfortunately in play for only a decade due to the Great Depression and the United States involvement in World War II. The current iteration of the golf course was crafted by Jay Morrish in the 1980s with amendments made by his son Carter in 1998 who reimplemented versions of two Thomas and Bell originals that were reclaimed by land during the war. The course features scenic views into the surrounding mountains and tumbling fairways framed by ancient oak trees and dense barranca. The standout hole at the Ojai Valley Inn course is Carter Morrish’s redesign of the Thomas and Bell original third hole, now the par-3 16th, played on a dramatic mountainside to a sloped green protected by a host of bunkers. View Course 1 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/3/TPC SanAntonio_18_CourtesyOfCourse - hero.jpg

Dave Sansom

2 / 6 tpc-san-antonio-oaks-24699 3 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/tpcsanantonio-oaks-24699.jpg 4 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/tpcsan-antonio-oaks-24699.jpg 5 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/tpcsanantoniooaks-24699.jpg 6 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/tpc-san-antonio-oaks--24699.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 64. JW Marriott San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa San Antonio, TX 3.5 4 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

TPC San Antonio’s Oaks course has hosted the Valero Texas Open since 2010. Playing through the dry outlands north of the city, the Greg Norman design is one of the most strategically compelling courses on tour with aggressive bunkering, some wonderful short par 4s and several uniquely demanding par 5s, including the 18th, one of the most underrated and frustrating closing holes the professionals play. The resort boasts 36 holes, including the Canyon course designed by Pete Dye. And the luxurious accommodations also include a nine-acre water park with a 1,100-foot lazy river.

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Omni Golf & Resorts

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Omni Golf & Resorts

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The Omni Grove Park Inn

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The Omni Grove Park Inn

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The Omni Grove Park Inn

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The Omni Grove Park Inn

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The Omni Grove Park Inn

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 63. The Omni Grove Park Inn Asheville, NC 3.3 8 Panelists Donald Ross’ design at Grove Park leverages the rolling terrain very well with holes that traverse up the mountain and many that go down. The rough and the undulating greens provide some difficulty even though the course measures only 6,700 yards from the back tees (par 70). The backdrop of the N.C. mountains and the historic Grove Park Inn are beautiful and provide for a lovely environment with which to play. View Course 1 / 10 aviara-golf-club-third-hole-13856 2 / 10 aviara-golf-club-sixth-hole-13856 3 / 10 aviara-golf-club-eighth-hole-13856

Brian Oar – Fairways+Greens

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Brian Oar – Fairways+Greens

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Brian Oar – Fairways+Greens

10 / 10 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Aviara Golf Club - Hole 8 Aerial View.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 62. Park Hyatt Aviara Carlsbad, CA 4 33 Panelists Aviara, part of an upscale Hyatt resort, has held the LPGA’s JTBC Classic (formerly the Kia Classic) for the past nine years. The only Arnold Palmer design in the area, this resort course meanders through rolling hillsides and is landscaped with native Southern California wildflowers. View Course 1 / 4 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Dove Mountain.jpg

J.D. Cuban

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J. Martin Harris Photography

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Formerly home to the PGA Tour’s WGC match-play event, the Saguaro and Tortolita nines feature guarded greens with some of the wildest contours Team Nicklaus has created, making the approach targets quite small. The Saguaro side lines a vast cactus forest, while the Tortolita sneaks through a secluded canyon. A natural stadium-like bowl surrounds the final green of the Tortolita, the perfect setting for matches that come down to the wire. View Course 1 / 8 ponte-vedra-inn-ocean-ninth-2167

LC Lambrecht/Courtesy of the club

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 60. Ponte Vedra Inn & Club Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 4 3 Panelists

The Ocean Course might have a much different reputation in the world of golf had it hosted the Ryder Cup, which it was scheduled to do in 1939 before it was cancelled due to World War II. Ponte Vedra Inn & Club’s Ocean course—though a bit of a misnomer since there are no ocean views—is a unique and creative routing with high shot options and impeccable conditioning. This is a very demanding test with the wind being very prevalent. The greens are somewhat forgiving, as if they were too demanding with the potential weather conditions, this would be nearly impossible to score. An absolute gem and must play at this great, historic inn.

View Course

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten: Back in mid-1980s, George Bryan, who ran Bryan Foods, now part of Sara Lee Corp., created Old Waverly Golf Club in tiny West Point, Miss., a Bob Cupp/Jerry Pate design and former U.S. Women’s Open host that to me is a bit underrated. In the early 2000s, Bryan bought an old dairy farm (Knob Hill Dairy) across the highway and hired Gil Hanse to give him an Old School public golf course. George named it Mossy Oak, after a West Point company of the same name that supplies outdoor camouflage gear. (The company has a 10-percent interest in the course.) He was going to call it Howlin’ Wolf after a legendary blues singer born in West Point, but his heirs wanted too much money. Hanse got the job before he was awarded the Rio Olympics design in 2012, and it was the first project he tackled after completing his work in Brazil. The site footprint is smaller than Old Waverly across the road, but except for some cottages along No. 10, there’s no residential on Mossy Oak, so the course feels more expansive. Explore our complete review here—including bonus photography and ratings from our expert panelists.

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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J.D. Cuban

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 58. Omni Barton Creek Resort & Spa Austin, TX 4.2 12 Panelists

One of Texas’ best golf resorts is the Omni Barton Creek, located just 25 minutes outside of Austin. The resort features four 18-hole designs, and the highest-ranked layout is the Fazio Canyons design, a former Golf Digest America’s 100 Greatest Public winner. This signature Tom Fazio design, which offers scenic views of Austin’s Hill Country, recently underwent an extensive renovation. View Course 1 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/tpc-scottsdale-stadium-fifteen-hole-12552.jpg

D Squared Productions

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D Squared Productions

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D Squared Productions

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Getty Images

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Courtesy of the TPC Network

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Ben Jared

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 57. Fairmont Scottsdale Princess at TPC Scottsdale Scottsdale, AZ 3.9 18 Panelists

The famed home of the WM Phoenix Open boasts probably the most well-known stadium hole in golf: the par-3 16th. Tiger Woods’ hole-in-one in 1997 put it on the map for casual fans, who now flock to Scottsdale during Super Bowl week. The layout has architectural merit, too, with its risk-and-reward-filled back nine. The late Tom Weiskopf, who designed the course with Jay Morrish, oversaw a series of renovations of the course—making tweaks to please the tour player and resort guest alike. View Course 1 / 1 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/beaver-creek_colorado.jpg

Courtesy of the club

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 56. Beaver Creek Beaver Creek, CO 3.8 1 Panelists A short 30-minute drive from Vail’s airport is the Beaver Creek Resort and village. Perhaps best known for being a world-renowned ski resort, Beaver Creek Resort turns into a golf and outdoor enthusiasts paradise when summer rolls around. The European-themed resort and village includes 12 lodging options and over 20 dining choices with boutique shopping and a premier member-only golf course at Beaver Creek Golf Club as well as at Red Sky Ranch and Golf Club. The Robert Trent Jones Jr.-designed golf course at Beaver Creek Club opened in 1982 and is built over naturally undulating valleys bordered by dense trees and Beaver Creek itself. Select properties within the Beaver Creek resort are granted access to the exclusive Red Sky Golf Club, located above the resort village, and home to the Tom Fazio and Greg Norman courses. The Fazio course opened in 2002 and is known for its difficult par 3s and greensites protected by sprawling sage meadows, dense groves of Aspen trees and breathtaking views across the valley to Vail mountain’s backbowls. Debuting a year later, the Norman course is the more challenging of the two and features naturally sloping fairways that snake through wild flowers groves and ancient trees that distract the player from the over 400 feet of elevation change throughout the round. View Course 1 / 4 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/pga-west-stadium-course-california-seventeenth-hole.jpg

JFHenebry/Courtesy of the club

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JFHenebry/Courtesy of the club

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JPHenebry

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JFHenebry/Courtesy of the club

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 55. PGA West La Quinta, CA 4 31 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Originally private, the Stadium Course (the original 18 at PGA West) was among the rota of courses for the old Bob Hope Desert Classic until some pros, objecting to its difficulty, petitioned to remove it (it’s now back). It’s Pete Dye at his rambunctious best, with a finish mimicking his later design at TPC Sawgrass: a gambling par-5 16th (called San Andreas Fault), a short par-3 17th to an island green and an intimidating par-4 18th with water all the way to the green. Though hideous in its difficulty and aesthetics by 1980s standards (it was can’t miss television when it hosted the 1987 Skins Game), it’s matured into a noble piece of architecture that represents the tail end of Dye’s extreme middle phase. In 2024, Tim Liddy, a protégé of Dye, returned to PGA West to perform a restoration to return putting surfaces and bunker complexes to their original dimensions. View Course 1 / 5 186 - Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South) - Jon Cavalier.jpeg

Jon Cavalier

2 / 5 186 - Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South) aerial - Jon Cavalier.jpeg 3 / 5 186 -   Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South) - Jon Cavalier.jpeg 4 / 5 186 - Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South) -  Jon Cavalier.jpeg 5 / 5 186 - Torrey Pines G. Cse. (South)  - Jon Cavalier.jpeg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 54. The Lodge at Torrey Pines La Jolla, CA 3.9 23 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Torrey Pines sits on one of the prettiest golf course sites in America, atop coastal bluffs north of San Diego with eye-dazzling views of the Pacific. Rees Jones’ remodeling of the South Course in the early 2000s not only made the course competitive for the 2008 U.S. Open (won by Tiger Woods in a playoff over Rocco Mediate), but it also brought several coastal canyons into play for everyday play, especially on the par-3 third and par-4 14th. An annual PGA Tour stop, Torrey Pines received another boost by Jones prior to hosting its second U.S. Open in 2021, this one won by Jon Rahm. View Course 1 / 5 fairmont-grand-del-mar-third-18613

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Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 53. Fairmont Grand Del Mar San Diego, CA 3.7 4 Panelists The pinnacle of luxury and relaxation can be found in the San Diego foothills at the Fairmont Grand Del Mar and its golf course the Grand Golf Club. With European and Mediterranean-style rooms, suites and villas set on over 400 acres of the Los Peñasquitos Canyon Preserve and natural area, the resort is a blissful natural getaway. The Fairmont is home to a recently renovated five-star spa as well as six unique dining experiences highlighted by Addison, the first Michelin three-star restaurant in San Diego. Partnered with the resort is the members-only Tom Fazio-designed Grand Golf Club opened in 1999 and features subtly undulating fairways guarded tightly by canyon walls and thick trees. Perfectly maintained green complexes give way to stunning views into the Los Peñasquitos reserve creating idyllic picturesque moments. The Grand Club is highlighted by its dramatic and intimidating par 3s at the sixth and 17th holes, as well as the standout par-4 finishing hole played over a waterfall with the 50,000 square foot clubhouse in the backdrop. View Course 1 / 6 pga-west-nicklaus-tournament-ninth-hole-13807

Rob Perry Photography

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John Henebry

3 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/nicklaus-tournament-pgawest.jpeg 4 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/nicklaustournament-pga-west.jpeg 5 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/nicklaustournament-pgawest.jpeg 6 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/nicklaus-tournament-pga-west.jpeg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 52. La Quinta Resort & Spa La Quinta, CA 3.9 20 Panelists

La Quinta Resort & Club attracted Hollywood’s biggest stars to the Coachella Valley 100 years ago, and the resort still remains one of golf’s most tranquil, elegant experiences with 800-plus rooms and access to five golf courses. Pete Dye built two courses for the recently acquired La Quinta Hotel in 1980, then was brought back as the development expanded to include the PGA’s western headquarters, now known as PGA West, housing the Pete Dye Stadium Course, billed as the toughest course when it opened, hosting Q-school for years and now the home of The American Express (the old Bob Hope Desert Classic).  

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courtesy of French Lick Resort

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Brian Walers Photography

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Brian Walers Photography

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Courtesy of Jon Cavalier

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 51. French Lick Resort French Lick, IN 4.4 20 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Pete Dye’s mountaintop design, Golf Digest’s 2009 Best New Public winner, established that at age 80 the designer still had fresh ideas, including rumpled chipping swales, country-lane cart paths and volcano bunkers. Measuring just over 8,100 yards from the tips, Pete Dye at French Lick is not the first course over 8,000 yards to land on our rankings. That would be, in 1967, the original 8,040-yard Runaway Brook in Massachusetts, later turned into the 8,325-yard Pines Course at The International Golf Club (and now completely remodeled by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, nowhere near 8,000 yards). The world’s longest is Jade Dragon Snow Mountain in China at 8,548 yards, not counting Australia’s Nullarbor Links, a course that stretches 1,365 kilometers with each hole stretched out in a different town along a highway. The yardage may be a talking point, but what golfers will remember about Dye’s French Lick course are the multi-mile views in all directions and the roominess of the fairways and greens that hang out over the edges of the sweeping land formations. View Course 1 / 9 farmlinks-golf-club-eighteenth-hole-21723

Michael Clemmer

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MICHAEL CLEMMER

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Michael Clemmer

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Michael Clemmer

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Michael Clemmer

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Michael Clemmer

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Don Naman

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Don Naman

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Michael Clemmer

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 50. Pursell Farms Sylacauga, AL 3.9 10 Panelists

Situated between Birmingham and Montgomery, FarmLinks is a Michael Hurdzan/Dana Fry layout at Pursell Farms, a Golf Digest Editors’ Choice resort at the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. The FarmLinks layout continually switches scenes, moving from meadows to woods to rugged foothills and back into the meadows. The course is also an agronomist laboratory with spacious fairways, tees and wavy greens planted with different strains and combinations of Zoysia and Bermudagrass, so visiting turf managers can study how they grow across the site’s different microclimates. But the fun is in the design and the journey through the vast, serene property, highlighted by an eccentric variety of par 3s that include the memorable fifth with one of the steepest drops in the U.S., a picturesque swan dive of almost 175 feet from tee to green. View Course

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten: I’ve always been fascinated by the design of Bay Hill, Arnold Palmer’s home course for over 45 years (although Tiger Woods owns it, competitively-speaking, as he’s won there eight times.) For one thing, it’s rather hilly, a rarity in Florida (although not in the Orlando market) and dotted with sinkhole ponds incorporated in the design in dramatic ways.

I always thought the wrap-around-a-lake par-5 sixth was Dick Wilson’s version of Robert Trent Jones’s decade-older 13th at The Dunes Club at Myrtle Beach. Each of the two rivals had claimed the other was always stealing his ideas. But the hole I like best at Bay Hill is the par-4 eighth, a lovely dogleg-right with a diagonal green perched above a small circular pond. OK, I admit that it reminds me of the sixth at Hazeltine National, another Trent Jones product, but I don’t think Wilson picked Trent’s pocket on this one, as both courses were built about the same time, in the early 1960s.I should pause here to point out that I have always given credit to Wilson (who died in 1965, four years after it opened) for the design of Bay Hill, going all the way back to the book I co-authored with Geoff Cornish, The Golf Course, first published in 1981. But the authorship of Bay Hill has been contested, and therein lies a story. It starts with a call I received in late 1983 from Thomas F. Barnes, Jr., a Florida real estate developer, who saw my book and called to tell me that I had it wrong. Dick Wilson didn’t design Bay Hill, Barnes said. He designed it, and Wilson merely reviewed his design, suggested a change and loaned him an associate, Bob Simmons, to construct the course. Explore more about Bay Hill with our complete review here—including bonus photography and ratings from our expert panelists.

View Course 1 / 1 16th Hole

Fred Vuich

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 48. SentryWorld Golf Club Stevens Point, WI 4.4 19 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The lush, tree-lined SentryWorld won Golf Digest’s first-ever Best New Public award in early 1984, but never made our 100 Greatest Public ranking until 2017, as the highest-ranking newcomer. A few years ago, Trent Jones Jr. partner Bruce Charlton and their former associate Jay Blasi remodeled SentryWorld, rerouting four holes and adding a new par-3 12th and par-4 13th, but they preserved the famous “Flower Hole,” the par-3 16th which uses petunias, snapdragons, marigolds, geraniums and other annuals grown on site as decorative hazards. The flower beds are treated as lateral hazards. A more recent renovation by RTJII’s team focused on preparing the course for the 2023 U.S. Senior Open. In an age when almost every renovation consists of enlarging fairway space to provide players better angles for more recoverability for mishits, SentryWorld went the opposite direction, narrowing its landing zones, enhancing roughs and converting a number of chipping areas into maintained bluegrass. Sub-Air systems were also installed under the greens. The alterations proved formidable as Bernhard Langer fended off Wisconsinites Steve Stricker and Jerry Kelly to win the Open. SentryWorld has previously hosted several other USGA championships, including the 2019 U.S. Girls’ Junior, where future U.S. Women’s Open champion Yuka Saso was the stroke-play medalist. View Course 1 / 1 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/mclemore-highlands-eighteenth-20037.jpg

Evan Schiller

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 47. McLemore Resort Rising Fawn, GA 3.9 15 Panelists

McLemore is one of the hottest golf resorts in the United States, thanks to the recent opening of its second course, The Keep. While remodeling the original course at McLemore in northwest Georgia, architects Bill Bergin and Rees Jones located an unused strip of heavily wooded land on the precipice of a cliff that drops several hundred feet. They then crafted it into a new hole that Golf Digest would list as the best 18th hole built in the U.S. since 2000. The revelation of that jaw-dropping exposure encouraged the ownership group to explore the rest of their holdings for more golf, which led to the development of The Keep, a new Bergin-Jones course one-and-a-half miles south. Instead of one hole that walks along the clouds, The Keep has five. The rest play through undisturbed inland sections with 50-mile views into north Georgia. Tee times for The Keep are available to guests of the stunning Cloudland at McLemore Resort along with additional stay-and-play packages.

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 46. The Omni Homestead Resort Hot Springs, VA 4.4 14 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

As Wayne Morrison and Tom Paul point out in their massive, comprehensive biography of William Flynn, Seth Raynor was originally consulted about building the Cascades Course, but declared the property insufficient. So the then-relatively unknown William Flynn got the job and made the most of it. The topography of Cascades is magnificent, and its bunkering is superb, particularly the cross-bunkers on the really fine 12th and 13th holes, both strong par 4s. The fourth and eighth are considered two of the great par 3s in the country, and Cascades finishes with another par 3, a rarity among top courses. The Virginia gem has hosted eight USGA championships, including a U.S. Women’s Open, a U.S. Amateur and two U.S. Women’s Amateurs. View Course 1 / 1 Half-Moon-Bay-18th-Hole.jpg

Photo by Kevin Murray

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 45. Ritz-Carlton Half Moon Bay Half Moon Bay, CA 3.3 6 Panelists Located on the dramatic windswept cliffs of Northern California, just under an hour from San Francisco, is the Ritz-Carlton Half Moon Bay. The resort is home to 260 luxury rooms and suites, three top-rated dining options that source local ingredients for contemporary dishes and a state-of-the-art spa focused on holistic and locally based remedies. The Ritz-Carlton is partnered with Half Moon Bay Golf Links, allowing guests access to the Ocean and Old courses. In 1973, Arnold Palmer and Francis Duane designed the parkland-style Old Course, considered the easier of the two, the course’s fairways that snake through cliffside bluffs offering an occasional view down to the Pacific. The Old Course has the most scenic and perhaps challenging hole on the property at the finishing par 4 with the Pacific Ocean on the right, forcing golfers to carry a hazard into the fairway, and then an approach uphill and often back into a strong wind. Almost 25 years later, Arthur Hills was commissioned to design the links-style Ocean Course, characterized by open driving areas covering steep elevation changes and playing to heavily sloped and windswept greens. The highlight here is the stunning three-hole closing stretch played alongside the Pacific ocean starting with the par-4 16th, dramatic par-3 17th styled after the seventh at Pebble Beach, and finishing at the intimidating risk-reward par-5 18th, snaking around the Pacific and finishing at the base of the resort. View Course 1 / 6 crosswater-club-ninth-hole-17085

Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 44. Sunriver Resort Sunriver, OR 4 13 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Part of Crosswater was reportedly built in the meadow where John Wayne, as Rooster Cogburn, filmed his climactic charge with guns blazing in the 1969 film, True Grit. The Bob Cupp design is far more subtle than a Wayne Western, with low-profile greens edged by graceful chipping areas and fairways intersected repeatedly by the Big and Little Deschutes rivers. Crosswater was Golf Digest’s Best New Resort Course of 1995. View Course 1 / 1 prairie-club-dunes-15-staff.jpg

Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 43. The Prairie Club Valentine, NE 4.5 16 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Dunes Course, as the name implies, flows through a rumpled blanket landscape of the rugged, treeless, windswept sand hills of central Nebraska. Most fairways are generously broad, most greens are perched, tucked or otherwise half-hidden to reward only shots correctly placed at certain angles. The most fascinating hole comes early, the par-4 second with out-of-bounds indicated by a barbed-wire fence hard along the right from tee to green, but other holes like the par-4 eighth with a notch in a dune that gives players a peek-a-boo look at the green as they approach and the multi-option sixth and 13th are just as entertaining. View Course 1 / 1 troon-north-golf-club-monument-thirteenth-hole-13382 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 42. Fairmont Four Seasons Resort Scottsdale at Troon North Scottsdale, AZ 4.2 24 Panelists

Troon North is home to two of the best public golf courses in Scottsdale, the Monument and Pinnacle, both designed by Tom Weiskopf. The late designer’s routings traverse ravines in the foothills of Pinnacle Peak, providing scenic vistas while also challenging golfers of all levels.

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Evan Schiller

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Dom Furore

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Courtesy of Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Brian Walters Photography

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 41. Forest Dunes Golf Club Roscommon, MI 4.4 27 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten:  The Tom Weiskopf-designed Forest Dunes in Michigan is a terrific layout on a terrific piece of property, with sand dunes deposited by the nearby Au Sable River and covered with mature pines. But it’s not a unique piece of property. When I first played it, I was struck by how much Forest Dunes resembles a Texas course designed by Weiskopf’s former partner, Jay Morrish. That course, Pine Dunes in Frankston, Texas, is built on much the same terrain, sand dunes covered in pines. Though they were working at the same time on their respective projects (Forest Dunes was completed in 2000 but didn’t open until 2002; Pine Dunes opened in 2001), I don’t think Weiskopf or Morrish had any idea that they were working on such similar courses, and I don’t think they stole each other’s ideas. But it’s uncanny how they created kissing-cousin courses.  

For the complete review on Forest Dunes from Ron Whitten’s complete review, click here. Forest Dunes also boasts The Loop, the clever reversible 18 designed by Tom Doak, as well as The Bootlegger, a new 10-hole pitch & putt by architects Riley Johns and Keith Rhebb.

View Course 1 / 8 TPC Sawgrass

Dom Furore / Golf Digest

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Dom Furore / Golf Digest

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8 / 8 2017-51-TPC-Sawgrass-Stadium-Course-Hole-16.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 40. TPC Sawgrass Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 4.6 24 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

TPC’s stadium concept was the idea of then-PGA Tour commissioner Deane Beman. The 1980 design was pure Pete Dye, who set out to test the world’s best golfers by mixing the demands of distance with target golf. Most greens are ringed by random lumps, bumps and hollows, what Dye called his “grenade attack architecture.” His ultimate target hole is the heart-pounding sink-or-swim island green 17th, which offers no bailout, perhaps unfairly in windy Atlantic coast conditions. The 17th has spawned over a hundred imitation island greens in the past 40 years. To make the layout even more exciting during tournament play, Steve Wenzloff of PGA Tour Design Services later remodeled several holes, most significantly the 12th, which he turned into a drivable par-4, something Dye was never a fan of. View Course

Reynolds Lake Oconee is home to 90 holes of championship golf—with five courses ranked in the top 40 of Golf Digest’s list of the Best Courses in Georgia. The Great Waters course, a fun resort course by Jack Nicklaus, boasts 10 holes along Lake Oconee. The Oconee course earned honors in the Best New Upscale Public Course of 2002 and features views of the lake on five of the holes. The Landing and The Preserve were both designed by Bob Cupp and The National has 18 holes by Tom Fazio. The Creek Club is a private club typically not available to resort guests but also ranked on Golf Digest’s top 40 in state. In addition to other fantastic amenities at Reynolds Lake Oconee, you can’t miss the TaylorMade at The Kingdom at Reynolds Lake Oconee, one of the best equipment experiences in resort golf.

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Hanse’s 18th hole has a number of strategic elements to navigate.

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A massive bunker complex at the 15th hole guards the green.

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The East course’s 13th hole looks like it always sat naturally within these live oaks and mesquite trees.

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The greensite at the 10th hole is carved into the property’s natural features.

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The rugged eight green complex at the East.

6 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/pga-frisco-fields-ranch-east-five.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 38. Omni Fields Ranch PGA of America Frisco Frisco, TX 4.3 26 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The East Course at the Omni PGA Frisco is one of two courses to open at the new Fields Ranch Golf Club. Alongside the Beau Welling-designed West course is the East, built by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner, which measures over 7,800 yards from the championship tees and puts a greater emphasis on driving than the West, demanding length, accuracy and the courage to take on cross-bunkers and central hazards. The greens, perched above bunkers and chipping runoffs, are smaller and require controlled approaches, and the holes of the second nine prowl the basin of Panther Creek. Both courses opened in May 2023, and the East has already hosted the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship. It is set to host a number of other prestigious events, including the PGA Championship (2027, 2034), the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship (2025, 2031) and the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship again in 2029. View Course 1 / 3 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Poipu Bay Golf Course - 16th Hole.jpg

Brian Oar

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Brian Oar

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 37. Grand Hyatt Kauai Resort & Spa Koloa, HI 4.1 10 Panelists

Situated on the south shore of Kauai, Poipu Bay is a Robert Trent Jones Jr. design that hosted the PGA Grand Slam of Golf from 1994 to 2006. Formerly a member of our 100 Greatest Public ranking, the course plays over 210 oceanfront acres and features wide fairways and large greens, making this a playable layout. There are numerous historical sites on the course, including several ancient Hawaiian heiau—places of worship—and centuries-old handmade stone walls. View Course 1 / 2 red-sky-ranch-and-golf-club-fazio-seventeenth-hole-19610

Allen Kennedy

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Brendan Caffrey

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 36. Red Sky Ranch Wolcott, CO 4 8 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The companion to the Norman Course at Red Sky, the Fazio 18 features more elevation change, with the mostly open front nine atop a bluff dotted with hand-planted sage and juniper bushes and the back nine rising in switchback fashion far up a mountain slope through groves of aspen before plunging downhill on the final three holes. The bunkers here are some of Fazio’s most elaborate. Both Red Sky Ranch courses have flip-flopped positions on the America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses ranking, but Fazio’s design consistently gets the higher Aesthetics marks. View Course 1 / 7 Arcadia-Bluffs-Clubhouse-Aerial-Staff.jpg

Photographed by Dom Furore at Arcadia Bluffs in Michigan.

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Dom Furore

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Nile Young Photography/Courtesy of Arcadia Bluffs GC

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Nile Young Photography/Courtesy of Arcadia Bluffs GC

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 35. Arcadia Bluffs Arcadia, MI 4.5 45 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Can a course ranked this high be a sleeper? The Bluffs Course at Arcadia Bluffs has been overshadowed by Pacific Dunes ever since it finished second to it in the Best New Upscale Public Course race of 2001. And likewise, it’s been second-fiddle to Crystal Downs, a northern Michigan neighbor that every visitor wants to play, even though it’s private, and Arcadia is public. And even by Whistling Straits, the imitation links on the opposite side of Lake Michigan that Arcadia Bluffs resembles, although the sand dunes at Arcadia are natural, not manmade. More recently, the Bluffs faces competition from within, the newly opened sister layout, the South Course at Arcadia Bluffs, designed by Dana Fry in the style of C.B. Macdonald and Seth Raynor. View Course 1 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-fifteenth-hole-ocean-2730 2 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-thirteenth-hole-2730 3 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-seventh-hole-2730 4 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-eighth-hole-2730 5 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-ninth-hole-2730 6 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-thirteenth-hole-2730 7 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-fifteenth-hole-2730 8 / 8 mauna-lani-resort-south-course-third-hole-2730 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 34. Mauna Lani Resort Kamuela, HI 4.1 13 Panelists

Situated on the Big Island’s northwest coast, Mauna Lani’s South course is one of two layouts at the resort. Host of the Champions Skins Game—a former exhibition with top over-50 circuit players—in the 1990s, the South course plays among lava outcroppings with views of the Pacific. The course features two scenic par 3s, including the 15th, which plays over the Pacific to a green set hard against the ocean. View Course 1 / 5 wailea-golf-club-gold-tenth-hole-2757

Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 33. Grand Wailea, a Waldorf Astoria Resort Kihei, HI 4.1 17 Panelists

Our highest-ranked course of the three at the Wailea Golf Club, the Gold course is a Robert Trent Jones Jr. design on Maui’s southwest coast. The layout has plenty of elevation changes and ocean views, especially on the front nine, which several of our course-ranking panelists have noted is the better of the two sides. The most demanding course of the three at Wailea from tee to green, the Gold has well-placed fairway bunkers and a few forced carries over deep ravines. Though with five sets of tees, there’s a playable option for every handicap. In the early 2000s, the course hosted the Champions Skins Game, an exhibition with some of the best players from the over-50 circuit. View Course 1 / 2 omni-bedford-springs-old-course-first-18525

Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

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Courtesy of Omni Hotels & Resorts

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 32. Omni Bedford Springs Resort Bedford, PA 4.1 10 Panelists

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten: Golf architects Ron Forse and Jim Nagle, the principals of Forse Golf Design, specialize in remodeling and restoration—Nagle from a base in western Pennsylvania, Forse from his relocated home in south Florida. They’re the perfect odd-couple team. The red-haired freckle-faced Forse, now in his mid-60s, has always looked like director Ron Howard (his childhood nickname was Opie) and is a bundle of nervous energy. Nagle, in his early 50s, looks like a suave leading man from one of Howard’s movies, and is so cool in every situation, I’d never want to play poker against him. Forse graduated from West Virginia in 1979 and after practicing landscape design for a decade, established his course design business in 1989. His first design associate was Bruce Hepner. Nagle, likewise a WVU grad (14 years after Forse), became Hepner’s replacement in 1998. Forse has always been a student of classic architecture. He studies green contours the way a bettor studies a racing form, and can describe in remarkable detail the size and shape of a Ross or Tillinghast or Flynn putting surface that he hasn’t seen in half a dozen years. Nagle is the technician, making sure a green patterned from Forse’s memory will work under today’s technology. One of my personal favorites from their portfolio is The Old Course at Bedford Springs at The Omni Bedford Springs Resort in Bedford, Pa., where they rescued the resort’s 18 holes from an unharnessed floodplain and years of neglect. (The restored Omni Bedford Springs Hotel is worth a sidebar. Built in 1806, it was in 1855 site of the only U.S. Supreme Court session held outside Washington, D.C. The hotel also served as President Buchanan’s summer White House before the Civil War. It’s every bit as impressive as the hotel at The Greenbrier in West Virginia.) The Bedford Springs resort boasts that their course was the work of three “architectural masters”: Spencer Oldham, A.W. Tillinghast and Donald Ross. Oldham was no architectural master. He was simply a Baltimore club pro who staked out the first nine in 1898. Tillinghast and Ross were definitely involved at different times, and remnants of both were still evident when I walked the site back in 1997 after the course had been closed and was overgrown. But it looked to have been a mediocre layout, despite that pedigree. It took Forse and Nagle, a decade later, to turn it into a timeless golf design. In 2006 and 2007, they revitalized it by rebuilding every hole, retaining only a couple of good holes in the process. They kept the 225-yard uphill fourth, which was one of Ross’ most treacherous par 3s ever. It’s dubbed “Volcano” because of the location of its green atop a domed hill. (Ross built the hole in 1923 and Walter Hagen soon thereafter declared it one of the best in America.) They also recaptured the spirit of Tillinghast’s 1916 pitch-shot par 3, “Tiny Tim,” played over marsh and pond to a tricky green ringed by knobs and bunkers. But mostly they created new holes in existing corridors that look, feel and play like classic oldies. Every hole at Bedford Springs is now a delight, even the final two that Forse and Nagle fashioned from the previous driving range. (A new range is behind the 15th green.) The par-3 17th, called “Ronnie,” is Forse’s nod to a Redan, without the runaway green, while the short, S-shaped par-4 “Home” 18th throws a mix of Tillie and Ross at us, with challenge bunkers, cross bunkers and an elevated, canted green. I especially admire all their greens complexes, some with dramatic slopes, others with subtle rolls, every one of them sized to the appropriate shot and molded to the topography. Their work is so good, I put Bedford Springs a notch ahead of the glorious Old White TPC at The Greenbrier as a must-play resort course. Does that mean I consider Forse and Nagle better architects than C.B. Macdonald, who laid out Old White? No, but they’re great at what they do, and part of what they do is borrow from Macdonald’s playbook. For instance, on the par-5 13th at Bedford, they decided the second landing area needed a bunker, so they built one patterned after the Hell Bunker at St. Andrews. Not as deep, not as frightful, and off to the left side, but still recognizable to golf design fans as Hell Bunker. C.B., who spent his career replicating famous golf holes, would have been flattered.

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Brian Oar

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Photo by Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 31. Gamble Sands Brewster, WA 4.5 26 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The winner of Golf Digest’s Best New Course of 2014 award, Gamble Sands sits atop a sprawling, treeless plateau of sandy desert overlooking Washington’s Columbia River Valley. The extremely playable layout is oversized in every respect, with enormously wide and slick fescue fairways, gigantic greens, no rough and some of the most panoramic vistas in the Northwest. In using “friendly contours” that divert shots away from bunkers and toward targets, designer David Kidd wants everybody to have fun. He hopes good players will relish opportunities to score low and high handicappers will post their best rounds ever. With three reachable par 4s on the 18, that’s a possibility. Of course, Gamble Sands was Kidd’s precursor to ideas fleshed out at Mammoth Dunes, currently ranked 165th. The difference is that Gamble Sands is more invigorating off the tee, presenting different lines and degrees of risk, while Mammoth Dunes is more diverse from 100 yards and in. View Course 1 / 2 red-sky-ranch-and-golf-club-fazio-seventeenth-hole-19610

Allen Kennedy

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Brendan Caffrey

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 30. The Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch Avon, CO 4 8 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Located on Beaver Creek mountain above the town of Avon is the Ritz-Carlton Bachelor Gulch. One of the most luxurious accommodations in the region, the resort’s convenient location on the mountain offers unparalleled vistas and outdoor recreation access. The list of world-class amenities include a 21,000-square-foot spa with private pools, as well as contemporary culinary choices that include special series from guest chefs as well as the Michelin-recommended WYLD restaurant. The Ritz-Carlton and its guests have access to the members-only Red Sky Ranch Golf Club, home to the Fazio and Norman courses. The courses at Red Sky Golf Club truly encapsulate western Colorado’s golf identity as fairways tumble through native sagebrush, wildflower meadows and groves of Aspen trees as they eventually reveal breathtaking views of the surrounding areas. The Norman course is the harder of the two, featuring stark elevation changes and playing 7,600 yards from the back tees. The Fazio course is set over more subtle terrain and is renowned for its use and incorporation of native ecology and plants, as well as its large and challenging green complexes. 

Explore our full review 1 / 2 Cordevalle-Resort-Aerial-Staff.jpg

Joey Terrill

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Courtesy of Rosewood Cordevalle

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 29. CordeValle San Martin, CA 4.2 19 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Located in the little-known but abundant golfing area south of San Jose, the gorgeous CordeValle was a private club when it first opened, but is a high-end resort destination these days, with climbing and descending soft hills dotted by gnarled oaks. It hosted both the U.S. Senior Women’s Amateur and PGA Tour’s Frys.com Open in 2013 and the U.S. Women’s Open in 2016, won by Brittany Lang in a playoff against Anna Nordqvist. View Course 1 / 5 sea-pines-resort-atlantic-dunes-fifteenth-hole-10326 2 / 5 the-sea-pines-resort-atlantic-dunes-ninth-hole-10326

The Sea Pines Resort/Rob Tipton

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The Sea Pines Resort/Rob Tipton

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The Sea Pines Resort/Rob Tipton

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Laurence Lambrecht

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 28. The Sea Pines Resort Hilton Head Island, SC 4 21 Panelists

Overhauled by David Love III, Atlantic Dunes is the reconstruction of The Sea Pines Resort’s Ocean Course, Hilton Head’s first golf course. This lowcountry track features water on almost every hole, beautiful Spanish moss-draped oaks and lurking gators, if you look close enough. The seaside feel of the course is accentuated by the native grasses and coquina shells scattered throughout. View Course 1 / 11 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/black-desert-utah-sixth-bunker.jpg

Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

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Courtesy of Black Desert Resort

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 27. Black Desert Resort Ivins, UT 4.5 21 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Black Desert Resort in the arid desert of southern Utah, surrounded by horizons of red rock mountains, was the last golf course Tom Weiskopf was involved in building (he was diagnosed with cancer as construction was beginning). Opened in 2023, the public course is a stunning juxtaposition of wavy fairways chiseled out of fields of black lava rock that had to be blasted into golf formations. Phil Smith, Weiskopf’s longtime design partner, completed the visually arresting design that hosted the PGA Tour’s new Black Desert Championship in the fall of 2024—the first tour event in Utah in more than 60 years—and an LPGA event in 2025. Black Desert Resort is located outside the golf-rich area of St. George, Utah. View Course 1 / 1 Pelican-Hill-Golf-Club-Ocean-North.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 26. The Resort at Pelican Hill Newport Coast, CA 4.1 19 Panelists

The Resort at Pelican Hill sits atop over 500 acres of elevated terrain with a stately, Italian-inspired clubhouse looking out over the Pacific Ocean. Both golf courses, Ocean South and Ocean North, are designed by Tom Fazio share the same waterfront property and are each ranked near the top of any list of the best courses in California. The accommodations are plush, starting with 830-square-foot bungalows with two-to-four bedroom villas also available, all sharing in the Tuscan-style motif.

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Mauna Kea Resort

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of Mauna Kea Beach Hotel

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 25. Mauna Kea Kamuela, HI 4.4 26 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The immediate thrill at Mauna Kea is its iconic par-3 third, a daunting tee shot over an ocean cove that’s a great substitute for those unable to gain an invitation to tackle the 16th at Cypress Point. The remaining holes at Mauna Kea are thrilling, too, with constant views of the ocean, awkward lies on sloping fairways and roughs of crunchy lava rock. A decade ago, Rees Jones updated his father’s original work by relocating and redesigning all the bunkers. They now add to Mauna Kea’s beauty. View Course

Brian Oar

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Brian Oar

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Barbara Kraft

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 24. Wynn Golf Club Las Vegas, NV 4.4 12 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Nestled in the heart of the Vegas strip, Wynn Golf Club has become a go-to venue for Capital One’s “The Match,” hosting the match between Brooks Koepka and Bryson DeChambeau in 2021, the four quarterbacks in 2022, and in 2023, the teammates battle between Steph Curry/Klay Thompson vs. Patrick Mahomes/Travis Kelce. The Tom Fazio design features dramatic elevation changes, created by moving over 400,000 cubic yards of earth. Fazio and his son, Logan, renovated the course in 2019 to make room for a casino and hotel expansion onto the property, creating eight new holes and refurbishing the other 10. The par-70 layout features six par 3s, including the picturesque 18th, with a green perched at the base of a roaring waterfall. View Course 1 / 1 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/the breakers golf course florida.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 23. The Breakers Palm Beach West Palm Beach, FL 3.9 7 Panelists The Breakers is one of the most recognizable brands in hospitality. Founded by one of the leading industrialists of the 1800s, Henry Flagler, The Breakers has been a go-to destination for those seeking sun and luxury since then. There are two golf courses associated with The Breakers: The Ocean Course, which was designed by Alexander Findlay in 1897 and renovated in 2018 by Rees Jones. It’s a shorter course, tipping out at 5,778 yards, that sits right along by the beach. Jones also returned to The Breakers in 2022 to renovate a course under his name, The Rees Jones Breakers Course, which sits about 10 miles from the resort on land with subtle elevation changes and some gentle contouring in the putting complexes. This is the resort’s championship layout, measuring 7,104 yards from the tips with six different tee box options. View Course 1 / 7 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Beautiful_Old_White_Pic.jpeg

Courtesy of The Greenbrier

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

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Courtesy of DANIEL JAMES MURPHY

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 22. The Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs, WV 4.5 12 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

C.B. Macdonald’s early American design of the Old White at The Greenbrier was always respected, especially after Lester George’s 2007 restoration re-established such things as a Principal’s Nose bunker and Dragon’s Teeth mounds. Golf Digest panelists rediscovered its pleasures and ranked it the Best New Public Remodel of 2007. Soon, owner Jim Justice began sponsoring an annual PGA Tour event. Then came devastating floods in July 2016, which claimed lives and destroyed several Old White holes. Another architect, Keith Foster, supervised a total rebuild of the famed course in less than 12 months, in time for the following year’s PGA Tour event. As a result, The Old White was named Golf Digest’s Best New Remodel again in 2017. View Course 1 / 4 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/25-oldedwardsclub-685ea9e46b178.jpg

Courtesy of the club/Tim Burleson, Frontier Group

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Courtesy of the club/Michael Clemmer

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Courtesy of the club/Tim Burleson, Frontier Group

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Courtesy of the club/Molly Harris Photography

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 21. Old Edwards Inn and Spa Highlands, NC 4.3 1 Panelists Situated in the corner of North Carolina, along the southwest plateau of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the Nantahala National Forest sits the Old Edwards Inn and Spa. The luxury boutique resort offers five accommodation options including the historic inn, poolside hickory rooms, mountainside lodge, waterfront cottages as well as full house rentals in town. Across the many sites, the resort offers 11 dining options, as well as a European-style spa focused on relaxation and fostering connections with nature. Nearby to the hotel is the resort’s Tom Jackson-designed Old Edwards Club open to members and resort guests only. Opened in 2000, the course is laid out in two distinct nines with a valley-style front and mountain-style back. The front nine has subtle elevation changes and open fairways, while the second nine features dramatic mountainside fairways that weave through rock outcroppings and dense trees. The mountainside characteristics of the back nine can be truly felt during the 250-foot ascent from the ninth green to 10th tee, as well as on the tricky putting surfaces with challenging breaks. In 2018 the resort commissioned Beau Welling to design an additional 12-hole par-3 course called The Saddle, featuring playful green complexes and utilizing visual intimidation to give the illusion of tucked pins and large breaks, making the course entertaining for players at every skill level. View Course 1 / 10 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Cabot Citrus Farms _ Jeff Marsh.jpg

Jeff Marsh

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Matt Majka/Courtesy of Cabot Citrus Farms

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Matt Majka

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Jeff Marsh

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Matt Majka

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Jeff Marsh

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Jeff Marsh

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Jeff Marsh

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 20. Cabot Citrus Farms Brooksville, FL 4.3 29 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

When arriving at Cabot Citrus Farms you’ll understand why Ben Cowan-Dewar sought this property for decades. A prehistoric ridge in Brookville, Fla., created rolling topography on sandy soil—a golf developer’s dream. In the early 1990s, World Woods opened with two acclaimed public courses and what was once the world’s largest driving range that hosted Tiger Woods commercial shoots. But playing conditions had deteriorated at World Woods. Its Pine Barrens course, once the 75th-best course in Golf Digest’s ranking of America’s 100 Greatest Courses, quickly fell off that list in 2013. Cowan-Dewar inquired about the property with the previous owner, Japanese businessman Yukihisa Inoue, in 2014 and 2016, to no avail. Others also tried to buy it. Finally, as COVID-19 restricted travel, Cowan-Dewar chatted with Inoue through translators over Zoom and negotiated to purchase the property in 2021—giving his burgeoning Cabot resort and real estate empire its first U.S. offering.That decades-long courtship has now paid off with Cabot Citrus Farms’ Karoo course, which opened this winter. Kyle Franz—known for his meticulous remodeling of North Carolina Sandhills courses such as Mid Pines, Pine Needles and Southern Pines—transformed the existing Pine Barrens course with Karoo, the first course to open. He reversed playing corridors in some cases, completely changing what was in the ground in many cases. You see that immediately on the first hole—a massive double green for the first and sixth holes. Franz dubs this design style as “adventure golf.” Eleven holes boast double fairways—and the 18th has a triple fairway. “George Thomas was doing massive double fairways 100 years ago,” Franz explains. “So this was a really fun way to make people think a little differently while still staying rooted in good, classical architecture.”The modern trend of pushing width and options is amplified with “super width” here, with some fairways over 100 yards wide, though strategy is still present—as large, exposed sand hazards often split the playing areas. Choosing the ideal side of the fairway will often open up an easier approach. —Stephen HennesseyFor a complete review of the newly opened Karoo course, click here. View Course 1 / 10 E101--0971-08  RAW  12x18  aRGB-16  5DM2.CR2

Paul Hundley

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Dom Furore

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Dom Furore

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Dom Furore

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Dom Furore

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Dom Furore

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 19. Erin Hills Hartford, WI 4.6 44 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Despite the rumor, Erin Hills wasn’t designed specifically to host a U.S. Open. Its original concept was to be a simple, affordable, lay-of-the-land layout to prove Mother Nature is indeed the best golf architect. The concept changed—some greens moved, one blind par 3 eliminated—as the quest for a U.S. Open grew. That dream came true: after trial runs hosting the 2008 U.S. Women’s Public Links and the 2011 U.S. Amateur, Erin Hills hosted the U.S. Open in 2017, the first time the event had ever been in Wisconsin. Brooks Koepka won with a 72-hole score of 16-under, leading some to conclude Erin Hills was too wide and defenseless. In truth, what it lacked that week was the usual gusty winds that would have effectively narrowed the slanted, canted fairways. Had the par been adjusted to 70 instead of 72 as is usual for most Opens, the score would likely have been closer to 8-under. View Course 1 / 8 189 - Pronghorn_Nicklaus12_DJI_0187 - Evan Schiller.jpg

Courtesy of Evan Schiller

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Courtesy of Evan Schiller

3 / 8 189 - Pronghorn Nicklaus15_DJI_0356 - Evan Schiller.jpg

Courtesy of Evan Schiller

4 / 8 14th hole, Nicklaus Course at Pronghorn

Courtesy of Evan Schiller

5 / 8 189 - Pronghorn Nicklaus - 15th hole - Courtesy of the club.jpg

Courtesy of the club

6 / 8 189 - Pronghorn_Nicklaus8_DJI_0489 - Evan Schiller.jpg

Courtesy of Evan Schiller

7 / 8 Pronghorn-Club-Nicklaus-18.jpg 8 / 8 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/Pronghorn Nicklaus13_DJI_0138 Evan Schiller.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 18. Pronghorn Resort Bend, OR 4.2 17 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

When it first opened in 2004, Pronghorn was strictly private, and its Nicklaus Course was ranked No. 2 by Golf Digest among America’s Best New Private Courses (a second members-only 18 from Tom Fazio opened three years later). A few years back, the club began allowing public play on its Nicklaus design, now ranked No. 42 on America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses. It’s a beauty. The second nine, carved from a flow of volcanic rock, might be the most delightful Jack has ever designed, with gambling holes and gorgeous scenery at every turn. The shaping is gentle and subdued to create holes that sit low on the land and slide through washes of exposed sand, native grasses and low pines and evergreens. View Course 1 / 1 may-river-palmetto-bluff

Courtesy of the club

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 17. May River at Palmetto Bluff Bluffton, SC 4.2 19 Panelists

Built some 35 years after nearby Harbour Town Golf Links, May River is an interesting contrast in Jack Nicklaus’s portfolio (Nicklaus was co-designer of Harbour Town with Pete Dye). It’s an equally low-profile layout with a number of bump-and-run approach shots, but with several Pine Valley-like waste areas and with larger, bolder greens. The classic routing has the front nine turning clockwise through the forest while the back nine circles counter-clockwise, and each touch repeatedly on the wetlands of the namesake May River. Gorgeous and mysterious at every turn, the course is at its best when it gets players thinking, like at the short par-4 seventh where they must decide to either lay up to an island of fairway or take a swipe at a shallow green situated on another small isthmus of land along the marsh, and the par-5 10th where a wetland crossing the fairway and several small centrally arranged pot bunkers put indecision into the second and third shots toward a green backed up against the river. View Course 1 / 12 primland-highland-drone-23854

Courtesy of the club

2 / 12 The No.18 at Primland

Courtesy of Michael Clemmer

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Courtesy of the course

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the course

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

10 / 12 primland-highland-rolling-fairways-23854

Courtesy of the club

11 / 12 The No.8  at Primland

Courtesy of Michael Clemmer

12 / 12 Primland. A sport resort, situated on a mountain top in the Blue Ridge Highlands of Virginia.

Courtesy of the club

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 16. Primland Meadows of Dan, VA 4.4 16 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Highland Course at Primland sits atop a mountain plateau overlooking some of the most unusual scenery in America, a deep river valley dotted with tall spirals of rock called the Pinnacles of the Dan River. The course design by veteran British architect Donald Steel is austere in its green contours and bunkering, as if not to overpower the setting. Aided by his then-associates Tom Mackenzie and Martin Ebert (who have since formed their own very successful partnership, Mackenzie & Ebert), Steel routed holes along ridges, over chasms, down valleys and into sideslopes, always offering a safe alternative to every perilous carry. There’s a stretch of three straight holes—13 through 15—with no sand, because dense trees and deep gulleys are hazards enough. Primland is Smoky Mountain majesty. View Course 1 / 3 nemacolin-mystic-rock-9808

Courtesy of the club

2 / 3 nemacolin-mystic-rock-9808

Courtesy of the club

3 / 3 Nemacolin-Woodlands-Resort-Mystic-Rock.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 15. Nemacolin Resort Farmington, PA 4.2 8 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Mystic Rock is one of the more curious courses Pete Dye ever designed, with mostly oval greens and rectangular bunkers. Because many holes were blasted from rock, some holes have fields of boulders in the rough and all water hazards are bulkheaded with stacked stone. The course concludes with Dye’s favorite finish, a gambling par-5 16th, a 17th over water (in this case, 205 yards) and a now-strong par-4 18th. Mystic Rock’s 18th was rebuilt and lengthened before the course hosted a PGA Tour event, the 84 Lumber Classic, from 2003 to 2006. View Course 1 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/Ozarks National 6TREE EDIT.jpg

Evan Schiller

2 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/Ozarks National 5_B0009072.jpg

Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

4 / 9 8th Hole, Ozarks National

Evan Schiller

5 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/Ozark National Screenshot hero.jpg 6 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/Ozarks National10_DJI_0246a .jpg

Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

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Evan Schiller

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 14. Big Cedar Lodge Hollister, MO 4.4 22 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Ozarks of southern Missouri are not tall, but their ridge-and-valley topography provides a sense of heightened elevation. Ozarks National at Big Cedar Lodge takes advantage of the illusion with holes that run out along ridgetops and onto elongated fingers of land that fall off into wooded ravines. Formerly the site of a different, much narrower golf course, Coore & Crenshaw found ways to widen out many of the same spaces and added new holes on previously unused parts of the property. Though not as broad as is customary for the designers, the cant of the holes and the engaging fairway bunkering put a premium on shaping shots and hitting the correct line off the tee. View Course 1 / 9 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/streamsong-resort-blue-course-eighth-matt-hahn.jpg

Matt Hahn

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LC Lambrecht

3 / 9 Streansong Resort

LC Lambrecht

4 / 9 Streamsong Red No. 17 by Larry Lambrecht

LC Lambrecht

5 / 9 Streamsong Red No. 16 by Larry Lambrecht

LC Lambrecht

6 / 9 Streansong Resort

LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

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LC Lambrecht

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 13. Streamsong Resort Bowling Green, FL 4.5 44 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Coore and Crenshaw’s Red Course is part of a resort triple-header that gives golfers a rare opportunity to compare and contrast the differences in styles and philosophies of arguably the three of the top design firms in America, including Streamsong Blue, a Tom Doak design, and Streamsong Black, from Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner. [In 2025, Streamsong announced a fourth 18-hole course by David McLay Kidd, the missing designer in modern architecture’s Big Four.] The Red, like the Blue, was built from sand spoils created by a massive phosphate strip mine, with some piles forming dunes reaching 75 feet into the air. But there was only room for 31 holes, so Coore and Crenshaw had to take a section of less desirable, stripped-down land and create five holes that looked like the rest of the site, Red’s holes one through five. The course has a wonderful mix of bump-and-run links holes and target-like water holes. Some greens are perched like those at Pinehurst, others are massive with multi-levels like those at St. Andrews. The turf is firm and bouncy, and while the routing is sprawling, it’s easily walkable. The Red has consistently come out on top in this survey, but the Blue and Black are within just about a point. View Course 1 / 5 wailea-golf-club-gold-tenth-hole-2757

Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

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Matthew Thayer

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 12. Grand Wailea, Waldorf Astoria Kihei, HI 4.1 17 Panelists

Our highest-ranked course of the three at the Wailea Golf Club, the Gold course is a Robert Trent Jones Jr. design on Maui’s southwest coast. The layout has plenty of elevation changes and ocean views, especially on the front nine, which several of our course-ranking panelists have noted is the better of the two sides. The most demanding course of the three at Wailea from tee to green, the Gold has well-placed fairway bunkers and a few forced carries over deep ravines. Though with five sets of tees, there’s a playable option for every handicap. In the early 2000s, the course hosted the Champions Skins Game, an exhibition with some of the best players from the over-50 circuit. View Course 1 / 10 broadmoor-golf-club-east-fourth-hole-1251

Dick Durrance II

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Dick Durrance

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Dick Durrance

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Dick Durrance II

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Dick Durrance

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Dick Durrance II

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Dick Durrance

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Dick Durrance II

10 / 10 broadmoor-golf-club-east-1251 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 11. The Broadmoor Colorado Springs, CO 4.2 16 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Broadmoor Golf Club East is another timeless mountain course, built hard against Cheyenne Mountain with famed green contours that pose optical illusions. Many putts that look uphill are actually running downhill. Few golfers recognize that the East Course is a combination of nine Donald Ross holes (one through six and 16 through 18) and nine more added 30 years later by Robert Trent Jones (holes seven to 15), though a road crossing helps delineate these lower and upper holes. The East Course was the site of Jack Nicklaus’ first U.S. Amateur win in 1959 and Annika Sorenstam’s first U.S. Women’s Open win in 1995. It has also hosted the 2011 U.S. Women’s Open won by So Yeon Ryu and the 2018 U.S. Senior Open won by David Toms, their first major victories as well (at least the first on the senior circuit for Toms). View Course 1 / 6 130 - Kapalua_Plantation09B_11-15 - Dave Sansom Photography.jpg

Courtesy of Dave Sansom

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Courtesy of Dave Sansom

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Courtesy of Dave Sansom

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Courtesy of Dave Sansom

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Dave Sansom

6 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Kapalua-Plantation-Course-27850.jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 10. The Ritz-Carlton Maui, Kapalua Lahaina, HI 4.5 32 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten:  

Most golf fans are familiar with Kapalua Golf Club’s Plantation Course, home of the PGA Tour’s opening event each year. Located on the north shore of the Hawaiian island of Maui, the Plantation was built from open, windswept pineapple fields on the pronounced slope of a volcano and is irrigated by sprinklers pressured solely by gravity. As the first design collaboration by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, it unveiled their joint admiration for old-style courses. The blind drive on the fourth, the cut-the-corner drives on the fifth and sixth are all based on tee shots found at National Golf Links. So, too, are its punchbowl green and strings of diagonal bunkers. It’s also a massive course, built on a huge scale, Coore says, to accommodate the wind and the slope and the fact that it gets mostly resort play. So it’s a big course. But what sets it apart in my mind are the little things. When I played the course years ago with Coore, it took only one hole for me to appreciate one of its subtleties. We were on the tee of the par-3 second, an OK hole but nothing riveting, nothing like the canyon-carry par-3 eighth or the ocean-backdropped par-3 11th. The second sits on a rare flat portion of the property. The green sits at a diagonal, angling left to right, and there’s a string of bunkers staggering up the right side of the green. The first bunker appears to be directly in front of the green but is actually 40 yards short of it. When pointed out to me, I called it Gingerbread. Bill disagreed.

Explore our complete review here—including bonus photography and ratings from our expert panelists.

View Course 1 / 7 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2022/1/GD0322_TRAVEL_THISVSTHAT_06.jpg

Carlos Amoedo

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Carlos Amoedo

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Behind the third green at the Ocean Course.

Uzzell Lambert

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Photo by Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 9. Kiawah Island Golf Resort Kiawah Island, SC 4.8 48 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Ocean Course was designed on short notice for a specific event, the 1991 Ryder Cup, when the PGA of America decided to move the event from California to the more attractive Eastern time zone television time slot. This manufactured linksland-meets-lagoons layout might well be Pete Dye’s most diabolical creation. Every hole is edged by sawgrass, every green has tricky slopes and every bunker merges into bordering sand dunes. Strung along nearly three miles of ocean coast, Dye took his wife Alice’s advice and perched fairways and greens so golfers can actually view the Atlantic surf over a ridge of beach dunes. That also exposes shots and putts to ever-present and sometimes fierce coastal winds. The Ocean Course will forever be linked with Phil Mickelson and his improbable victory at the 2021 PGA Championship, as well as Rory McIlroy’s romp in 2012. View Course 1 / 8 2017-30-Pinehurst-Resort-No-2-course-hole-17.jpg

Stephen Szurlej

2 / 8 family-destinations-pinehurst-2-hole-17.jpg 3 / 8 Pinehurst #2

Dom Furore

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Stephen Szurlej

5 / 8 Pinehurst #2

Dom Furore

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The 13th hole at Pinehurst No. 2.

Courtesy of the resort

7 / 8 Pinehurst #2

Dom Furore

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Dom Furore

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 8. Pinehurst Resort Pinehurst, NC 4.7 51 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

In 2010, a team led by Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw killed and ripped out all the Bermudagrass rough on Pinehurst #2 that had been foolishly planted in the 1970s. Between fairways and tree lines, they established vast bands of native hardpan sand dotted with clumps of wiregrass and scattered pine needles. They reduced the irrigation to mere single rows in fairways to prevent grass from ever returning to the new sandy wastelands. Playing firm and fast, it was wildly successful as the site of the 2014 Men’s and Women’s U.S. Opens, played on consecutive weeks, and produced an even more exciting Open in 2024 when Bryson DeChambeau beat Rory McIlroy on the final hole. It’s the rare course that a wide variety of resort players can enjoy and play quickly one day, and be a test for tour pros the next by essentially just quickening the greens. A new favorite of the USGA with a headquarters in town, Pinehurst #2 will host Opens again in 2029, 2035, 2041 and 2047. View Course 1 / 6 whistling-straits-straits-aerial-18225

Carlos Amoedo

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Stephen Szurlej

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Carlos Amoedo

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

6 / 6 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/4/whistling-straits-straits-course-hole-8 hero.jpg

Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 7. The American Club Sheboygan, WI 4.7 55 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Pete Dye transformed a dead flat abandoned army air base along a two-mile stretch of Lake Michigan into an imitation Ballybunion at Whistling Straits, peppering his rugged fairways and windswept greens with 1,012 (at last count) bunkers. There are no rakes at Whistling Straits, in keeping with the notion that this is a transplanted Irish links. It has too much rub of the green for the comfort levels of many tour pros, which is what makes it a stern test for top events, such as three PGA Championships, the 2007 U.S. Senior Open and the 2021 Ryder Cup. View Course 1 / 13 Sea-Island-Golf-Club-Seaside-5-6-7-Staff.jpg

Stephen Szurlej

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Photo by Stephen Szurlej

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Courtesy of the club

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Courtesy of the club

5 / 13 172 - Sea Island - Seaside_Course_13 - Courtesy of the club.jpg

Courtesy of the club

6 / 13 12th & 13th holes of Seaside Course at Sea Island Club

courtesy of Sea Island

7 / 13 14th hole, The Seaside Course at Sea Island Club

courtesy of Sea Island

8 / 13 13th Hole, Sea Island Seaside Course

courtesy of Sea Island

9 / 13 8th Hole, The Seaside Course at The Sea Island Club

courtesy of Sea Island

10 / 13 18th Hole, Sea Island Seaside Course

courtesy of Sea Island

11 / 13 16th Hole, Sea Island Seaside Course

courtesy of Sea Island

12 / 13 11th Hole, The Seaside Course at The Sea Island Club

courtesy of Sea Island

13 / 13 11th Hole, The Seaside Course at The Sea Island Club

courtesy of Sea Island

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 6. Sea Island Resort Saint Simons Island, GA 4.2 27 Panelists

100 Greatest Public
Best In State

The Sea Island resort continues to credit famed British golf architect H.S. Colt for its Seaside design, but in truth, it was never purely Colt’s design. It was the work of Colt’s partner, Charles Alison, who traveled to the U.S. and beyond in the 1920s and 30s while Colt remained in England. But the Seaside Course isn’t even Alison’s anymore—it is purely Tom Fazio, who incorporated Alison’s original Seaside nine (today’s 10-18) along with a nine (the Marshland Nine) designed in 1974 by Joe Lee, to create a totally new 18-hole course. But in keeping with the resort’s heritage, Fazio styled his new course in the design fashion of Alison, with big clamshell bunkers, smallish putting surfaces and exposed sand dunes off most of the windswept fairways. The Seaside Course has hosted numerous USGA championships and has been a mainstay on the PGA Tour schedule. View Course 1 / 3 hualalai-golf-club-seventeenth-hole-26573 2 / 3 hualalai-golf-club-sixteenth-hole-26573 3 / 3 hualalai-golf-club-seventeenth-hole-26573 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Private 5. Four Seasons Resort Hualalai Kailua Kona, HI 4.1 11 Panelists

Open to club members and guests of the Four Seasons Resort Hualalai, the Hualalai course is one of two layouts at the resort, along with the private Ke’olu course. A past member of our 100 Greatest Public ranking, the Hualalai course was designed by Jack Nicklaus and annually hosts the first event of the season on the PGA Tour Champions. The par-72 plays along the shore and over rugged, charcoal-black lava landscape, which, along with the ocean vistas, enhances the course’s aesthetics. View Course 1 / 7 110 - Sand Valley - 18th hole.jpg

Courtesy of Jeffrey R. Bertch

2 / 7 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2021/5/sand-valley-hero.jpg 3 / 7 110 - Sand Valley  aerial - 129.jpg

Courtesy of Jeffrey R. Bertch

4 / 7 110 - Sand Valley - 17th punchbowl green - Evan Schiller.jpg

Courtesy of Jeffrey R. Bertch

5 / 7 110 - Sand Valley - 12th hole.jpg

Courtesy of Jeffrey R. Bertch

6 / 7 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/2019/01/06/5c324a27bb5e322cd04818cc_110 - Sand Valley _10 - Ryan Farrow 2017.jpg 7 / 7 Best New Course 1. Sand Valley 5th - Ryan Farrow 11-15-2017 (GD).jpg Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 4. Sand Valley Nekoosa, WI 4.5 50 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Sand Valley is the fifth course that the firm of Coore and Crenshaw has designed for resort maven Mike Keiser, and the first not located close to an ocean. No matter. It’s still on a thousand acres of rolling sand hills in Central Wisconsin, and Coore and Crenshaw were given carte blanche to route their course. (Rumor has it Coore routed a hole outside the property line, and Keiser reluctantly bought that additional parcel.) Given the name, many conclude Sand Valley is a combination of Nebraska’s Sand Hills Golf Club and New Jersey’s Pine Valley. But Sand Valley has its own personality, with some dual fairways, gigantic sand spits, enormous greens and even a hidden putting surface. Sand Valley was Golf Digest’s Best New Course of 2017. View Course 1 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 2 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 3 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 4 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 5 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 6 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 7 / 7 manele-golf-course-16619 Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 3. Four Seasons Resort Lanai Lanai, HI 4.6 21 Panelists

Second 100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Manele, previously called The Challenge at Manele, unseated Kapalua’s Plantation course as the highest-ranked public course in Hawaii several years ago. Now the course, located on the southern coast of Lanai, has the votes to make it eligible for the 100 Greatest and Second 100 Greatest rankings as well, buoyed by an Aesthetics score that regularly ranks among the top 30 in the U.S. The Nicklaus design is worthy of high praise. It has three ocean-cove holes, including the par-3 12th and dogleg-right par-4 17th. You might argue Manele has been perpetually underranked, starting with its finish on Golf Digest’s ranking of Best New Resort Courses in 1994, well behind World Woods’ Pine Barrens course (now known as the Karoo at Cabot Citrus Farms), which is currently 50th on our 100 Greatest Public. It’s hard to argue it’s underranked now. View Course 1 / 10 pebble-beach-golf-links.jpg

Stephen Szurlej

2 / 10 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Pebble-Beach-Golf-Links-TaylorMade-20978.png

Sherman Chu

3 / 10 Pebble-Beach-8th.png 4 / 10 https://www.golfdigest.com/content/dam/images/golfdigest/fullset/course-photos-for-places-to-play/Pebble Beach4_DJI_0076 _EvanSchiller.jpg

Evan Schiller

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Getty Images

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Photo by Joann Dost

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Keyur Khamar

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Stephen Szurlej

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 2. Pebble Beach Pebble Beach, CA 4.7 46 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Not just the greatest meeting of land and sea in American golf, but the most extensive one, too, with nine holes perched immediately above the crashing Pacific surf—the fourth through 10th plus the 17th and 18th. Pebble’s sixth through eighth are golf’s real Amen Corner, with a few Hail Marys thrown in over an ocean cove on the eighth from atop a 75-foot-high bluff. Pebble hosted a successful U.S. Amateur in 2018 and a sixth U.S. Open in 2019. Recent improvements include the redesign of the once-treacherous 14th green and reshaping the par-3 17th green, both planned by Arnold Palmer’s Design Company a few years back, and modifications to the green at the famous eighth hole, which we deemed the second Greatest Hole in America. Green modifications have continued, and Pebble re-enters our top 10 after a brief time out the last two years. View Course 1 / 9 bandon-dunes-aerialtwo-18481

Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Stephen Szurlej

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Wood Sabold/Courtesy of Bandon Dunes Golf Resort

Previous Next Pause Play Save for later Public 1. Bandon Dunes Bandon, OR 4.6 52 Panelists

100 Greatest
100 Greatest Public
Best In State

Chicago recycled-products mogul Mike Keiser took a gamble when he chose then-tenderfoot architect David McLay Kidd to design a destination daily fee on the remote southwestern coastline of Oregon. But the design Kidd produced, faithful to the links-golf tenets of his native Scotland, proved so popular that today Keiser has a multiple-course resort at Bandon Dunes that rivals Pinehurst and the Monterey Peninsula—or perhaps exceeds them, given that all five Bandon courses are ranked on our 200 Greatest, four in the top 100. None of that would have happened if McLay Kidd hadn’t produced a great first design that drew golfers into its orbit. View Course

This article was originally published on golfdigest.com