
Connoisseur: The Bucket List
Legendary courses that everyone should—and actually can—play at least once.
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Everybody has a different idea of the quintessential golfing experience. For some, it’s striping an iron down the chasmic fairway of the 18th at St Andrews. For others, it’s nestled among the pristinely pruned azaleas at Augusta. The essential spice of life for any player, however, is variety. Which is why we’ve pulled together a list of clubs and courses—some iconic, some lesser-known, but all open to visitors—worth flying around the world to experience.
Royal Melbourne, Australia
The jewel in the crown of Melbourne’s Sandbelt region, an area Tiger Woods once described as “heaven”. Regarded among the world’s five top courses, Royal Melbourne is, barring some serious competition from Tasmania’s most dramatic links, the apex of golf in Australia.
Royal County Down, Northern Ireland
For many experts’ money, the greatest course on earth right now. Nowhere else combines such a dramatic setting, in this case where the Mountains of Mourne fall into the Irish Sea, with a setting dripping in tradition. The pinnacle of links golf.

Te Arai Links, New Zealand
The two world-class links courses here, just down the road from the famed and now completely private Tara Iti, are quickly becoming the stuff of legend for visitors to the North Island. As with its sister course just up the coast, surrounding dunes provide spectacular visuals—as well as a seriously tough test of one’s accuracy.
Muirfield, Scotland
While St Andrews will naturally be the first Scottish course on most lists, Muirfield is the more rewarding, and perhaps quintessential, links experience. A short hop from beautiful Edinburgh and infinitely more fun than its storied cousin, every hole is set up to provide a fair test to visitors of all levels while leaving a lasting imprint on the memory.

Bethpage State Park, USA
The notorious warning sign next to the first hole at Bethpage’s Black Course is a fitting precursor to one of the toughest tests in golf, but don’t let it scare you off. In fact, you could easily camp up in Long Island and spend a blissful week touring the park’s six (yes, six) well-regarded tracks, one of which will host next year’s Ryder Cup.
Royal Birkdale, England
Don’t tell the Scots we said so, but this stands up to any links course north of the border. Maybe England’s most celebrated venue, its reputation as a classic links experience is matched only by its incredible coastal views.
Cabot Cape Breton, Canada
Home to some dramatic cliffside vistas, Cabot sits at the eastern tip of Nova Scotia, where its two legendary links courses sit quite literally perched over the roiling waters of the Atlantic. The adjoining resort offers a luxurious base to explore the rest of the island’s gastronomic splendours.
Cape Wickham, Australia
Sitting on the rugged heathland of the Bass Strait’s King Island, expect windswept vistas reminiscent of Scotland’s most romanticised links, with the option to stay in one of 16 luxury villas if one day simply isn’t enough.
Naruo Golf Club, Japan
Rarely seen on TV, Japan’s courses are rich in history and famed both for their pristine presentation. Naruo is one of the nation’s most iconic golfing stages, carving a bonsai-lined trail through a scenic hillside forest just north of Osaka.

Utrechtse de Pan, Netherlands
The European nation isn’t particularly well-known as a golfing hub, which is odd considering it boasts two of the continent’s most highly rated courses. Utrecht de Pan is one of them: almost English in the way it snakes through a stretch of otherwise untouched heathland, and full of intoxicating tree-lined approaches.
Diamante, Mexico
One of the Americas’ great golfing destinations, Diamante feels built from the ground up to provide a breezily luxurious experience to golfers visiting Cabo’s sunlit shores. Both the links-style Dunes course and the Tiger Woods-designed El Cardonal are among Mexico’s finest, while the surrounding resort offers one of the best stays anywhere on the Baja California peninsula.

Leopard Creek Country Club, South Africa
Golfing in Africa can often be a rough-around-the-edges experience, but not at Leopard Creek, where South Africa’s must-visit course meets a luxurious country club. The trump card, however, lies in its adjacent wilderness, with its location at the southern tip of Kruger National Park making every round a veritable safari.
Real Club Valderrama, Spain
One of Europe’s most storied courses often draws comparisons with Augusta in its pristineness, the key difference being it’s actually open to visitors (for a hefty premium, naturally). In our eyes, it’s worth it just to visit the spot where Seve broke American hearts in ’97.

Barnbougle, Australia
Home to not one, not two, but three of Australia’s greatest courses (two of which are widely regarded among the 50 best on the planet), Barnbougle offers two days of blissed-out, picturesque links golf among the Tasmanian wilderness, complemented with a host of luxury lodges and villas. There’s no better golfing escape in the nation right now.

Mid Ocean Club, Bermuda
This idyllic ode to island luxury also hides one of the most renowned courses in this part of the world: a pristinely manicured Charles Blair Macdonald design flanked for 18 holes by the majesty of the Caribbean.
Pinehurst, USA
The definition of a complete golf resort, combining an acclaimed spa and accommodation with 12 courses that between them have hosted more majors than any other location in the States. You could spend a year here and never get bored.
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