There are few finer ways to spend an afternoon than on the rolling fairways of one of your favourite Sydney golf courses. We’ve put together this list of the 15 best golf courses Sydney has to offer.
LessNestled in the Centennial Parklands, minutes from the CBD and offering unobstructed views of the Sydney skyline, Moore Park Golf is one of the most acceessible public golf courses in Sydney. The 18 hole championship course offers a pleasantly complex layout sure to excite golfers of all ability levels. Moore Park Golf also boasts a three-level, sixty bay driving range – one of the largest in the southern hemisphere.
If escaping the bustle of the city is high on your agenda, replace the roar of the freeway with the rumble of the surf at the Mona Vale Golf Club. Considered one of the best golf courses in Sydney for under $50 per round, the first 10 holes blends the challenge of parkland hills and woods before turning into the fickle ocean breeze and levelling off along the coast for the run home.
The only Sydney golf course with harbour views, the Northbridge Golf Club features 18 challenging holes that wind through the huge red gums that litter the heritage-listed park making it one of the best public golf courses in Sydney. The compact collection of par threes at Northbridge means you might be leaving the driver in the bag. Trading distance for accuracy, success at this golf course comes down to careful club selection and a tight short game.
Perched on the cliffs at the mouth of Botany Bay, the Coast Golf Club is affordable and challenging, offering 18 holes of tricky seaside play. Offering one of the best views of any Sydney golf course, be sure to factor in the cooling sea breeze that picks up along the back nine. Precise shooting is essential on some of the more difficult holes; particularly the 15th, where too much power into the teeth of the wind runs the risk of losing a few balls into the Pacific.
With views stretching from the Central Coast in the north to Manly in the south, Long Reef Golf Club enjoys a commanding position on the headland between Collaroy and Dee Why beaches. Long Reef has been praised by multiple British and Australian Open Champion Peter Thompson, who considers the course layout among the finest of all the best golf courses in Sydney. Thanks to its lofty perch on the sandstone hills, excellent drainage means when nearby courses are rained out, Long Reef is good to go.
Sat on the cliffs of the Little Bay peninsular, the stately St. Michael’s Golf Club is one of three golf courses cohabiting this patch of land. A tough but fair challenge is posed by the generous, yet often misleading fairways and the ever-changing influence of the sea breeze. A must-see on any serious golfers list, St Michael’s stands up to the task of living in the shadow of its illustrious neighbour, the New South Wales Golf Club.
Let nothing but the sound of the ocean lapping the cliffs disturb your backswing as you play around the 9-hole Bondi Golf & Diggers Club. A buggy may not be required for this short but hilly course of mostly par threes, but fret not; the view from the cliffs above Bondi Beach is some of the best scenery of any Sydney golf course. Some more challenging terrain exists on the seaward side of the course where the rough constitutes a fifty-meter cliff.
All grandeur and pomp aside, the Royal Sydney offers a demanding, no-nonsense challenge to professionals and amateurs alike. Once boasting an average of one bunker every twenty yards, the regal course has since eased up on the sand traps. However, the sand is still the dominant hazard of this proudly traditional Sydney golf course which forgoes any gimmicks, tricks or water hazards. Many of golf’s royalty has strolled the undulating freeways; the Royal Sydney has also hosted the Australian Open.
Founded in 1882 and residing in its present location since 1903, The Australian Golf Club is considered one of the best golf courses Sydney and Australia has to offer. And for a good reason; the oldest golf course in the country hosted the first and inaugural Australian Open in 1904 and has hosted the event 18 times since.
Regularly listed among the 50 best golf courses on the planet, the New South Wales Golf Club has been praised by golfers from all walks of life for the past 90 years. Making the most of the rugged beauty of the northern headland of Botany Bay, the NSW is one of the toughest tests of golf in the country. Since its inception, a succession of renowned architects – most recently Greg Norman – have refined this course into the masterpiece it is today.
A testing championship-calibre golf course, the Lakes Golf Club boasts several challenges in addition to the multiple the water hazards that give the course its name. Be sure to have an abundance of balls on hand; the Shark himself lost three strokes to the drink on Hole 14 at his own Greg Norman Classic, indication enough that these hazards are not to be negotiated carelessly.
Established in 1897 and moved three times before settling in its current location, Bonnie Doon Golf Club boasts much more than the most imaginative name among the best golf courses in Syndey. The unique layout strives to mimic the work of nature with its irregular undulations and wind-swept bunker lips courtesy of some of golf’s preeminent course designers including Eric Apperly and Geoff Ogilvy.
Another Greg Norman creation and the newest course on this list, Stonecutters Ridge opened in 2012 and has been turning heads ever since. Designed to make the most of the rolling topography alongside the meandering Eastern Creek, this course will test players of all abilities with its imposing water features and an abundance of well-placed bunkers.
This course remains within city limits but offers an escape from the distracting hustle and bustle of Sydney. Bordered by the Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park to the north, the Terrey Hills Golf & Country Club makes the most of its spacious, serene setting offering over 7,000 yards of play, one of the longest golf courses in Sydney. The course features a variety of tees strategically positioned to accommodate the adventurous and the conservative golfer alike.
Tucked in the hills above the Northern Beaches, the Elanora Country Club gets its name from the Aboriginal word meaning ‘home by the water’; and it certainly satisfies this etymological requirement. The Elanora’s strongest attributes are its excellent turf standards, which rank deservedly alongside the best golf courses Sydney has to offer, and unmatched vistas. Its superbly manicured fairways and fast greens overlook Narrabeen Lagoon and adjacent Collaroy Beach.