Myrtle Beach Golf’s Four Best Entrances
Courses in this Article
Heritage Golf Club
Pawleys Island, SCOpened in 1986 and designed by developer Larry Young and architect Dan Maples, Heritage Club is one of the more inventive designs golfers are likely to find. With gnarly bunkers guarding enormous, boldly-contoured greens, the experience of playing Heritage Club is thrilling and unforgettable
Get DetailsGrande Dunes - Resort Golf Club
Myrtle Beach, SCThe host site of the 2014 PGA Professional National Championship, Grande Dunes Resort Course swept the South Carolina and National Golf Course Owners Association's Course of the Year honors in 2009, and was completed renovated in 2022
Get DetailsCaledonia Golf and Fish Club
Pawleys Island, SCCaledonia Golf and Fish Club located in Pawleys Island opened in 1994 and has received many accolades for its beauty and southern charm. Ranked #27 in Golf Magazine’s 2014 "Top 100 You Can Play"
Get DetailsBarefoot Resort - Norman Course
North Myrtle Beach, SCOpened in 2000, the Norman Course is one of the more playable tracks in the area, based largely on the prevalence of short grass and sand over penal longer rough, especially around its green complexes. Golfers who miss greens are often able to putt or play bump-and-run shots instead of the flop or pitch shots necessitated by greenside lies in the rough.
Get DetailsBarefoot Resort - Love Course
North Myrtle Beach, SCOpened in 2000, the Love Course is an excellent track crafted by major champion Davis Love III. With wide fairways and interesting green complexes, it is both playable for the higher handicapper and the accomplished player.
Get DetailsBarefoot Resort - Fazio Course
North Myrtle Beach, SCThe course opened in 2000 and was designed by legendary architect Tom Fazio, who has designed golf courses all over the world, as well as working at such venues as Augusta National Golf Club. The course is a par 71, with five par threes, four par fives and nine par fours.
Get DetailsBarefoot Resort - Dye Course
North Myrtle Beach, SCPete Dye, the patriarch of the successful golf course-designing Dye family, is responsible for the Dye Club at Barefoot Resort, which, at 7,343 yards from the back tees, is the second-longest golf course on the Grand Strand, behind only the Grande Dunes Resort Club.
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