Best Golf Destinations for September
September is arguably the best month for golf nationwide. Northern courses enjoy warm days and lighter crowds, while shoulder-season pricing kicks in at many destinations.
Top States for September Golf
Consider avoiding: Florida — courses may be closed or in poor condition in September.
Top Accessible Courses for September
Pebble Beach, California · Jack Neville & Douglas Grant (1919) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 6,828 yards
Arguably the most famous golf course in America, Pebble Beach has hosted six U.S. Opens along the cliffs of the Monterey Peninsula. The iconic oceanfront holes from 4 through 10 and the dramatic finishing stretch at 17 and 18 deliver golf at its most spectacular and storied.
Portland, Oregon · Tom Doak (2001) · 18 holes · Par 71 · 6,633 yards
Widely ranked as the #1 public course in America, Pacific Dunes is Tom Doak's links masterpiece perched on the bluffs above the Pacific Ocean at Bandon Dunes Resort. The routing — which hugs the cliff edge for multiple holes — recalls the great seaside links of Scotland and Ireland, but in an utterly wild Oregon setting.
Pinehurst, North Carolina · Donald Ross (1907) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,588 yards
The crown jewel of American golf, Pinehurst No. 2 is Donald Ross's masterpiece and has hosted more single championships than any course in America — including U.S. Opens, PGA Championships, and Ryder Cups. The restored wiregrass-and-sand landscape and legendary turtle-back greens define the Pinehurst experience.
Portland, Oregon · David McLay Kidd (1999) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 6,732 yards
The course that started it all — David McLay Kidd's original Bandon Dunes layout put Oregon on the world golf map. The links-style design on the rugged southern Oregon coast features tumbling dune terrain, gorse-lined fairways, and multiple oceanfront holes that define bucket-list golf.
Portland, Oregon · Bill Coore & Ben Crenshaw (2020) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 6,734 yards
The newest addition to Bandon Dunes, Sheep Ranch is a Coore & Crenshaw design with the most dramatic ocean exposure of any course at the resort. Nearly every hole offers Pacific Ocean views, and many play directly along the cliff edge. The wide, strategic layout with minimal rough evokes the spirit of early links golf.
New York, New York · A.W. Tillinghast (1936) · 18 holes · Par 71 · 7,468 yards
The most famous public course in America, Bethpage Black is a brute of a Tillinghast design that has hosted two U.S. Opens and a PGA Championship. The first tee famously warns: "The Black Course is an extremely difficult course which we recommend only for highly skilled golfers."
San Diego, California · William F. Bell / Rees Jones (1957) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,698 yards
Perched on the cliffs above the Pacific Ocean, Torrey Pines South is one of America's most famous municipal courses and host of the Farmers Insurance Open. Tiger Woods' legendary 2008 U.S. Open victory here cemented its place in golf history.
San Francisco, California · Alister MacKenzie (1929) · 18 holes · Par 70 · 6,476 yards
Alister MacKenzie's personal favorite among his designs (he built a home on the 6th fairway), Pasatiempo in Santa Cruz is a bucket-list course for architecture aficionados. The rolling layout features MacKenzie's trademark contoured greens, strategic bunkering, and a dramatic barranca crossing.
Palm Springs, California · Pete Dye (1986) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,300 yards
One of Pete Dye's most famous and fearsome designs, PGA West Stadium was built as the ultimate spectator-friendly desert course. The infamous island-green 17th, deep pot bunkers, and relentless challenge made it a PGA Tour venue and one of the toughest resort courses in the world.
Pebble Beach, California · Robert Trent Jones Sr. (1966) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 6,960 yards
Robert Trent Jones Sr.'s Spyglass Hill begins with five stunning oceanfront holes through the sand dunes before ascending into the Del Monte Forest pines. Often considered the toughest test on the Monterey Peninsula, it combines coastal and forest golf in a single round.
San Martin, California · Robert Trent Jones Jr. (2000) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,360 yards
Host of the 2016 U.S. Women's Open at the Rosewood CordeValle resort, this RTJ Jr. design occupies a stunning valley floor in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains south of San Jose. The championship layout features dramatic elevation changes, native oak corridors, and impeccable conditioning that earned it top resort accolades.
Santa Cruz, California · Alister MacKenzie (1929) · 18 holes · Par 70 · 6,472 yards
Alister MacKenzie's personal favorite among his American designs, Pasatiempo in Santa Cruz is a Golden Age masterpiece set on dramatic coastal terrain overlooking Monterey Bay. MacKenzie lived adjacent to the 6th hole, and the strategic par-70 features his trademark bold bunkering, creative green complexes, and a natural routing through barrancas and ridgelines.
Portland, Oregon · Bill Coore & Ben Crenshaw (2005) · 18 holes · Par 71 · 6,765 yards
The Coore & Crenshaw entry at Bandon Dunes routes through coastal forest, open meadow, and dune land — offering the most varied terrain of any course at the resort. While it lacks the ocean views of Pacific Dunes, many consider it the most strategically interesting layout at Bandon.
Portland, Oregon · Tom Doak & Jim Urbina (2010) · 18 holes · Par 71 · 6,942 yards
A tribute to the template holes of Charles Blair Macdonald, Old Macdonald is Tom Doak's second design at Bandon. The wide, strategic layout features massive greens, deep pot bunkers, and expansive ocean views — recreating Macdonald's timeless hole concepts in a Pacific Northwest setting.
Bend, Oregon · Jack Nicklaus (2004) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,379 yards
A Jack Nicklaus Signature design at Pronghorn Resort in the high desert east of the Cascades, this course offers panoramic views of Broken Top, the Three Sisters, and Mount Bachelor. The championship layout traverses juniper-studded lava terrain with pristine conditioning at 3,400 feet elevation.
Pinehurst, North Carolina · Gil Hanse (2018) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,361 yards
Completely rebuilt by Gil Hanse in 2018, Pinehurst No. 4 has earned rave reviews as the best "other" course at the resort. The design features bold contours, sandy waste areas, and a strategic quality that some say rivals No. 2 for pure fun.
Pinehurst, North Carolina · Donald Ross (1928) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,015 yards
Host of three U.S. Women's Opens and the 2022 U.S. Open, Pine Needles is a Donald Ross masterwork that winds through longleaf pines. The walkable layout features Ross's signature crowned greens and strategic bunkering.
Los Angeles, California · Tom Fazio (1991) · 18 holes · Par 70 · 6,580 yards
Overlooking the Pacific from Newport Coast, Pelican Hill's Ocean South Course delivers one of the most spectacular resort golf experiences in California. Tom Fazio sculpted 18 holes with sweeping ocean panoramas and immaculate conditioning.
Palm Springs, California · Pete Dye (1980) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 6,758 yards
Set against the dramatic Santa Rosa Mountains at the historic La Quinta Resort, the Mountain Course is a Pete Dye desert classic and part of the American Express PGA Tour rotation. The intimate desert canyon setting and mountain backdrop create one of the most photogenic rounds in the Coachella Valley.
Portland, Oregon · Bob Cupp (1995) · 18 holes · Par 72 · 7,693 yards
Part of the Sunriver Resort in Central Oregon, Crosswater is a Bob Cupp design that plays through meadow, marshland, and along the Deschutes and Little Deschutes rivers. At 7,693 yards from the tips, it's one of the longest resort courses in the Pacific Northwest, with Cascade Mountain views providing a stunning backdrop.
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