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The best golf courses in California

May 29, 2025
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The argument over which state has the best golf is complicated. California is tough to beat by any calculation. Twenty-two courses appear in our 100 Greatest and Second 100 Greatest rankings, and numerous courses that don't crack the top 25 on the Best in State ranking like Torey Pines' South Course (a U.S. Open venue), Lake Merced, The Links at Spanish Bay and PGA West's Stadium Course would be at the top of the lists elsewhere. And unlike northeastern powerhouses like New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, public-access and resort courses are well represented.

The Golden State is so deep in quality and diverse golf, we extend our Best in State ranking here (which dates back to 1977) to 60 courses. Only Florida has more.

Below you'll find our 2025-'26 ranking of the Best Golf Courses in California. If you're interested in the best public options, check out our collection of the best courses you can play in California.

Scroll on for the complete list of the best courses in California. Be sure to click through to each individual course page for bonus photography and reviews from our course panelists. We also encourage you to leave your own ratings … so you can make your case for (or against) any course that you've played.

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60. Pelican Hill Golf Club: Ocean South
Newport Coast, CA
4.2
19 Panelists
Previous rank: NR
The first of the two Tom Fazio designs at Pelican Hill, The Ocean South course opened in 1991 and boasts striking Pacific Ocean vistas. Wide fairways, large undulating greens and fantastic conditions make for an enjoyable round on this coastal track.
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59. Santa Ana Country Club: Santa Ana
Santa Ana, CA
4
11 Panelists
Previous rank: NR
In 2016, Santa Ana Country Club in Orange Country underwent a total transformation by architect Jay Blasi. The traditional treelined Ted Robinson redesign of an early 20th century course was entirely reimagined with a new routing that broke up the monotony of holes running back and forth in the same direction, angling them in new orientations and utilizing the club’s boundaries more engagingly. The new design keeps the play turning with strategies defined by lovely bunkering that’s more effective at evoking pre-Depression era architecture and a wild set of greens highlighted by expansive shortgrass surrounds. Santa Ana feels both aged and fresh at the same time.
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58. Trump National Golf Club Los Angeles
Rancho Palos Verdes, CA
3.9
5 Panelists
Previous rank: 47
Just 30 minutes south of LAX, the Pete Dye design features Pacific Ocean views on every single hole. Built among the jagged cliffs of Palos Verdes Peninsula, Trump National Los Angeles is reportedly one of the most expensive courses constructed in the United States, as the Trump Golf folks claim it took $250 million to develop this scenic public golf experience.
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57. Stanford Golf Course
Stanford, CA
4.1
10 Panelists
Previous rank: 54
Home to the top-ranked Cardinal men’s and women’s golf teams, the Stanford Course is a par-70 George C. Thomas and Billy Bell Jr. design that dates to the early 1930s. Alums from Tiger Woods, Tom Watson and Michelle Wie to Mickey Wright and Lawson Little developed their games at this sprawling layout that was ranked on our America's 100 Greatest list in the 1970s. Grand oak trees line the fairways and elevated tee boxes provide beautiful views of the surrounding mountain scenery, especially on the 18th tee, where you can see San Francisco in the distance. There is strong layout variety at Stanford, with holes moving in each direction and a mix of wide-open tee shots and others that are quite narrow. Though it's a pleasant walk with few houses on the course, it can be strenuous given the elevation changes and distance between some holes.
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56. Mission Hills Country Club: Tournament
Rancho Mirage, CA
3.3
4 Panelists
Previous rank: 53
The former site of the ANA Inspiration, now to be a senior tour event, opened in 1972 and was designed by Desmond Muirhead. It is an old school parkland course with hazards, primarily bunkers defining the landing areas off the tee. The green complexes offer a variety of recovery shots unless you are short-sided, then they require a high pitch or flop to end up close to the pin. Bunkers are well maintained and consistent, while the greens have defined and subtle slopes that make putting a challenge. Mature trees intrude into the fairway and often represent an unfair challenge where shots in the fairway are blocked or require the shot to be shaped to access the pin. Some of the holes do not allow a driver, as the risk is not commensurate with the reward. The finishing five holes are the standout on the property—with the well-known 18th hole and Poppie's Pond, the concrete-lined pool that is part of Champions Lake and site of the famous jump by ANA winners.
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55. Rustic Canyon Golf Course
Moorpark, CA
4
24 Panelists
Previous rank: 52
Rustic Canyon earned the honor of Golf Digest's Most Affordable Public Course in 2002, and it has continued to generate attention as one of Southern California's best public options since. With wide, generous fairways routed through a seasonal stream bed in the foothills north of Los Angeles, this Gil Hanse, Jim Wagner and Geoff Shackelford design is a natural, minimalistic and strategic gem that should be on any list of the best in California.
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54. Pelican Hill Golf Club: Ocean North
Newport Coast, CA
4.1
19 Panelists
Previous rank: 45
This Tom Fazio-designed oceanside course provides stunning views of Catalina Island and Newport Beach. Set on slightly higher ground than its sister course (Ocean South), the North Course at Pelican Hill features sloping greens and several carries over canyons off the tee.
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53. Grizzly Ranch Golf Club
Portola, CA
4.1
16 Panelists
Previous rank: 55
Located in the Sierra Nevada foothills 50 miles northwest of Reno, Grizzly Ranch is a getaway, escapist golf and a refreshing trek through nature. When given such serenity and untouched natural beauty, it’s important not to overcook the design. The late architect Bob Cupp didn’t. He layered the holes onto a basin of forest floor with minimal buildup, directing them easily up and down the tilted property and positioning the greensites in ways that mingle thoughtfully with creeks and dry washes.
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52. OMNI La Costa Resort & Spa: North Course
Carlsbad, CA
4
23 Panelists
Previous rank: NR
North of San Diego in the coastal community of Carlsbad, La Costa hosted 37 PGA Tour events through the mid-2000s. The North Course (previously known as the Champions Course) was renovated in 2011 by Steve Pate and Damian Pascuzzo, but it got a much larger redo in 2023 by Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner so that Omni La Costa could host the NCAA Division I Golf Championships. Hanse/Wagner added many of their signature features, including native areas, barranca and falloff areas around the greens. With six sets of tees, there are plenty of options for the public to take on an exciting new design.
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51. Rolling Hills Country Club
Rolling Hills Estates, CA
4.2
10 Panelists
Previous rank: 58
David McLay Kidd transformed an existing, tight 18-hole course when a new owner purchased more land to allow Kidd to create a new routing. A massive quarry was filled, and trees were removed to create expansive views of Los Angeles on this course just south of downtown.
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50. Toscana Country Club: South
Indian Wells, CA
4.1
4 Panelists
Previous rank: 39
Bold and dramatic bunkering is a key feature on the first of two Jack Nicklaus-designed courses at Toscana Country Club. Nicklaus’ team moved a lot of earth to create some rolling terrain that offers impressive elevation changes. A number of long par-4s require precise approach shots over water and well-guarded putting complexes. Oftentimes, challenging the bunkers off the tee creates the best angles on the greens.
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49. Torrey Pines Golf Course: North
La Jolla, CA
3.6
21 Panelists
Previous rank: 49
Redesigned by Tom Weiskopf in 2018, Torrey Pines' North course became friendlier for the average golfer. The number of bunkers was reduced from 60 to 42, making it easier to play out of. And the average green size was increased from 4,500 square feet to 6,000. Lastly, Weiskopf added one of his signatures: a short, drivable par 4 (the seventh)—making the companion course to the championship South course a little more fun.This may sound like a dumbing down of the architecture, but it isn't. Within the simplification is a wide variety of green configurations and contours, with slopes rising and falling, some set high and others low, and many with more internal contour than is found on most greens on the South course, including the surfaces of the cross-ravine par-3 12th and par-3 15th. The North course also boasts ocean and canyon views on par with the South, particularly the par-4 16th rising along the Pacific Ocean cliffs and bringing the player in the most direct contact with the stunning panorama. Perhaps because we feel there's a better course hidden somewhere beneath the current South course, playing the North doesn't feel like a step down, just a step across to the other side of one of the best public golf sites in the U.S.
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48. The Hideaway Golf Club: Clive
La Quinta, CA
3.7
4 Panelists
Previous rank: 36
One of two courses at this Discovery Land Company property that sits on 600 acres, the Clive Course is a standout in our conditioning category -- and attention to the detail around the greens and along the fairways adds to the sitelines off the tees. The par 3s offer spectacular backdrops, and the one-shotters are all varied in length (playing around 196, 147, 200 and 221 yards from the back tees) to add to the layout variety.
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47. The Reserve Club
Indian Wells, CA
3.9
11 Panelists
Previous rank: 45
The Reserve is a private club in Indian Wells, Calif., built by Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish that is routed against the surrounding mountain ridges and follows the natural contours, winding through the terrain to create interesting and varied holes. Tee and approach shots are well framed, and the housing never intrudes into your view as you play.
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46. Menlo Country Club
Redwood City, CA
3.9
3 Panelists
Previous rank: 50
Kyle Phillips completed an extensive renovation in 2014, moving nearly 100,000 cubic yards of earth—creating 14 new holes and redesigning the other four holes. The original course opened in 1912 after it was designed by Scotsman Tom Nicoll. Redesigns were done over the years by Robert Trent Jones, Sr., after the club acquired additional land—and the work Phillips did over 17 months completely reimagined the course while staying true to the original Menlo Country Club design. The club now enjoys bentgrass greens, and Phillips instituted playability with more teeing areas and redesigned green complexes that feature run-off areas that offer options for those who miss the green.
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45. Poppy Hills Golf Course
Pebble Beach, CA
4
23 Panelists
Previous rank: 44
When originally built, Poppy Hills had unpopular perched greens framed by massive containment mounds. Following a 2013 remodeling by original designer Robert Trent Jones II and partner Bruce Charlton, it's now a graceful, low-profile layout. "We popped the hills at Poppy Hills," says Trent Jr. A new feature is sandy naturalized areas and pine straw off the fairways, instead of manicured rough, part of a concerted effort to significantly reduce water consumption. The renovated course was on display at the 2018 U.S. Girls' Junior, won by current LPGA player Yealimi Noh.
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44. Rams Hill Golf Club
Borrego Springs, CA
4.3
18 Panelists
Previous rank: 46
Local residents revived this golf development within Anza Borrego Desert State Park, on the western edge of the Sonoran Desert, about an hour from La Quinta, Calif., in the mid-2000s with an entirely new course built by Tom Fazio. Some of Fazio’s spacious holes are molded into the desert earth and others ride the up and down rocky elevations, leading to a finish that includes the short par-4 17th and gambler’s par-5 18th that streaks downhill around a water feature.
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43. Rancho Santa Fe Golf Club
Rancho Santa Fe, CA
4
1 Panelists
Previous rank: NR
The Southern California-based golf course designer and writer Max Behr, who worked primarily in the 1920s and ‘30s, is a favorite among architecture scholars for his dense philosophical essays about strategy and psychology. He wasn’t as prolific at building courses as regional contemporaries like William Watson and William Bell, but those he did design, like Rancho Santa Fe north of San Diego, were packed with nuance and simple strategic intrigue. Scottish designer David McLay Kidd doesn’t typically take on historical renovations (he prefers to put his own new ideas in the ground), but he was taken by the efficient arrangement of holes that run up and down a narrow valley and the essence of what remained of Behr’s ideas, and committed himself to drawing them out. The result following the work in 2021 is a distillation of classical era angles and options that focused on bunker replacement, select tree removal and recreating large putting surfaces that spill into short-grass surrounds leaving players a multitude of recovery shots.
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42. Toscana Country Club: North
Indian Wells, CA
4
2 Panelists
Previous rank: 43
The second 18 holes at Toscana Country Club weren't completed until a few years ago, with the North Course's first nine holes and its 18th built at the time of the South course's completion. Toscana's North course fits in the Jack Nicklaus style, playing through and around beautiful arroyos and water features with bold green and bunker complexes. Holes are picturesquely framed by layers of landscaping and the surrounding mountains.
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41. Los Angeles Country Club: South
Los Angeles, CA
3.6
5 Panelists
Previous rank: 42
Overshadowed by its championship brother, the South course at LACC is still an incredibly fun course and often gets more play than the more difficult North. Highlighted by interesting variety and shark-toothed bunker formations from George C. Thomas, remodeled by Gil Hanse and Geoff Shackelford, LACC's South course packs less of a punch in comparison to the North. South’s tunnels are one of its most interesting features. Holes 1-2 and 17-18 share the side of Wilshire Road with the North course, while the rest of the holes come after crossing a tunnel to get to the other side of the property. The South also weaves through buildings that provide a fitting metropolitan backdrop for the Tinsel Town stunner. South’s par-3s are probably the highlight of the course, delivering five very different holes and mandating five very different shots.
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40. Eldorado Country Club
Indian Wells, CA
3.6
4 Panelists
Previous rank: 37
Eldorado Country Club, located in the Coachella Valley, hosted the 1959 Ryder Cup, when Sam Snead captained the American team to a dominating victory over Great Britain. That was played on the original Lawrence Hughes designed track; in the early 2000s, Tom Fazio led an extensive redesign of the course, notably adding plenty of water to both toughen the course and add aesthetic appeal. Still, it remains a player-friendly layout, with forgiving fairways and large greens that often allow players to run shots up onto the surfaces.
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39. The Plantation Golf Club
Indio, CA
3.9
7 Panelists
Previous rank: 41
On a short list of the most exclusive clubs in the country, The Plantation Golf Club is notorious for being a men-only club with some strict rules (i.e. no phones, women arriving at the club, etc.). For those who get to enjoy the course, The Plantation is a fun, playable layout by Brian Curley and Fred Couples with some intriguing bunker and green complexes.
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38. Wilshire Country Club
Los Angeles, CA
4.3
6 Panelists
Previous rank: 38
Wilshire is an exclusive private club with an old-school layout situated on 104 acres near Hollywood. The course is bisected by Beverly Boulevard and a barranca meanders throughout, coming into play on around half of the holes. The course was designed by Englishman Norman Macbeth in 1919 and hosted four Los Angeles Opens between 1928-1944. Tipping out around 6,500 yards, Wilshire is a short course by modern standards, but a variety of testing green shapes with plenty of undulation, as well as sharp-lipped deep bunkers, make the historic course a strong test. In 2008, Kyle Phillips revamped the bunkers and barranca, drawing out a more evocative 1920s appearance, and he returned in 1925 to update that work and conduct a more comprehensive top to bottom remodel. Wilshire's 18th hole remains one of the city's best closing holes with its green set under the view of the clubhouse, tucked in the elbow of the deep barranca.
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37. Lakeside Golf Club
Burbank, CA
4.1
6 Panelists
Previous rank: 34
Lakeside is a classic old-school layout near Studio City in North Hollywood. The course was designed in the early 1920s by Max Behr, a Yale graduate and the first editor of Golf Illustrated magazine. Lakeside has long been a favorite among Hollywood elite—Bing Crosby notably was a five-time club champion. The routing makes great use of a tight property, especially considering a portion of the original course had to be sacrificed during an expansion of the Los Angeles River that forms the southern border of the course (several holes played across the old river and back). Grassy barranas meander the property, creating depressions that cross and flank greens, and LA-based designer Todd Eckenrode's work remodeling the bunkers and large, sweeping putting surfaces has kept Lakeside a marquee attraction in a star-studded golf market.
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36. PGA West: Stadium Course
La Quinta, CA
Previous rank: 33
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, as well as grassing the greens in more drought-tolerant TifEagle bermuda.
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35. Hillcrest Country Club
Los Angeles, CA
4.3
12 Panelists
Previous rank: 35
Hillcrest Country Club sits adjacent to Rancho Park Golf Course—one of L.A.’s better public options—and across West Pico Boulevard from the Fox Studio Lot. The private country club opened in 1920 with a design by prolific California-by-way-of-Minnesota architect William Watson. In 2019, Kyle Phillips made extensive changes to the course, creating six new holes and making room for a new six-acre practice facility. The par-3s stand out at Hillcrest, including the new point-to-point fourth with views across West Hollywood and the Hollywood Hills, and the 12th, which can tip out as far as 260 yards and plays downhill to massive Biarritz green. Phillips’ remodel has yet to garner the same degree of acclaim as his work at Cal Club in San Francisco has, now a 100 Greatest member, but perhaps it will in time. It merits comparison with George Thomas’s great triumvirate of LA courses, Los Angeles Country Club, Riviera Country Club and Bel-Air Country Club.
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34. The Links At Spanish Bay
Pebble Beach, CA
Previous rank: 32
The Links at Spanish Bay was the first true links course built in America in many decades, but it took years for conveyor belts to deposit sand atop exposed bedrock to return this mined-out sand quarry back to a linksland site. The trio of designers, playfully dubbed "The Holy Trinity," thoughtfully shaped an 18 that looks natural, plays strategically and is sensitive to the coastal wetland environment. The criticism of the course has always been that it looks like a links but doesn't play like one with soft turf and too many carry approaches into the greens. It remains to be seen how designers Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner handle those issues in their upcoming major redesign of the course.
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33. Shady Canyon Golf Club
Irvine, CA
4.1
10 Panelists
Previous rank: 30
Opening in 2002, Shady Canyon is a Tom Fazio design in Irvine, just south of Los Angeles. Fazio said his “ultimate goal is to have it appear as if nothing has been done, that the layout is completely natural.” At Shady Canyon, the course weaves through the canyon, with native brush and streams lining many holes, giving the layout the natural feel that Fazio strived for. Many of the greens have a significant amount of slope, often creating numerous distinct sections. If you’re not on the proper section, you’ll face a difficult two-putt.
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32. CordeValle Golf Club
San Martin, CA
Previous rank: 29
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.
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31. The Olympic Club: Ocean
San Francisco, CA
4.1
8 Panelists
Previous rank: 31
The Ocean Course at The Olympic Club has a tumultuous history. Originally named Lakeside Golf Club, it was bought by Olympic in 1918 after falling into some financial trouble following World War I. The course became the Ocean course in 1924, but winter storm damage just months after it opened forced the need for the course to be remodeled before finally reopening in 1927. Set on the western (ocean) side of the Olympic Club property, the land is more naturally invigorating than that of the more famous Lake Course, with wonderful variety in the holes and incredibly undulating greens, along with San Francisco's beautiful Cypress trees. Designer Jim Urbina will begin a major overhaul of the course in 2026 that will pay homage to architect William Watson while also infusing the course with new strategic blood.
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30. Lahontan Golf Club
Truckee, CA
4.4
9 Panelists
Previous rank: 25
Situated a few miles north of Lake Tahoe, Lahontan is a Tom Weiskopf design that weaves through the densely forested landscape. Weiskopf balanced playability and challenge, presenting narrow corridors off many tees that open to forgiving fairways and large greens. Lahontan is an aesthetically pleasing layout, playing among towering pines and wispy fescue set against a mountain backdrop.
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29. Bighorn Golf Club: Mountains
Palm Desert, CA
4.3
4 Panelists
Previous rank: 27
Set hard against the mountains, the aptly named Mountains course is one of two courses at Bighorn Golf Club ranked inside the top 30 on our Best in California list. The Arthur Hills design features some dramatic elevation changes, with many downhill tee shots providing fantastic vistas of Palm Springs down below. The course receives high marks from our panelists for its conditioning and aesthetics. In early 2018, the club completed a new 80,000-square-foot clubhouse that cost $70 million.
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28. Lake Merced Golf Club
Daly City, CA
4.3
26 Panelists
Previous rank: 51
Lake Merced is one of the latest clubs to benefit from the restoration work of Gil Hanse, Jim Wagner and their team. In 1962, a freeway consumed a portion of the club’s property and forced a major overhaul of the work Alister MacKenzie did in 1929 and 1930, forcing the holes to be re-routed, new holes to be built and permanently altering the look and character of the golf course. Gone were the deep barrancas, sandy waste areas and MacKenzie's signature mounding and bunker designs. The new course was reflective of the design predilections of the post-World War II era that included tree plantings, simplified bunkers and a general narrowing of the holes. Further work done in the 1990s, including new bunkers and elevated greens, enhanced the modern aspects of the course, even as the cypress and pines had overgrown most hole corridors. Hanse and Wager suggested the club attempt to recapture the MacKenzie routing, and they were able to recreate 14½ original holes, two and ½ hybrid holes and the new par-3 16th playing next to one of MacKenzie’s marquee holes, the revived par-3 13th. In all, 150,000 square feet of bunkers were refurbished in a style that matches the club’s 1920s shaping, trees were pared back and eliminated and a new spacious practice facility was added to the north side of the property. The changes were strong enough to earn Lake Merced the Golf Digest Best Transformation award for 2023.
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27. Bighorn Golf Club: Canyons
Palm Desert, CA
3.5
6 Panelists
Previous rank: 29
The second of two courses at Bighorn to open, the Canyons was designed by Tom Fazio and features prominent bunkering throughout. Like the sibling Mountains course, the Canyons layout receives high marks from our panelists for its conditioning and aesthetics. In early 2018, the club completed a new 80,000-square-foot clubhouse that cost $70 million.
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26. Torrey Pines Golf Course: South
La Jolla, CA
Previous rank: 23
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.
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25. The Bridges At Rancho Santa Fe
Rancho Santa Fe, CA
4.3
12 Panelists
Previous rank: 24
This upscale residential course wanders a lovely site in the dry, stony foothills of north San Diego County. The design is a contrast of sculpted architecture with smooth-edged, cape-and-bay style bunkering, reflection ponds and flowing fairway lines set against the property’s rugged ridges and canyons, with long views toward the Pacific off the highest points. The first nine circles through the development’s more compact residences, while the second nine flares out into open country under the purview of large luxury estates. The club’s namesake bridges connect several holes that leap over valleys and the Escondido Creek ravine.
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24. Tradition Golf Club
La Quinta, CA
4.7
10 Panelists
Previous rank: 21
Tradition Golf Club was intended to be Palmer Course Design’s answer to the most opulent private courses in greater Palm Springs, such as No. 85 The Quarry at La Quinta and No. 200 Vintage Club (Mountain). Built on the old Hacienda del Gato Ranch, the front nine is routed over rolling desert and through a flood-control basin, while most of the back nine is tucked at the base of the rocky slopes of the Santa Rosa Mountains, with three holes (15th through 17th) curving around a 90-degree bend dubbed the “Coyote Canyon.” Almost every hole here has a distinguishing feature, from desert wash to serpentine waste bunker to double fairway to boulder landscaping to cascading waterfalls. The common overall theme is fields of wildflowers spread throughout the far roughs. During a 2005 Golf Digest Panelist Summit, Arnold Palmer explained he had those flowers planted to appeal to his first wife, Winnie, who loved flora much more than golf.
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23. The Vintage Club: Mountain
Indian Wells, CA
Previous rank: 22
The Vintage Club proved to be the last collaboration between former tour golfer-turned-architect George Fazio and his young nephew, Tom. But while George was heavily involved in promoting this exclusive Palm Springs area club to prospective members, Tom was sweating the details out on the construction site. The opulent course was built for $6 million, considered an outrageous amount at that time (that's roughly $24 million, adjusted for inflation), but Tom explained that sum was necessary to “create an environment where none existed,” a phrase he would repeat later in the decade when constructing No. 24 Shadow Creek in Las Vegas. Tom spent $1.5-million building just The Vintage’s 16th and 17th holes, including three cascading waterfalls at $175,000 apiece. It was money well spent.
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22. Meadow Club
Fairfax, CA
Previous rank: 28
About a half hour north of the Golden Gate Bridge, Meadow Club opened in 1927 as Alister MacKenzie’s first design in the United States. Over the years, the original treeless links-style layout was lost as many trees were planted and greens shrunk, but a restoration project in the early 2000s recaptured much of MacKenzie’s original intent. Architect Mike DeVries expanded the greens to their original size and restored the bunkers to MacKenzie’s intended style. Set in a valley near Mount Tamalpais, Meadow Club once again plays as a sprawling design with large, undulating greens and well-placed MacKenzie bunkering.
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21. Sherwood Country Club
Thousand Oaks, CA
Previous rank: 20
When Jack Nicklaus completed Sherwood Country Club for industrialist David Murdock in the late 1980s, critics immediately compared it to Shadow Creek, which Nicklaus felt was unfair, since his land—a river valley with homesites on high surrounding hills—was far more natural than the barren Vegas desert. But critics were comparing ledger books. They spent lots of money at Sherwood. Several hundred mature oaks were transplanted at an estimated cost of $6 million (over $15 million in today's dollars). The massive boulders edging some fairways were trucked in as well, and the ponds and streams guarding landing areas and greens were manufactured by experts in that business. In the end, it added up to producing one of the best courses money could buy, until the drought of 2014. Nicklaus returned in 2016 to approve agronomic improvements that reduced water use by 25 percent. Sherwood remains a great layout, but is more austere in presentation.
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20. Martis Camp
Truckee, CA
Previous rank: 17
Back in the 1960s, a forest south of Truckee, Calif., served as a location for the filming of the popular TV western “Bonanza.” Now, the area near Lake Tahoe is a gold mine for impressive golf experiences, with a half-dozen high-end public courses, including PGA Tour host site Old Greenwood, and a couple of private gems. And in terms of gold, the standard for golf-and-ski living in all of America is Martis Camp. We say that emphatically because nowhere else can residents and their visitors play a mountainous and challenging Tom Fazio layout—Scottie Scheffler won the U.S. Junior Am here—and when winter arrives, take a quick shuttle from home to a private ski lift for the slopes at Northstar. Fazio has called this site one of the finest natural pieces of property on which he’s ever created a golf course. It has pines, firs, hemlocks and rocky outcroppings on nearly every hole, particularly the 18th, where the clubhouse sits atop a 70-foot-high wall of granite behind the green. Fairways are broad, though hazarded by squiggly bunkers in certain spots, and some greens have trunks of tall Ponderosa pines uncomfortably close. So gorgeous is Martis Camp that one critic called it “a private-gated national park experience.” The many amenities feel both natural for the setting and fanciful at the same time. The 18-hole putting course, now popular among high-end resorts, is among the best of its kind, winding through the multi-million-dollar properties. There is an 18,000-square-foot Family Barn that hosts activities all year long—the Beach Boys have played there—along with bike and walking trails, a private beach and dining options on the shores of north Lake Tahoe. Three restaurants on site, including one for fine dining, can keep you on the property for days, and there's even a cool "Lost Library," a cozy cabin tucked in the woods, replete with relaxing porch swings, that offers a quiet escape. Bonanza? Martis Camp fits that bill.
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19. Mayacama Golf Club
Santa Rosa, CA
Previous rank: 19
As Jack Nicklaus wound down his competitive career, his empathy for average golfers rose, and rather than continue to build back-breaking championship-length courses, he began to tailor some of his designs toward the average golfers who foot the bill. Thus, Mayacama is less than 6,800 yards and is routed to be a very comfortable walk, essential since the club has no golf carts. A bold design, it explores every facet of the oak-dotted hillsides above Santa Rosa. Watersheds and gulches figure prominently in the layout, which has some dramatically elevated tees and four stunning, gambling par-5s.
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18. Bel-Air Country Club
Los Angeles, CA
Previous rank: 18
Completing a George C. Thomas hat trick of designs—the others being Los Angeles Country Club (North) and (Riviera)—is Bel-Air Country Club. It's a charming throwback design that winds through mansion-dotted canyons of Los Angeles, the topography so steep that golfers are guided from hole to hole via a tunnel, an elevator and the city’s most famous suspension bridge, which spans a gulch on the par-3 10th and serves as a dramatic backdrop for the 18th green. Bel-Air’s design had been altered over decades by, among others, Dick Wilson, George Fazio, Robert Trent Jones Jr. and Tom Fazio. But in 2018, Tom Doak erased every bit of their work, removing most of the phony water hazards and faithfully recapturing Thomas’s splashy signature bunkering. To complete a round amidst these Hollywood hills, you’ll definitely encounter a Hollywood star. Her name is Bel-Air.
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17. The Madison Club
La Quinta, CA
Previous rank: 15
When developer Michael Meldman first showed Tom Fazio the land for the proposed Madison Club, an arid, barren desert outside Palm Springs, he told Fazio, “Let’s do a modern-day Shadow Creek.” By “modern-day,” he meant one that would feature homesites along the holes. So Fazio did what he’d done in Las Vegas at Shadow Creek. He had crews dig into the desert and pile up dirt on the sides. But this time, the cuts became channels wide enough for fairways, with pads for home sites perched above holes on surrounding ridgelines. After trucking in and planting mature trees and sodding everything, Fazio was satisfied The Madison Club looked nothing like a typical Palm Springs residential layout. Said Fazio, “If you’re given a free hand in the Coachella Valley, what do you do? You do everything. You move the earth, plant the trees and carve out the streams. You create the entire space. There’s so much here.”
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16. Stone Eagle Golf Club
Palm Desert, CA
Previous rank: 16
Stone Eagle is one of the most remarkable courses in the golf-heavy Palm Springs market. It sits atop a rocky plateau, 1,000 feet above the Coachella Valley but still thousands of feet below the peaks of the adjacent Santa Rosa Mountains. When Tom Doak first walked the site, he said, “I thought this must be what the surface of Mars looks like: rocky, rugged and red.” Given the luxury of routing an 18 without any homesites, Doak did his lay-of-the-land best to create a faux links high above the desert floor by tucking fairways into creases of the land and positioning shots to play over low ridges into bold greens that mimic the rugged topography. At Stone Eagle, Doak used hillsides of rocks and boulders the way Old Country architects used sand dunes. The only difference: sand is soft, rock is not.
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15. The Preserve Golf Club
Carmel, CA
Previous rank: 14
Located a few miles inland from the glorious fivesome of 100 Greatest courses on California’s Monterey Peninsula (Cypress Point, Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill and the two courses at Monterey Peninsula Country Club), The Preserve Golf Club is dramatically different, the only golf course contained within a 20,000-acre parcel of gentle hills and mammoth oaks. Fazio moved almost no earth here, so perfect was the routing established by Poellot and Sandy Tatum. The greens are subtle, the bunkering low-key, the atmosphere one of absolute tranquility.
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14. Pasatiempo Golf Club
Santa Cruz, CA
Previous rank: 13
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, 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, 15 and 16 all play over rugged sand and grass barrancas, and another bizarre barranca, turfed in fairway grass, runs down the left side of the par-4 14th. Among these is one of the course’s great sleeper holes, the uphill par-4 17th with a frighteningly tilted putting surface. 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 2023 and 2024, architect Jim Urbina cored out and rebuilt every green to improve drainage issues and remove decades of sand and organic buildup. He then used a vast array of historical data and images to restore the contours as closely as possible to what they were in the 1930s. The work recaptured hole locations on masterpiece greens like the 16th and 18th that were unusable due to slopes that had become too severe for modern green speeds. The club will maintain the rebuilt greens at slightly slower speeds to embrace the brilliant contours MacKenzie designed.
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13. The Quarry at La Quinta
La Quinta, CA
4.7
23 Panelists
Previous rank: 12
The developers of The Quarry hired Tom Fazio in the early 1990s with instructions that he top his design of Shadow Creek (ranked No. 24 on this year’s list). Fazio was savvy enough to ignore those instructions because he recognized The Quarry's site was a much better piece of topography than what he’d been provided in Las Vegas. Thus, The Quarry has more variety, starting and ending in a gravel quarry now lavishly landscaped. In between, holes play on high desert overlooking the Palm Springs Valley and in a valley, with four holes tucked in an isolated notch of the Santa Rosa Mountains. The course regularly receives some of the highest Conditioning scores in the country.
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12. Ladera Golf Club
Thermal, CA
4.8
20 Panelists
Previous rank: NR
Ladera breaks every "rule" of desert golf in Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley. The design does not incorporate unnatural water features, it’s not lined by palm trees, it's not criss-crossed by cart paths and it’s not hemmed in by housing, no matter how expensive. Instead, it is a beautiful and varied expression of what desert golf can be in its most natural form, though nothing about it is natural. The 300-acre site slopes 140 feet from the high point near the Santa Rosa Mountains across once-level land that was formerly lemon groves and mango farms. Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner propped up the low side of the property to reorient sightlines over the valley floor toward the eastern Mecca Hills and moved millions of cubic yards of earth to create each particle of golf. Ladera’s fairways are generous, 60 to 100 yards wide with no formal rough, but strategy abounds with options to play to wide parts of the fairway—though the best approach angles and lines of sight are reserved for those who skirt the boundaries of the hazards. Even completely straight holes, such as the par-5 seventh, are full of options with staggered bunkers and a treacherous side slope short of the green. The greens reveal a tremendous variety of sizes and forms, some modestly contoured like the enormous saucer third and others a pattern of ridges and falling tiers (the 14th). But the most distinctive features at Ladera are the attractive dry gullies and arroyos that Hanse, Wagner and their team cut through the site, emulating sandy, eroded vegetative lows that water would rush through during rare periods of heavy rain. The excavated sand was used to create sweeping elevation changes and to prop up greens like the par-3 fourth, the altar-like 15th, the par-3 16th and the par-5 17th that hangs over the edge of a deep barranca.
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11. Monterey Peninsula Country Club: Dunes
Pebble Beach, CA
4.6
32 Panelists
Previous rank: 11
The Dunes Course, long in the shadow of its big brother Shore Course (ranked 55th), was originally routed by Seth Raynor, who died before construction. It was completed by Robert Hunter, a partner to Alister MacKenzie (who did not participate in the work), and Raynor's ideas for the greens were altered before they were even built. In the 1990s, Rees Jones remodeled the course and reshaped holes to mimic the Raynor look, to mixed reviews. In 2016, Tom Fazio was brought in to make the Dunes as appealing to members as the gorgeous Shore Course, though it was former associates Tim Jackson and David Kahn who conceived of and carried out the details of the plan to give the Dunes a MacKenzie look. Sandscapes now frame most holes, fairways now zigzag around jagged bunkers and nearly all the greens are oriented diagonally to lines of play. The Dunes Course now lives up to its name—and its current ranking is the highest in the history of our list.
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10. Spyglass Hill Golf Course
Pebble Beach, CA
Previous rank: 8
Given the task of designing a course just up the 17 Mile Drive from Pebble Beach and Cypress Point, Robert Trent Jones responded with a combination of Pine Valley and Augusta National. The five opening holes, in Pine Valley-like sand dunes, are an all-too-brief encounter with the Pacific seacoast. The remaining holes are a stern hike through hills covered with majestic Monterey pines (which, sad to say, may someday disappear to pitch canker, but are being replaced in some areas with cypress trees). Add several water hazards that hearken back to the 16th at Augusta (a hole which Trent Jones designed, by the way), and you have what some panelists consider to be Trent’s finest work. Others say it’s the best course never to have hosted a major event (though it was conceived to do so). After all, even Pine Valley and Cypress Point have hosted Walker Cups.
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9. The Valley Club of Montecito
Santa Barbara, CA
4.5
11 Panelists
Previous rank: 10
The Valley Club is routed like an hourglass, with a wide variety of holes, including the third (hard against a barranca), the downright mountainous 10th, the gorgeous canyon-carry 14th and broad, serpentine 15th. Fairways are generous, but the slant of greens demands certain angles of approach. The restored MacKenzie bunkers resemble jigsaw pieces that, observed architect Jim Urbina, seem to fit one another, left and right. An added bonus is its location, in perhaps the best golfing weather in the nation. But the surrounding dry hills are subject to erosion, and The Valley Club was severely damaged by mudslides in 2018, necessitating an intensive project to reclaim its grand golf holes.
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8. California Golf Club
South San Francisco, CA
4.7
18 Panelists
Previous rank: 9
For a course that featured Alister MacKenzie bunkers (added just two years after it first opened), Cal Club was never considered the equal of its near neighbors, No. 35 Olympic Club (Lake) or No. 33 San Francisco Golf Club. That’s partly because it was so claustrophobic, not just from dense trees, but from its truncated front nine reworked in the 60s by Robert Trent Jones after road expansion took two holes. Architect Kyle Phillips resolved the problem in 2007 by clearing trees and creating five new holes, including a new par-4 second in the old practice range and a new dogleg-right par-4 seventh atop a previously unused mesa in the middle of the course. Best of all, he reintroduced MacKenzie’s glamorous bunkers. Cal Club is now much closer to its top-ranked neighbors and continues its meteoric rise up the charts, jumping to its highest position to date.
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7. Monterey Peninsula Country Club: Shore
Pebble Beach, CA
4.5
23 Panelists
Previous rank: 7
Mike Strantz was battling cancer while transforming the bland, low-budget Shore Course into a scenic and strategic marvel that rivals next-door neighbor Cypress Point. Strantz reversed the direction of the fifth through 15th holes to provide a Pacific Ocean backdrop to most of them. He weaved fairways among trees so players could “dance among the cypress,” and added native grasses for a coastal prairie look. The stunning landscape would be Strantz’s last work of art. He died six months after completing the redesign. Former PGA Tour player Forrest Fezler, who was Strantz’s associate on the project, later served as a consulting architect to retain the Strantz vision, until he passed away, also from cancer, in 2018. Designer Dave Zinkand completed a renovation of the bunkers in 2025 to keep Strantz's artistry vivid.
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6. The Olympic Club: Lake
San Francisco, CA
4.7
35 Panelists
Previous rank: 6
It seems fitting that, in a town where every house is a cliffhanger, every U.S. Open played at Olympic has been one, too. For decades, the Lake was a severe test of golf. Once, it was a heavily forested course with canted fairways hampered by just a single fairway bunker. By 2009, the forest had been considerably cleared away, leaving only the occasional bowlegged cypress with knobby knees. The seventh and 18th greens were redesigned, and a new par-3 eighth added. Despite those changes, the 2012 U.S. Open stuck to the usual script: a ball got stuck in a tree, slow-play warnings were given, a leader snap-hooked a drive on 16 in the final round and a guy named Simpson won. If the past was predictable, the future of the Lake Course might be more mysterious after Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner completed a remodeling in 2023 in preparation for the 2028 PGA Championship. The holes are even more breathable than before, with additional tree decluttering, the greens have been expanded for more hole locations and the bunkers don't seem so deep and disconnected with the greens as they did. That old seventh hole was also scrapped in favor of a new drivable par-4 playing to a new greensite closer to the eighth tee. What hasn't changed is the Lake Course's secret ingredient, the mysterious hillside atmosphere that makes balls fall out of the air and the holes play much longer than their yardage.
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5. San Francisco Golf Club
San Francisco, CA
4.7
22 Panelists
Previous rank: 5
San Francisco Golf Club’s original routing was done mostly by a trio of club members, who first staked out the course in 1918. A.W. Tillinghast remodeled the course in 1923, establishing its signature greens and bunkering. He also added the par-3 seventh, called the “Duel Hole,” because its location marks the spot of the last legal duel in America. Three holes were replaced in 1950 in anticipation of a street widening project that never happened. In 2006, the original holes were re-established by Tom Doak and his then-associate Jim Urbina.
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4. Riviera Country Club
Pacific Palisades, CA
4.8
28 Panelists
Previous rank: 4
A compact and shrewd design by George C. Thomas Jr. and associate William P. Bell, Riviera features everything from a long Redan par-3 to a bunker in the middle of a green to an alternate-fairway par-4. With its 18th green at the base of a natural amphitheater, and its primary rough consisting of club-grabbing Kikuyu, Riviera seems tailor-made as a tournament venue. It hosted a PGA Championship in 1995, a U.S. Senior Open in 1998 and a U.S. Amateur in 2017, but no U.S. Open since 1948. Riviera was recently awarded the 2031 U.S. Open, and it will also host the 2028 Olympics. But it’s the site of an annual PGA Tour event, which is even better exposure to the golf world.
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3. Los Angeles Country Club: North
Los Angeles, CA
4.8
23 Panelists
Previous rank: 3
It’s on the edge of Tinsel Town, but the architecture of the North Course at Los Angeles Country Club has been solid gold ever since its 2010 restoration by architect Gil Hanse and partner Jim Wagner. It matters not that Hanse’s team didn’t replicate the bunkering style of original architect George C. Thomas, but rather the more visually exciting style of Thomas’ associate, William P. Bell. The first nine plays rustically up and down a shallow canyon with holes switching back and forth across a dry barranca, and the second nine loops across a more spacious upland section with one par 3 (the 11th) that can stretch to nearly 300 yards and another (the 15th) that often plays just 90 yards. The hole strategies reinstituted by Hanse provided an intriguing examination when LACC's North course hosted the 2023 U.S. Open as Wyndham Clark beat Rory McIlroy by a stroke.
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2. Pebble Beach Golf Links
Pebble Beach, CA
Previous rank: 2
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.
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1. Cypress Point Club
Pebble Beach, CA
5
28 Panelists
Previous rank: 1

From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten:

Cypress Point, the sublime Monterey Peninsula work of sandbox sculpture, whittled Cypress and chiseled coastline, has become Exhibit A in the argument that classic architecture has been rendered ineffectual by modern technology.

I'm not buying that argument. Those who think teeny old Cypress Point is defenseless miss the point of Alister MacKenzie’s marvelous design.

MacKenzie relished the idea that Cypress Point would offer all sorts of ways to play every hole. That philosophy still thrives, particularly in the past decade, after the faithful restoration of MacKenzie’s original bunkers by veteran course superintendent Jeff Markow.

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

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