
Germany
Germany is set deep in the heart of Europe and it has left its indelible historical mark. Synonymous with reliable cars, Weltschmerz, Black Forest gateaux, poolside beach towels and the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall. With exciting and vibrant cities such as Cologne and Munich, Germany has plenty to offer between its world-famous museums, perched up fairytale castles and mouth-watering culinary delights.
Hamburger Golf Club Falkenstein
North West Germany, Germany
Hamburger Golf Club Falkenstein
Falkenstein is an attractive golf course, which is routed in all directions of the compass. The wooded location provides a genteel oasis to play golf, away from the hustle and bustle of Hamburg’s city centre.
Budersand Sylt GolfKlubb
North West Germany, Germany
Budersand Sylt GolfKlubb
The scale of the challenge at Budersand Sylt is set out at the very first hole on the fringe of the property, played downhill to a fairway that then veers left and up to a green with a sand hill to the right for protection...
Hubbelrath (East)
West Germany, Germany
Hubbelrath (East)
Hubbelrath Golf Club was founded in 1961 and it’s located a mere 10kms east of Düsseldorf City Centre on 90 hectares of heavily forested and rather hilly land.
Frankfurter Golf Club
South West Germany, Germany
Frankfurter Golf Club
Frankfurter Golf Club was a once a regular German Open venue and this historical layout was designed by Harry Colt and John Morrison in the 1920s.
Föhr (Rot & Gelb)
North West Germany, Germany
Föhr (Rot & Gelb)
Surprisingly, for 27 holes on a site with little room to spare, the routing at Föhr Golf Club is not only perfectly walkable, but also quite interesting.
Berlin-Wannsee Golf & Country Club (Championship)
North East Germany, Germany
Berlin-Wannsee Golf & Country Club (Championship)
Formed as Berlin Golf Club by British and American diplomats back in 1895, Golf- und Land-Club Berlin-Wannsee is one of the oldest and most prestigious in continental Europe.
Winston (Links)
North East Germany, Germany
Winston (Links)
The Canadian architect David Krause certainly moved the earth to create the Winston Links course, which is set in a sandy landscape, and is described as an inland links.
zur Vahr Bremen (Garlstedt)
North West Germany, Germany
zur Vahr Bremen (Garlstedt)
At the Club zur Vahr nestles one of Germany’s best courses. Carved through a pine forest, the course is known as Garlstedt and some say it’s even better after its 2004 facelift when all greens, tees and bunkers were renovated by Christoph Staedler.
Seddiner See (Süd)
North East Germany, Germany
Seddiner See (Süd)
Seddiner See is one of Germany’s great golfing venues and it lies in the heart of the lake district, to the south of Berlin City Centre and it’s reachable by car in about 30 minutes via the autobahn.
Bad Saarow (Arnold Palmer)
North East Germany, Germany
Bad Saarow (Arnold Palmer)
Arnold Palmer laid out the first course at the Sporting Club Berlin Scharmützelsee (now known as Bad Saarow Golf Club) back in 1995 and it’s a cracker and probably the course you’ll want to limber up on first.
Winston (Open)
North East Germany, Germany
Winston (Open)
The four par threes on the Winston Open course (at 4, 7, 11 and 15) are all noteworthy holes, though the water-threatened 15th is not such a “short” hole at 235 yards from the back tees.
Gut Lärchenhof
West Germany, Germany
Gut Lärchenhof
Gut Lärchenhof Golf Club returned to the professional circuit by first staging the BMW International Open in 2012, thus continuing a proud tradition that began by hosting the German Masters and the Mercedes-Benz Championship.
Mittelrheinischer Bad Ems
South West Germany, Germany
Mittelrheinischer Bad Ems
During the 1937 German Open, Henry Cotton played a round of 63 at Mittelrheinischer Golf Club in Bad Ems, the lowest score ever recorded in Germany up to that point.
Gut Wissmanshof
North West Germany, Germany
Gut Wissmanshof
Gut Wissmanshof is an old country estate, whose fifteen minutes of fame came in 1912 when Emperor Wilhelm II visited to survey military exercises nearby.
Wittelsbacher
South East Germany, Germany
Wittelsbacher
Wittelsbacher Golfclub occupies a 167-acre property on which the horses of the Bavarian royalty were once bred. J. F. Dudok van Heel set out the course in 1988 and a round here starts and ends with a par five.
Bad Neuenahr
South West Germany, Germany
Bad Neuenahr
All things considered, Bad Neuenahr is a good all-around test of golf on a beautiful site, perhaps lacking a few percent here or there to really threaten the world class, but certainly very worthwhile.
Bad Münstereifel
West Germany, Germany
Bad Münstereifel
Bad Münstereifel is the archetypical hidden gem… no one in particular designed it, it lies in the middle of nowhere, there is hardly any traffic on the golf course...
Elmpter Wald
West Germany, Germany
Elmpter Wald
Despite being a bit on the short side, the golf course at Elmpter Wald must rank as one of the best in Germany. It has strategy, quirk, sandy fairways and heather galore.
Rhein-Main
South West Germany, Germany
Rhein-Main
The oldest still-existing golf club in Germany is the one in Wiesbaden, which was founded in 1893 and moved to the present "Chausseehaus" site in 1911.
München-Riedhof
South East Germany, Germany
München-Riedhof
München-Riedhof is a memorable layout that was designed in 1989 by Heinz Fehring across undulating terrain. It's a first class experience all around, but the club never loses sight of its raison d'être - a very playable golf course.
Bad Saarow (Stan Eby)
North East Germany, Germany
Bad Saarow (Stan Eby)
Officially opened in 2001 with a pro-am event before the 15th edition of the now defunct Ladies German Open, the Stan Eby course at Golf Club Bad Saadow sits on a hill overlooking the resort, with great views of the surrounding landscape.
Schloss Langenstein
South West Germany, Germany
Schloss Langenstein
You’ll find that a round on the 18-hole course at Schloss Langenstein offers as close to a quintessential British parkland golf experience as you could ever wish for.
Jakobsberg
South West Germany, Germany
Jakobsberg
The history of the Jakobsberg golf course starts in 1157, when Frederick I Barbarossa founded a monastery on a plateau high above the majestic Rhine valley...
Hofgut Georgenthal
South West Germany, Germany
Hofgut Georgenthal
It must be assumed that for the last couple of centuries the Hofgut Georgenthal estate was a rather unpopular place, as it was the church's official leaseholder for collecting the tithe from the surrounding farms.
Haxterpark (Haxterhöhe Links)
West Germany, Germany
Haxterpark (Haxterhöhe Links)
Home venue of the Paderborn University golf teams, the Haxterhöhe Links course at Haxterpark was laid out in the style of a Celtic links by Achim Reinmuth of Städler Golf Courses, with shaping by Conor J. Walsh.
St Leon-Rot (St Leon)
South West Germany, Germany
St Leon-Rot (St Leon)
You’ll need a long and accurate game to tame the St Leon course at St Leon-Rot and you’ll also need a soft touch around these greens...
Hamburger Hittfeld
North West Germany, Germany
Hamburger Hittfeld
Hamburger Hittfeld celebrated its 50th birthday in 2007 and the John Morrison designed layout is still as enthralling today as it was half a century ago.
Schloss Klingenburg
South East Germany, Germany
Schloss Klingenburg
This is an excellent course that all Donald Harradine connoisseurs will truly enjoy. Terrain dictates rhythm – nowhere is this truer than at Schloss Klingenburg Golf Club...
Reichswald-Nürnberg
South East Germany, Germany
Reichswald-Nürnberg
Although Golf Club am Reichswald was founded in 1960, an inaugural 9-hole course didn’t appear until four years later. Another decade would then pass before today’s 18-hole layout came into play in 1974.
Freiburger
South West Germany, Germany
Freiburger
Founded with a 9-hole course in 1970, Freiburger Golfclub evolved over time to develop a fine 18-hole layout.
Ostsee-Wittenbeck (Eikhof)
North East Germany, Germany
Ostsee-Wittenbeck (Eikhof)
The Eikhof course at the Ostsee Golf Resort Wittenbeck has distant sea views, a links-like styling, no trees and ample wind - but also numerous water features and extensive bunkering and mounding.
Hardenberg (Niedersachsen)
North West Germany, Germany
Hardenberg (Niedersachsen)
The signature hole on the Niedersachsen course is the par three 11th and its island green complex is shaped like a boar’s head, exactly as depicted on the Hardenberg family crest.
Golf Valley München (A & B)
South East Germany, Germany
Golf Valley München (A & B)
The “A” and “B” nines at Golf Valley München comprise the longest and toughest 18-hole course at this 27-hole complex but the water-laden “C” circuit is a favourite of many with its island green at the “signature” 7th hole.
Bad Saarow (Faldo Berlin)
North East Germany, Germany
Bad Saarow (Faldo Berlin)
There are golf holes to spare at Golf Club Bad Saarow (formerly known as Sporting Club Berlin Scharmützelsee) – 63 in total – but the centrepiece of this golf resort, which is situated in Bad Saarow next to the beautiful Lake Scharmützel, is the Faldo Berlin course.
Wendelinus (A & C)
South West Germany, Germany
Wendelinus (A & C)
Interesting sites for building golf courses are becoming increasingly rare, but at St Wendel a great opportunity presented itself when the French military left the city in 1999... welcome Wendelinus Golfpark.
Gut Düneburg
North West Germany, Germany
Gut Düneburg
Things are generally pretty low key at Gut Düneburg and the golf course doesn't shove its features in your face, but there’s a quiet air of quality underlying everything.
Schloss Wilkendorf (Sandy Lyle)
North East Germany, Germany
Schloss Wilkendorf (Sandy Lyle)
The Sandy Lyle course at Schloss Wilkendorf is set in rolling secluded Brandenburg countryside to the north east of Berlin. The former Masters champion designed it with a little help from Ross McMurray of European Golf Design.
Regensburg
South East Germany, Germany
Regensburg
The course at Golf- und Land-Club Regensburg is an exemplary Donald Harradine design on a pretty severe site. It certainly exudes plenty of blue-blooded elegance, but also an element of blue-collar raucousness…
Gut Apeldör (Big Apple)
North West Germany, Germany
Gut Apeldör (Big Apple)
The Big Apple 18-hole course was the first layout to appear at the 27-hole Golf Club Gut Apeldör facility in the mid-1990s, with fairways routed around several large water hazards.
Düsseldorfer
West Germany, Germany
Düsseldorfer
Düsseldorfer Golf Club's adventure starts off with three moderate holes and then the rollercoaster is kick started...
Stuttgarter Solitude
South West Germany, Germany
Stuttgarter Solitude
Stuttgarter Golf Club Solitude was founded way back in 1927 but the prolific architect Dr Bernhard von Limburger designed the current layout in the late 1960s.
Gut Kaden (B & C)
North West Germany, Germany
Gut Kaden (B & C)
Set in extensive grounds, with an old manor house as a grand clubhouse, the three nines at Gut Kaden are named – in somewhat uninspiring fashion – A, B and C.
Hamburg Wendlohe (A&B)
North West Germany, Germany
Hamburg Wendlohe (A&B)
Founded in 1964, Golf Club Hamburg Wendlohe had a 9-hole course in operation six years after its formation. By 1973 the “A” and “B” nines were in play, with an additional 9-hole “C” circuit introduced in the late 1980s.
St Leon-Rot (Rot)
South West Germany, Germany
St Leon-Rot (Rot)
The Rot course at St Leon Rot Golf Club was opened in 1997 and hosted the European Tour's Deutsche Bank/SAP Open in 1999 and 2001 – Tiger Woods won on both occasions.
Bodensee Weissensberg
South East Germany, Germany
Bodensee Weissensberg
Designed by Robert Trent Jones Snr and unveiled in 1987, the woodland course at Golfclub Bodensee Weissensberg lies close to Lake Constance, in southern Germany. With more than a hundred bunkers in play, it’s renowned as a tough track.
Heildelberg-Lobenfeld
South West Germany, Germany
Heildelberg-Lobenfeld
Golfclub Heidelberg-Lobenfeld was founded in 1968 and a 9-hole layout designed Donald Harradine was inaugurated five years later. By 1978 this layout was extended to eighteen holes and it’s since been modified in the new millennium by Thomas Himmel.
Schloss Ludersburg (Lakes)
North West Germany, Germany
Schloss Ludersburg (Lakes)
The Lakes course at Schloss Lüdersburg Golf Resort opened in 1999 and it’s fashioned in an American links-like style with vast expanses of water, challenging greens and tight fairways.
Münchener (B & C)
South East Germany, Germany
Münchener (B & C)
Münchener Golf Club dates back to 1910 but its current 27-hole golf facility is relatively modern. Eighteen Bernhard von Limburger holes were unveiled in 1964 and Kurt Rossknecht added another nine in 1996 before Perry Dye carried out a complete remodel a decade later.
Tegernseer Bad Wiessee
South East Germany, Germany
Tegernseer Bad Wiessee
While the first beginnings of Tegernseer Bad Wiessee Golf Club date back to 1958, the site is not overgrown with trees, so there are some great views, even a few of the otherwise elusive lake.
München Eichenried
South West Germany, Germany
München Eichenried
Established in 1989 as a 27-hole golf facility, Golfclub München Eichenried has since staged more than twenty editions of the BMW International Open on the men’s professional European golf tour.
Hardenberg (Göttingen)
North West Germany, Germany
Hardenberg (Göttingen)
The Göttingen course at the 36-hole Golf Resort Hardenberg was developed in two stages, with the front nine laid out by Donald Harradine in 1971 and the back nine following sixteen years later, when Hannover-based Wolfgang Siegmann completed the 18-hole design.
Taunus-Weilrod
South West Germany, Germany
Taunus-Weilrod
The course at Taunus-Weilrod Golf Club is full of exciting shots, scenic views and death-defying challenges that "could not be built today".
Sonnenalp-Oberallgäu (Oberallgäu)
South East Germany, Germany
Sonnenalp-Oberallgäu (Oberallgäu)
Kurt Rossknecht's spectacular Oberallgäu mountain course at the Sonnenalp-Oberallgäu Golf Resort dates from 2004 and it’s situated on the edge of an Alpine valley, complete with 360° views and wild terrain...
Herzogswalde (Links & Parkland)
North East Germany, Germany
Herzogswalde (Links & Parkland)
Situated on the northern edge of the Tharandt Forest, between Freiburg and Dresden, the 9-hole Links course was added to the existing Parkland nine at Golfclub Herzogswalde by Christian Althaus in 2017, creating an exciting new 18-hole layout for the club.
Schloss Myllendonk
West Germany, Germany
Schloss Myllendonk
A mid-1960s Donald Harradine design, the course at Golfclub Schloss Myllendonk was renovated in recent years by Christoph Städler, resulting in the upgrading of tees, fairways and greens, along with the introduction of two new holes.
Oberstaufen-Steibis
South East Germany, Germany
Oberstaufen-Steibis
The strength of the Steibis mountain course at Oberstaufen-Steibis Golf Club is that the spectacular Alpine landscape gives up just enough manageable terrain for a full 18-hole layout.
Green Eagle Golf Courses (North)
North West Germany, Germany
Green Eagle Golf Courses (North)
At 7,845 yards, the North course at Green Eagle is one of the longest courses anywhere, built to host professional tournaments and even the Ryder Cup. Besides the usual Tour styling, its defining element is the extremely undulated greens.