Golf Club Achensee

📍 Tyrol, Austria Alpine Championship 18 holes, Par 71
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Course Details

  • Established: 1934
  • Designer: Sepp Meßner
  • Course Type: Alpine Championship
  • Holes: 18
  • Par: 71

Facilities & Amenities

driving rangeputting greenpro shopclubhouserestaurant

About This Course

Golf Club Achensee is one of the more interesting golfing stops in Tyrol, offering a 18-hole, par-71 test that carries the fingerprints of Sepp Meßner. Established in 1934, the course sits in a part of Austria where golf is as much about the setting and travel rhythm as it is about the scorecard. Even before getting into individual holes, the place has a clear identity: this is an alpine championship venue rather than a generic club layout, and that distinction matters when you are deciding whether it deserves space on an itinerary. The broad appeal is easy to understand. Alpine course with spectacular mountain scenery beside Lake Achensee A course from Sepp Meßner also comes with a certain expectation. Players are usually looking for more than conditioning; they want holes that ask for thought from the tee, approaches that reward angle as much as length, and greens that make position matter. Golf Club Achensee fits that brief better than many resort-facing properties because the challenge is not limited to a couple of headline holes. The round tends to build through smart pacing, with holes that ask for restraint one minute and commitment the next. The par-71 card also tells only part of the story. On paper, 18 holes might suggest a familiar championship formula, but the actual experience depends on how the course uses width, contour, hazards, and exposure. At venues like this, the quality often lies in the variety: a tee shot that looks generous but favours one side, a par 3 where wind and elevation change the real number, or a par 5 that is reachable only if the drive finds exactly the right section of fairway. Golfers who enjoy plotting a round tend to get more from courses of this type than players who simply want to overpower them. What separates it from flatter inland venues is the alpine framing: mountain air, shifting light, and the constant sense that the terrain is part of the round rather than just scenery around it. Green fees typically sit around EUR 75-95, which helps position the course in the local market and gives a fair sense of whether the experience is aiming at value, premium resort golf, or something more exclusive. Its mapped location also points to a genuine destination-course profile rather than a purely local members venue, making it easier to build a wider trip around the round. From a trip-planning perspective, Golf Club Achensee also makes sense because it offers more than a single memorable photo opportunity. The established date gives it credibility, the architecture gives it purpose, and the regional setting gives it atmosphere. That combination usually produces the rounds people remember most clearly once the holiday is over. It may not promise perfection on every hole, but it does offer something better: a recognisable character. For travelling golfers, that is the difference between a course that is merely played and one that is genuinely worth seeking out. The most reliable playing window is May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, when conditions are usually at their most settled and the course presents itself as intended.

Signature Holes

Hole undefined
3
170 yards

Early Momentum Builder

An early hole that tends to reveal how Golf Club Achensee wants to be played. It looks straightforward from the tee, but the real defence is positioning: the safe line leaves a longer putt, while the aggressive line brings the main trouble into play. On a alpine championship course, this is the sort of hole that quickly teaches the value of patience.

Hole undefined
4
405 yards

Risk-Reward Mid-Round Test

This is where strategy starts to outweigh autopilot golf. A solid drive can set up a realistic birdie chance, but the hole is at its toughest when the tee ball misses the ideal angle. Expect bunkering, contour, or a diagonal line of trouble to influence decision-making all the way to the green.

Hole undefined
4
430 yards

The Thinking Player’s Hole

A classic back-nine hole that rewards proper sequencing. Long hitters may be tempted to force the issue, but the better play is often to divide the hole into sensible sections and arrive at the green with control. It is the sort of hole where one bold swing can make birdie possible, but one loose one can turn into a number quickly.

Hole undefined
4
430 yards

Strong Finisher

A proper closing hole should make you commit, and this one does. The tee shot asks for conviction rather than sheer violence, and the approach usually plays with enough pressure to expose any lapse in rhythm. It is a satisfying finish because par feels earned, not handed out.

Playing Tips

  • Play for the correct side of the fairway rather than just the fairway itself; angle into the green matters on a lot of holes like this.
  • In the mountains, elevation and temperature can make the ball fly differently from the flat. Trust the adjusted number, not just your stock yardage.
  • Treat the first six holes as reconnaissance as much as attack. Once you understand the pace of the greens and the true carry numbers, scoring chances become clearer.
  • If you are between clubs, choose the option that leaves an uphill putt. These greens are easier to handle from below the hole than from the wrong tier.
  • Do not assume every par 5 is a green light. Lay-up positioning is often what creates the best birdie opportunity.
  • Respect the venue’s rhythm: courses with this profile usually punish one rushed swing more than they reward one heroic one.

Best Time to Visit

May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep

May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep

The most reliable playing window is May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, when conditions are usually at their most settled and the course presents itself as intended.

Nearby Attractions

Lake and mountain viewpoints

Attraction

Hiking and spa-hotel stays

Attraction

Tyrolean dining and easy scenic excursions

Attraction

The Verdict

Golf Club Achensee looks like the kind of course that makes sense for golfers who value setting, architecture, and a venue with a clear point of view. It should appeal most to travelling players building a broader trip through Tyrol, rather than people hunting only for bargain golf. If the conditioning matches the design intent on the day, this is the sort of round that feels well chosen rather than merely ticked off.

Plan Your Visit

For booking information and current green fee rates, we recommend contacting the course directly or visiting their website.

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