North Berwick Golf Club
Course Details
- Established: 1832
- Designer: David Strath, Old Tom Morris, Ben Sayers
- Course Type: Links
- Holes: 18
- Par: 71
Facilities & Amenities
About This Course
North Berwick Golf Club is exactly the sort of course that reminds you why bucket-list golf is worth the trouble when the place has real identity instead of just reputation. Established in 1832, set in North Berwick, North Berwick Golf Club has the kind of profile that instantly sharpens expectations: 18 holes, par 71, and design input from David Strath, Old Tom Morris, Ben Sayers. It sits at No. 29 in the Golf Monthly Top 100 2023/24 list, which tells you straight away this is not a “nice if you’re nearby” stop but a course serious golfers actively plan trips around. That ranking matters because there are plenty of famous clubs in Britain and Ireland, but not all of them feel vivid once you are actually on the ground. This one does. What separates the course from lesser prestige venues is that the interest is structural, not cosmetic. Quirky traditional links with famous Redan 15th. Walls through fairways, varied greens, sea on 6 holes. The architecture leans into firm-running turf, wind exposure, and ground-game options, so the course is rarely about smashing driver and hoping talent sorts out the rest. Instead, the challenge lives in angle, trajectory, and acceptance that the ball will not always behave politely. That gives the round replay value. You can make your way around once and enjoy the scenery, then immediately start thinking about how differently you would tackle half the course next time. That is usually the sign of somewhere genuinely good. The setting also does a lot of work without turning the course into postcard nonsense. In this part of Scotland, the atmosphere around the round is part of the appeal: travel feels purposeful, the landscape makes sense for the golf being asked of you, and the venue carries enough gravitas that even the warm-up tends to feel like the opening chapter rather than administrative delay. The good news for travelling golfers is that it is a real visitor course rather than a purely theoretical dream. Typical visitor pricing runs from £140 to £200 depending on day and package. For a course of this calibre, that usually means you are buying not just a tee time but a day with some shape to it: arrive early, use the practice ground properly, have lunch or a drink after, and let the place breathe a bit. From a playing standpoint, the most impressive thing is usually the balance between examination and fairness. Great courses do not need to trick you; they just expose loose thinking. The smartest players on links land are usually the ones who stop fighting it and start using it. Better players will find plenty of chances to be bold, but mid-handicappers can still have a proper day if they keep the ball in the correct corridors and accept that discretion is often the sensible play. By the time you reach the closing holes, the best versions of a course like this make one thing obvious: the score matters, but the memory is built from the sequence of questions the layout asks. North Berwick Golf Club has enough personality to make those questions stick.
Signature Holes
The Famous Redan Influence
This is the hole everyone wants to talk about afterwards. The classic angled green asks for shape, nerve, and acceptance that feeding the ball in from the right line is smarter than firing directly at a flag you cannot really attack.
Momentum Shifter
This is the kind of par 4 that defines the round’s rhythm. A drive in play is only step one; the real challenge is earning the correct angle into a green that asks for control rather than apology. Birdie is available, but only if the tee shot was properly thought through.
Back-Nine Decision Hole
A proper strategic three-shotter for most golfers, though stronger players will spend the walk from tee to ball arguing with themselves about whether to press on. The hole is memorable because every decision changes the next one.
Serious Finisher
A closer with enough bite to ruin a card or crown a good one. The tee shot demands commitment, the approach rarely feels casual, and par has the satisfying feel of something earned.
Best Time to Visit
Late spring to early autumn
May, June, July, August, September
This is the sweet spot for links golf: long daylight, firmer turf, and the best chance of getting the running conditions the architect intended. Shoulder-season golf can be excellent too, but wind and rain become a bigger part of the deal.
Nearby Attractions
North Berwick for pubs, post-round food, and the practical stuff you want near a tee time
Attraction
East Lothian sightseeing and coastal or countryside drives depending on your route
Attraction
Enough accommodation choice to turn the round into an overnight or multi-course trip
Attraction
The Verdict
North Berwick Golf Club is the sort of course that justifies a dedicated trip rather than a casual detour. It suits golfers who enjoy architecture, atmosphere, and a round that keeps making them think. If you want cheap and easy, look elsewhere; if you want memorable, this is your kind of place.
Plan Your Visit
For booking information and current green fee rates, we recommend contacting the course directly or visiting their website.
View on Map