12 insanely private golf courses you will never get to play

Chances of playing here are slim and none, and Slim just left town.
Sensei Porcupine Creek
The golf course at Sensei Porcupine Creek is available for resort guests only.

(Originally published in 2015.)

When you hear the phrase "most exclusive golf courses," I bet you think of names like Pine Valley, Augusta National and Cypress Point.

But I'd also wager you probably know a couple of people who have played at least one or two of those courses. My father has played Augusta and Pine Valley, for example (lucky him).

On the other hand, the following courses are so private, you nor your golf pals have likely ever heard of them (and in some cases, we don't even have a course page for them).

And that's by design - you can count how many members they have on one hand or, in some cases, on one finger.

Plus, these courses have never appeared on any lists...until now.

Here are a dozen of the most insanely private golf courses and ridiculously exclusive golf clubs in the world:

Cherokee Plantation - Yemassee, S.C.

Cherokee Plantation's course winds through a proper Old South-style estate. (Bing Maps)

Wall Street billionaire Dirk E. Ziff is one of about two dozen member/owners of Cherokee Plantation near Yemassee, South Carolina. The property is a few thousand acres large, with a Donald Steel-designed golf course at the heart which hosts fewer than a thousand rounds in most years. The scant writings that exist about the club place the joining fee around $1 million and the annual dues around $85,000. But just because you have the money, it is far from guaranteed you'll get in.

Due Process Stable - Colts Neck, N.J.

This Johnny Miller/Gene Bates-designed course, located in Colts Neck, New Jersey, used to be the private territory of Robert Brennan, who headed a penny stock trading company until he was jailed for a decade for money laundering in 2001 (after being released from prison, Brennan went to work at the course). Named after the associated thoroughbred racing stable, Due Process eventually ended up in the possession of a former Goldman Sachs executive and one of the co-founders of Arizona Iced Tea. Now, it is probably the least-exclusive course on this list, with a relatively large membership (between 100 and 150, we hear), each in at a reported $350,000 initiation fee.

The Institute - Morgan Hill, Calif.

This Silicon Valley course designed by Damian Pascuzzo adds a layer of mischief to mystery. It belongs solely to Frys.com leader John Fry, and it can stretch to more than 8,000 yards if all back tees are used by him or selected guests. Interestingly, the Institute was built without the appropriate permits, but has since been deemed up-to-code. At one point it was expected to take over as the host of the PGA Tour's now nonexistent Frys.com Open, but that never came to fruition. However, it did open its doors to host an NCAA Regional in 2023.

Windwalker Ranch - Steamboat Springs, Colo.

Cherokee Plantation co-owner Dirk Ziff also owns this nine-hole treasure tucked on a triangular plot along the Yampa River about five miles south of the ski-and-golf-mad town of Steamboat Springs. Ziff's partner in the venture: former Augusta National Golf Club chairman Billy Payne. You and I may never get on Windwalker but chances are PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan, who owns a house in the area, probably can.

Morefar Back O'Beyond Golf Club - Brewster, N.Y.

Located on the New York-Connecticut line, part of this mysterious club is actually visible from another course: the municipal Richter Park in Danbury, Conn. But that's the closest you are likely to get to this layout, unless you're an invited high-ranking employee or client of insurance giant AIG, whose former CEOs Cornelius Vander Starr and Maurice Greenberg guided the property into quiet fame. In addition to the immaculately-kept grounds, those who have played Morefar have marveled at the statues and sculptures placed throughout the course, including one in the middle of a bunker. The atmosphere and even the club's logo echo the Chinese influence on AIG's history.

White Oak Plantation - Yulee, Fla.

white-oak-conservation.png
White Oak Conservation is home to exotic and endangered wildlife, as well as two golf courses, including one of Pete Dye's last designs.

This 17,000-acre preserve owned by Mark and Kimbra Walter (part of the ownership of the Los Angeles Dodgers) is first and foremost a wildlife sanctuary, housing species like Asian elephants, cheetahs, giraffes and rhinoceros. It is also home to 27 holes of golf. Its nine-hole course was laid out in 1989 by Steve Melnyk and in the past has been available to visitors who make the necessary arrangements in conjunction with a tour of the wildlife preserve. Around 2018, though, a new 18-hole course was built adjacent to the nine-holer. The original plans were created by Pete Dye, and a Google Earth perusal of the course shows all the hallmarks of a Dye design, including an island-green par 3 and long, angled bunkers interspersed with small pots.

Porcupine Creek Golf Club - Rancho Mirage, Calif.

Once threatened, Porcupine Creek is again a billionaire's playground. (Google Maps)

Funny name, wild story. You may have read about Tim and Edra Blixseth, who developed the extremely private (but still too well-known for this list) Yellowstone Club in Montana and subsequently fell on hard times when the now-divorced couple's financial house collapsed on them. Porcupine Creek was the couple's private estate course until they were forced to sell it in 2011. Thereafter, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison would use the course as his private retreat, even hosting President Obama for a round in 2015.

In 2023, however, Ellison converted Porcupine Creek into a super-high-end Sensei wellness resort, so it's still an exclusive golf course, but not nearly as much as the other courses on this list.

TX0 (formerly Wolf Point Club) - Port Lavaca, Texas

You've probably never heard of Port Lavaca, Texas, about 125 miles southwest of Houston. TX0 course architect, Mike Nuzzo, labored under the radar for years, too, before earning accolades for his work at Cabot Citrus Farms. Built for a single client, TX0 is the ultimate "backyard" golf course. It has a standard 18-hole routing but is so broad and expansive that it can be played in numerous configurations. The lucky few who have been invited to play say the rumpled fairways, heaving greens and firm conditions remind of The Old Course at St. Andrews. In 2020, Zach Peed, owner of the Dormie Network of private destination golf clubs, purchased it in 2020 and re-branded the club from its original name of Wolf Point to the official code of the property's on-site airstrip. It's not an official part of the network, but has been accessed by fly-in/fly-out guests in recent years. So if you have private aircraft access, you might be able to get on.

Domaine Laforest - Charlevoix-Est, Quebec, Canada

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Domaine Laforest sits some five hours north of Montreal.

Thomas McBroom is little-known in the States, but he is one of Canada's best-regarded architects. So when late Canadian energy billionaire Paul Desmarais wanted to build a private golf retreat for himself and invited guests, he turned to McBroom, who fashioned the course on Desmarais' hilly, enormous and remote private estate northeast of Quebec City. Invitees have historically been flown to the course in helicopters owned by Desmarais' company, Power Corp.

Ellerston Golf Club - Ellerston, New South Wales, Australia

By the time he died in 2005, Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer had amassed a fortune of some A$6.5 billion. Now administrated by son James Packer, Ellerston is at the heart of a multi-thousand-acre tract of land north of Sydney belonging to the family, where Kerry Packer instructed Greg Norman's design team to find the best portion for a golf course and get to work. The result is a course routinely ranked in the top five in Australia...not that you're likely to receive an invite. But if you do, bring a lot of golf balls - the course is regarded as one of the toughest in the world.

Golf De Vidauban/"Prince de Provence" - Vidauban, France

We're reasonably sure this is the secretive Vidauban/Prince de Provence course. (Google Maps)

This is just one of many names to which this Robert Trent Jones, Sr./RTJ Jr. tandem effort has been referred in the past. With just two dozen captain-of-industry members, this club near the town of Vidauban is so secretive that rumor has it that guests are blindfolded en route to the course in order to keep it as hidden as possible from the outside world.

Royal Palace Golf Club - Agadir, Morocco

The Prince of Morocco's palace contains a golf course behind its crenellated walls, which even border a couple holes of the Robert Trent Jones, Jr. design. The course used to host a DP World Tour event, but has disappeared from the schedule. Unless you're an invited guest of the Prince, you'll have to dream of playing here, where many months sometimes pass between rounds. We understand the course is always kept in perfect shape just in case the Prince has the urge to play.

Yemassee, South Carolina
Private
0.0
0
Colts Neck, New Jersey
Private
5.0
1
Morgan Hill, California
Private
5.0
1
Brewster, New York
Private
5.0
1
Rancho Mirage, California
Private
5.0
1
Weedhaven, Texas
Private
5.0
1
Ellerston, New South Wales
Private
0.0
0
Vidauban, Var
Private
0.0
0

Do you know any other similarly ultra-exclusive golf courses? Have you, against all odds, played any of them? As always, we'd love to hear your thoughts and experiences below in the comments.

Tim Gavrich is a Senior Writer for GolfPass. Follow him on Twitter @TimGavrich and on Instagram @TimGavrich.
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12 insanely private golf courses you will never get to play
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