Skip to main content

The best golf courses in Colorado: Where to play

When you are over skiing, swing your clubs at the best golf courses in Colorado.

Cattail Creek Golf Course.
Cattail Creek Golf Course

You might picture more winter-type sports when you think of Colorado, but the state needs to be acknowledged for its abundance of notable golf courses. With almost year-round conditions to work your wedges, Colorado golf courses are important for the wildlife and infrastructure across the state. If you want to do your part as a golfer, these are the best golf courses in Colorado to tee off at.

Courses for more of a challenge

RainDance National golf course.
Raindance National Resort & Golf

RainDance National

PGA Tour Champ Fred Funk helped design the RainDance National, which opened in 2022 in Windsor. The course isn’t for the faint of heart, with more than 250 feet of elevation changes, challenging tee boxes, and over 8,400 yards of unforgiving terrain. If you want a course to test your skills, this is one for you. On the bright side, the views from all 18 holes are stunning.

Recommended Videos

Colorado Golf Club

A Ben Crenshaw and Bill Coore design, the Colorado Golf Club is made of 18 holes across 7,600 yards of challenging green. Holes 15 and 16 are a risky par 5 that leads into a more fun par 3 hole 17. Don’t let the beauty of the tree-lined hilly terrain distract you, those fairways are littered with hazards, like the water feature you’ll have to battle on hole 16.

Good courses for beginners

Cherokee Ridge Golf Course.
Cherokee Ridge Golf Course

Cattail Creek Golf Course

If you are a newer golfer — or just haven’t found your swing yet — bring your clubs to the Cattail Creek Golf Course in Loveland. It’s a smaller 9-hole course with every hole a par 3. With a driving range to warm up on and self-teaching stations for you to work on whatever part of your game needs help, this course is perfect for a starter before tackling some of the other ones.

Cherokee Ridge Golf Course

Open for tee time since 1971, Cherokee Ridge Golf Course is a gentle 9-hole, par 3 course. It’s a great spot to learn how to play, get a quick game in while on vacation, or work on tightening up your skills. The gorgeous views of Pikes Peak and the Rocky Mountains are a bonus. Though it’s a 9-hole course, you could play twice from different sets of tees, of which there are 3, if you want to get a full 18 holes in.

Courses with a view

Sanctuary Golf Club.
Sanctuary Golf Club

Telluride Golf Club

There is nothing like the feeling of swinging a club at the highest-elevation golf course in the world. Telluride Golf Club sits on the beautiful Turkey Creek Mesa, with 13,000 to 14,000-foot peaks to make you forget how bad your handicap looks. But actually, the thinner air should help your score since the ball doesn’t have as much resistance to fight. Be ready for the best long drives you’ve ever hit, but stop and take in the panoramic view at the 17th tee.

Sanctuary Golf Club

You can’t go wrong with 12,500 acres of gorgeous landscape for your next round of golf. See nothing but the foothills of the Rock Mountains with no development in sight, as the Sanctuary Golf Club lives up to its name for golfers of any experience level. If you are lucky enough to play at Sanctuary, be on the lookout for black bears, mountain lions, or bobcats, who call the course home. To keep the course pristine, only 9,000 rounds are allowed to be played there each year, with most of them fundraising tournaments whose money gets donated to charity.

Courses with history

Fossil Trace Golf Club.
Fossil Trace Golf Club

Fossil Trace Golf Club

Golf is an old sport, but it isn’t dinosaurs old. If you want to combine your love of history with your passion for golf, the Fossil Trace Golf Club will cover you from tee to tail. Though the course opened in 2003, 64 million years ago, dinos walked around holes 11 through 15. You’ll swing next to triceratops footprints and could even look at mining equipment along the course.

Ballyneal Golf Club

Making GolfDigest’s 100 Greatest Courses list consistently since 2011, Ballyneal Golf Club transports players to Scotland in the 1400s, where they will feel like they are witnessing the start of golf. Just because the course takes on a minimalist look doesn’t mean it’s easy. The combination of high plains and sand dunes makes for a windy fight for each hole on the links-ish green.

The Broadmoor Golf Club

If you want to play on a course that has seen some things, the Broadmoor Golf Club celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2023. President Eisenhower, Bob Hope, and Bing Crosby all played a round on the green, and it was host to the U.S. Men’s Senior Open in 2018 and the 2011 U.S. Women’s Open. Talk about a rich history. There is an East Course and West Course on the grounds, which are pretty similar, except you might like the views on the West Course a little better.

With plenty of beautiful Rocky Mountain views, some courses open 362 days a year, and a general golf time frame of 10 months out of the year available for tee time, there’s a reason this state is a golf destination. Play for the view, the history, or the challenge — just make time for a round at these golf courses in Colorado.

Dannielle Beardsley
Dannielle has written for various websites, online magazines, and blogs. She loves everything celebrity and her favorite…
This is when you can go to national parks for free in 2025
Visit a national park in 2025 during one of these special days for a waved entrance fee
Yosemite National Park in winter

There are over 400 national parks, monuments, and historical sites in the United States, so if visiting a national park is on your bucket list, 2025 is the year to make it happen! The National Park Service has just announced six free entrance days for the new year so visitors can enjoy the beauty and history of America’s parks without paying an entrance fee.
Here's a list of free entrance days for 2025

January 20 – Martin Luther King Jr. Day
April 19 – First Day of National Park Week
June 19 – Juneteenth National Independence Day
August 4 – Great American Outdoors Act Signing Day
September 27 – National Public Lands Day
November 11 – Veterans Day

Read more
Why winter is secretly the best time to visit Yosemite National Park
Don't miss these adventures at Yosemite in winter
Yosemite National Park in winter

With 4 million visitors this past year, Yosemite National Park is one of the most visited in the country. Crowds spike in the summer and reservations for lodging are tough to snag, but you'll avoid many of those problems if you choose to visit the park during the winter season. Whether it's gliding down the mountain at the Badger Pass Ski area or enjoying the Yosemite Firefall that will light up Horsetail Falls in February, this national park has so much winter fun to offer you and your crew. Here's everything you need to know (and more) about Yosemite in winter.
What you should know before you visit Yosemite in winter

Just because you come during the winter doesn't mean you're exempt from the $35 standard entrance fee, which grants access to the park for a full seven consecutive days. Reservations aren't typically required for park entry during this time due to the manageable crowds, but it's still essential to plan for certain activities (such as the Badger Pass Ski Area) and any overnight accommodations.

Read more
Winter camping made comfortable: The best tents for cold-weather adventures
Stay warm in one of these warm tents for winter camping
Woman with a headlamp camping in a winter tent surrounded by snow.

Winter camping isn't for the faint of heart. You've got to deal with deep snows, high winds, and freezing temperatures, but the right winter tent can be the difference between a memorable adventure and a miserable one. Your tent will protect you during the coldest hours of the early morning, so it better be a good one. In this guide, we'll be looking at what to consider when buying a winter tent and discussing the best tent for winter camping, as we've found two options.
Things to consider when buying a winter tent

Tent type
When considering what kind of tent to buy for your winter adventure, make sure you purchase a tent designed for the cold. Summer-grade tents are primarily designed for maximum ventilation to keep you cool, but that's not going to fly in the winter. Choose one that's marked as a four-season or mountaineering tent. These are built for harsher conditions and can withstand the extra weather challenges that you will face during the winter.

Read more