Category: Golf Course Review

Hollywood Beach Golf Club Review: Worth the Drive From Miami?

The clubhouse and entrance at Hollywood Beach Golf Club with the course logo and American flag.
The first impression begins in the parking lot where golfers gather before heading to the first tee.

You have to really love golf to willingly leave Miami and sit in South Florida traffic for a tee time.

Anyone who lives here understands exactly what I mean. Every highway feels crowded. Every trip seems to take longer than it should. For years, I convinced myself that once golf season ended and the snowbirds returned north, traffic would ease up. Somehow, it never does.

That’s why when I do make the drive, I’m hoping to find something worth talking about.

Dwayne Tucker hitting a three hybrid toward the green at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
Taking on a demanding approach shot. The bunker protects the left side while trouble waits long and right. A hole that rewards commitment more than caution.

A few months ago, In Flight Magazine, a Bahamian publication, asked me to recommend a public golf course near Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport. It was a good question.

Many Bahamians fly into Fort Lauderdale regularly for shopping, business, and long weekends. Whenever we’re traveling, we’re always looking for things to do, places to eat, and ways to make the most of our time. If you’re traveling with your clubs, adding a round of golf to the mix is usually a pretty good idea.

Located roughly 10 to 15 minutes from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, Hollywood Beach Golf Club is one of the more convenient public golf options in the area. Whether you’re squeezing in a round before heading home or looking for somewhere to play shortly after landing, location alone makes it worth knowing about.

But convenience only gets a course on the list.

The real question is whether it’s worth playing.

A Course I Once Overlooked

dwayne-tucker-birdie-putt-hollywood-beach.jpg
Every good golf course eventually asks you to earn it on the greens.

Years ago, I remember driving past Hollywood Beach Golf Club and wondering why such a well-located property felt forgotten.

It seemed like the type of place that should have been a centerpiece for the local golf community, yet never quite stood out to me. At the time, golf wasn’t experiencing the surge in popularity it enjoys today, and public golf throughout South Florida looked very different than it does now.

Fast forward to today and the course feels like it has found its footing again.

Originally designed by Donald Ross and opened in 1924, Hollywood Beach Golf Club carries a quiet piece of South Florida golf history. Ross, known for his strategic layouts and subtle green complexes, left his imprint here in ways that still show up throughout the round.

The property has undergone significant restoration work over the years, bringing renewed life to one of South Florida’s historic golf courses and reminding golfers why it mattered in the first place.

Public Golf Matters

Titleist golf bag with Shell Bay, PGA National Resort, Fisher Island, and Miami Lakes headcovers.
A few memories ride with me every round. Every headcover tells the story of another course, another friendship, and another day spent chasing this game.

While I’m fortunate to spend time around private clubs such as Coral Ridge, Lago Mar, and Shell Bay, I’ve always believed public golf is where the game truly grows.

Public courses are where beginners fall in love with golf.

They’re where friendships are formed.

They’re where junior golfers learn.

They’re where communities are built.

The best public golf courses don’t just provide a place to play. They provide a place to belong.

After my visit, I could understand why local golfers continue to support it.

First Impressions

Lake beside the cart path at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
Water is never far away and often becomes part of the decision making.
Large banyan tree beside a fairway at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
The mature trees give the course much of its personality and frame many of the holes beautifully.

The first thing I noticed was character.

Hollywood Beach Golf Club sits right in the middle of a neighborhood, yet somehow the routing works surprisingly well.

The property feels almost like a large square, with portions of the front nine working around the perimeter while sections of the back nine move through the interior of the property. Despite the surrounding homes, the course flows naturally from hole to hole and never feels cramped.

Mature trees frame many of the holes and help give the course character, creating a classic South Florida atmosphere that is becoming increasingly difficult to find.

The layout rewards good decision making.

There are opportunities to be aggressive, but there are consequences for missing your target. On several holes, a miss left can quickly bring out of bounds into play. On others, water waits on the right side. A few holes punish misses in either direction.

It’s not an overly difficult golf course, but it asks you to pay attention. The further the round progresses, the more you begin to appreciate positioning and course management over simply trying to overpower it.

When people ask me about public golf near Fort Lauderdale, my mind usually goes to Jacaranda West and Emerald Hills.

Jacaranda has benefited from recent improvements and remains one of my favorite public golf experiences in South Florida. Emerald Hills has also improved over the years. The last time I played, the greens were finally moving in a much better direction than previous visits.

Hollywood Beach Golf Club belongs in that conversation.

Not because it’s trying to compete with either course directly, but because it offers a different experience. It has history, character, and a layout that keeps you engaged without beating you up.

Through My Lens

Bridge crossing over a water hazard at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
The routing asks you to think your way around the course. Water and out of bounds appear throughout the round without ever feeling excessive.

Before golf, I’m a photographer.

And the funny thing is that the longer I spend around golf courses, the more similarities I find between photography and course maintenance.

A well-retouched beauty portrait and a well-maintained golf course have more in common than people realize.

The details matter.

Removing imperfections from a photograph isn’t much different than repairing ball marks on a green. Clone stamping distractions from an image is not unlike filling divots in a fairway. The things most people never notice are often the things that separate good from exceptional.

While playing Hollywood Beach Golf Club, I found myself paying attention to many of the same things I notice when creating photographs.

Light.

Texture.

Composition.

Atmosphere.

The way shadows moved across fairways.

The way mature trees framed certain holes.

The way golfers interacted with the landscape around them.

Golf courses, much like photographs, are made up of thousands of small decisions. The best ones rarely need to tell you they’re special.

You simply feel it.

I didn’t take nearly as many photographs as I would have liked during my round, but I did bring along my Nikon Zfc and made a few images worth sharing.

Those photographs accompany this article and help tell the story better than words ever could.

Golf apparel and merchandise inside the Hollywood Beach Golf Club pro shop.
No golf trip feels complete without spending a few minutes inside the golf shop.
Golf ball markers available at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
Sometimes it’s the smallest details that become the most memorable.

Course Conditions

Golf course maintenance worker taking a lunch break beside a green roller.
Golf courses don’t maintain themselves. A quiet moment behind the scenes while the maintenance team keeps the course moving.
Worker building wooden hole marker signs at Hollywood Beach Golf Club.
While golfers chased birdies, another story quietly unfolded as new hole markers were being built for the course.

The course presented itself well during my visit.

Greens rolled consistently and the property showed evidence of care and attention. Nothing felt overly manufactured or forced. The experience felt authentic, which is a compliment I don’t give lightly.

Public golf facilities have a difficult job. They must balance maintenance budgets, pace of play, accessibility, and golfer expectations while still creating an enjoyable experience for players of all skill levels.

Hollywood Beach Golf Club does a good job of walking that line.

Final Thoughts

So, is Hollywood Beach Golf Club worth the drive from Miami?

I think so.

Not because it’s the most exclusive course in South Florida.

Not because it’s the longest.

Not because it’s the hardest.

But because it offers something that’s becoming harder to find: character.

If you’re flying into Fort Lauderdale and looking for a convenient public golf course near the airport, Hollywood Beach Golf Club is worth considering.

And if you’re a South Florida golfer looking to explore beyond your usual rotation, it may surprise you the same way it surprised me.

Stay tuned,

Tucker

Best Golf Courses in Miami | A Local Golfer’s Guide by Dwayne Tucker

Photographer Dwayne Tucker, who plays golf often, is frequently asked about the best courses to play; these are his personal course reviews, shaped by his eye behind the camera.
Photographer Dwayne Tucker, Instagram Golfer, Miami: @DwayneTucker

If you’re traveling to Miami with your clubs, you’ve probably asked the same question I hear all the time:

Where should I play?

Through Instagram and the golf community, I’ve met golfers from all over the world. Whether they’re visiting for a weekend, a business trip, or a full vacation, the conversation always ends up here.

Miami looks like a golf paradise from the outside. But once you get here, you realize the experience can vary. Conditions, pace of play, pricing, and overall vibe all matter.

My name is Dwayne Tucker. I’ve been playing consistent golf in Miami for over a decade.

I play a lot of golf.

But I make better shots with my camera.

This guide isn’t based on rankings, sponsorships, or marketing. It’s based on real experience; the courses I actually play, the ones I rotate through, and the ones I recommend when someone asks where they should tee it up.

Hole number 11, par 4, number one handicap hole at Miami Lakes golf course.

Miami Lakes Golf Club

The Best Overall Public Golf Experience Right Now

A few years ago, my answer would have been Melreese.

Not just because of the layout, but because of the energy. The outside staff, management, kitchen, maintenance; everyone felt like family. That kind of community matters on a public course, especially when the course is working hard to stay in good condition.

When Melreese closed, a lot of us wondered where that feeling would go.

Today, that energy lives at Miami Lakes.

The course reopened to the public in late 2025, and you can feel the difference the moment you arrive. A good number of the staff from Melreese made the move, and the atmosphere reflects that same welcoming energy.

Condition-wise, it’s one of the best public setups in Miami. The turf feels healthy, the lies are clean, and the greens have real personality. They’re bold, undulated, and reward players who understand where to miss and how to manage the course.

From a photographer’s perspective, the property feels open and calm. Morning light cuts across the fairways beautifully, and late afternoons bring a quiet rhythm to the space.

If someone asks me where to play first in Miami, this is my answer.

Crandon Golf at Key Biscayne

A Championship Test in a True South Florida Environment

Crandon feels different before you even get to the first tee.

The drive over the Rickenbacker Causeway sets the tone. Once you’re there, you’re dealing with wind, heat, exposure, and a layout that doesn’t give you anything easy.

This is one of the toughest public courses in Miami. It’s long, demanding, and will show you exactly where your game stands.

They’ve made recent improvements to the greens and bunkers, and the difference shows. Fairways can still be inconsistent in spots, but maintaining turf this close to saltwater is a challenge most inland courses don’t deal with.

King tides can occasionally impact holes on the property, which is something to keep in mind when planning your round.

Wildlife is everywhere. Iguanas, raccoons, and the occasional surprise remind you that this is real South Florida.

If you pay attention, hole 18 gives you a quiet window where the Miami skyline opens up. It’s one of my favorite photo moments on any public course in the city.

Just remember; take the photo and keep the pace moving.

The Biltmore Golf Course

Classic Miami Resort Golf

The Biltmore is about the experience.

As a local, it’s not part of my regular rotation, but I understand what it offers. This is a historic resort property designed around the visitor experience.

Everything here carries a premium feel; pricing, parking, range access; but that comes with the territory.

The course itself is long, open, and fair. It’s not overly complicated, but it requires solid ball-striking and patience.

The practice facilities are strong, and the Jim McLean Golf School on property adds serious credibility for players looking to invest in their game.

If you’re visiting Miami and want a classic resort round with history behind it, the Biltmore delivers.

JW Turnberry Aventura, Miami, Florida.

JW Turnberry Resort

True Resort Atmosphere

Turnberry gives you a full resort golf experience.

Both courses require target golf and smart positioning. It’s less about overpowering the course and more about managing your way around.

The conditioning is strong, the landscaping is polished, and the overall environment feels built around enjoying the day rather than grinding through a competitive round.

If you’re staying at the resort, the experience is seamless. If you’re visiting from elsewhere, expect valet and resort-style logistics.

Trump doral blue monster course in Miami, Florida.

Trump National Doral

Championship Conditions and a Serious Test

Doral is one of the most recognized golf properties in South Florida.

The Blue Monster gets most of the attention, and the name fits. It’s long, exposed, and unforgiving. Water is everywhere, and if you miss the fairway by a little, you may not find your ball.

Personally, I enjoy the Red Tiger and Golden Palm. They feel more balanced and playable while still demanding good golf.

Conditions across the property are consistently excellent, and the practice facility is one of the best in Miami; unlimited balls, large putting areas, and strong short-game space.

This is serious golf. Between the length, wind, heat, and layout, it will show you exactly where your game stands.

Miami Beach Area Courses

Convenience for Beach Visitors

If you’re staying near the beach, these are the courses I rotate through depending on what I’m working on.

Sunrise on hole number one at Miami Beach Golf course.

Miami Beach Golf Club

The strength here is the practice facility.

The short-game area helped me tighten up my chipping and pitching more than anywhere else locally. The range now has lights, fans, and coverage for evening sessions.

The downside is pricing. A large bucket has gone from about $13 to around $24.

The course itself is solid but busy. Early morning or late-day rounds are the best move.

Normandy Shores Golf Club in Miami, Florida.

Normandy Shores Golf Club

Normandy is straightforward, relaxed, and honest.

The range is mostly mats, but the putting surfaces roll well, and the overall vibe is social and easygoing.

18 green-miami-shores-country-club

Miami Shores Country Club

Miami Shores has an old-school municipal feel.

The greens have a subtle elevated “turtle shell” shape, and the rough can be heavy St. Augustine. The range stays open late, which makes it a good after-work practice option.

Hole 17 is a tough par three, so it helps to give yourself some room before you get there.

Sunrise on hole number one at Granada Golf Course in Coral Gables.

Granada Golf Course

A Historic Nine-Hole Gem

Opened in 1923 and designed by Donald Ross, Granada is one of the oldest courses in South Florida.

Strategy matters more than power here. What makes the course special is the community. I’ve shown up as a single many times and ended up paired with the same local players.

It’s simple, social, and one of the most authentic golf experiences in Miami.

Long par 3 hole at Miami Springs Golf & Country Club.

Miami Springs Golf & Country Club

A historic municipal course that once hosted early professional events.

Recent renovations improved the greens, and the layout is fair and approachable. It’s an easy walk and a solid relaxed round.

Private Clubs

Some of Miami’s best courses require member access, including La Gorce, Indian Creek, Riviera, and Deering Bay. Outstanding facilities, but you’ll need a connection to experience them.

Where Should You Play First?

If you only have time for one round:

Best overall public experience; Miami Lakes

Best challenge; Crandon

Best resort experience; Doral or Turnberry

Best local feel; Granada

Final Thoughts

Miami golf isn’t perfect. It’s expensive. Conditions vary. The weather will test you.

But the variety is real.

This guide comes from a local perspective after years of playing across the city.

I play a lot of golf.

But I make better shots with my camera.

If you’re visiting Miami, enjoy the round. Stay hydrated. Bring patience.

And if you see me out there, say what’s up.

Stay tuned,

Tucker

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