Golfing in Greece offers golf enthusiasts of all levels the opportunity to enjoy a pleasant round of the game in courses that are brilliantly set in the heart of the Mediterranean.
- Afandou Golf Club (Rhodes Golf Afandou):
This is a championship 18 holes (par 73) golf course situated 18 km south of Rhodes town, on the road to Lindos. The course plays host to an International Championship Cup twice a year (last week of March and last week of October). The course is open to the public 12 months a year. Test your skills while enjoying the pleasures of the Rhodes countryside and the Afandou beach. Facilities include changing rooms, lockers, showers, pro shop and a snack bar.
- Corfu Golf & Country Club:
Located in the Ropa Valley, Corfu, this is an 18 hole, year round championship course. Facilities include a clubhouse, a bar, a lounge area offering snooker and satellite TV and a restaurant where appetizing meals are served at reasonable prices.
- Glyfada Golf Club of Athens:
The Glyfada Golf Course is located in the seaside town of Glyfada which is a suburb of Athens. Designed by Donald Harradine, this 18 hole, Par 72 course has continually hosted such events as the World Cup Tournament in 1979, the Mediterranean Gamers in 1992, and the PGA Senior Greek Open. Facilities include pro shop, driving range and putting green.
- Porto Carras Golf Club:
The Porto Carras Grand Resort is located in a hidden paradise in Northern Greece, on the western coast of Sithonia, Halkidiki’s central peninsula. It offers year-round golfing due to a benevolent microclimate that keeps winter temperatures warm.
- The Crete Golf Club:
The newest, most challenging and perfectly maintained championship course in Greece is set in the beautiful mountains just south of the favorite tourist destination Hersonissos. This Bob Hunt masterpiece is a desert golf course hewn out of rolling landscape. It boasts a series of memorable holes that will test every aspect of a golfer's repertoire. The course also offers stunning views over mountainous landscape that has hardly changed since the Minoan era back in 2600 to 1100 BC.