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The Spring Experience — What Nobody Tells You
Most first-timers come expecting a beach town with some decent golf. What they find is a destination that takes golf seriously — one that’s been fine-tuning the visiting golfer experience for decades. Spring is when that really shows.
The Weather Is the Sweet Spot
Highs in the mid-60s to low 70s from March through May. Cool enough in the morning to feel crisp. Warm enough by the back nine to shed a layer. No humidity yet. No summer heat. Just ideal golf weather, day after day.
Best Playing ConditionsThe Courses Look the Part
Spring is when the Grand Strand’s Bermuda fairways make their full transition from winter dormancy. By mid-March you’ll see the color coming back. By April it’s the full picture — lush, green, rolling true. Superintendents spend all winter getting ready for this.
Excellent ConditionsThe Pace of Play Is Better
Spring means the summer family crowds haven’t arrived. You’re sharing the course with other golfers — people there for the same reason you are. Rounds move. You’re not waiting on every tee box. It makes a real difference to the feel of the day.
Better RoundsThe Days Are Long Enough for 36
Daylight is generous in spring. Early tee times, a full 18, lunch, and you’ve still got enough light for a second loop if the legs are willing. Most serious visiting groups play 36 holes a day without any stress about beating the sunset.
Max Golf TimeValue Before the Peak Kicks In
Early March still carries shoulder pricing on a lot of courses. Even as spring peaks mid-month, Can-Am Days deals and package rates make it one of the better value windows of the entire year. You’re getting peak conditions without peak pricing.
Smart TimingThe Setting Hits Different
Myrtle Beach in spring is the Grand Strand at its most relaxed. The ocean is there. The restaurants aren’t slammed yet. You can actually get a table at the good places. It has the energy of somewhere gearing up for something big — and that feeling is contagious.
Peak VibeThe wind is real in spring — especially on coastal layouts. It’s not a problem, it’s part of the game here. Experienced Myrtle Beach golfers love it. Pack one extra club in your bag and embrace it. The courses are designed with it in mind, and it makes every round more memorable.
5 Courses Every First-Timer Should Play
There are 65+ courses on the Grand Strand. Narrowing it down for a first trip is genuinely hard — but these five give you the full range of what makes Myrtle Beach golf special, from bucket-list experiences to beautiful everyday rounds.
Caledonia Golf & Fish Club — consistently ranked among the top public courses in the country. Photo: Jim Maggio / Golf Tourism Solutions
If you’re playing Myrtle Beach for the first time, Caledonia is the one everyone tells you about — and it earns every bit of the praise. The live oaks draped in Spanish moss, the antebellum plantation setting, the closing holes along the tidal marshes. It’s a course that makes you stop mid-round and just look around. Golf this beautiful shouldn’t play this well, but it does.
True Blue Golf Club — big, bold, and endlessly photogenic. One of the best public courses in South Carolina.
Caledonia’s sister course, and in some ways even more fun to play. True Blue is bigger, bolder, and more dramatic — wide fairways, large waste bunkers, and a layout that rewards power but never punishes a first-timer unfairly. It tends to be slightly more accessible pricewise than Caledonia, which makes pairing the two for a back-to-back day one of the best value plays on the Grand Strand.
TPC Myrtle Beach — a true Tour-caliber experience on the Grand Strand. Conditions are impeccable in spring.
Part of the PGA Tour’s TPC network, this is where you go when you want to feel what it’s like to play somewhere that takes conditioning seriously at the professional level. The fairways are pristine, the greens are immaculate, and the service matches. Spring is when TPC Myrtle Beach is at its absolute best — perfectly transitioned and receiving its full attention before the busy summer season.
Pawleys Plantation — a Jack Nicklaus design weaving through salt marshes and ancient oaks. Classic Low Country golf.
Designed by Jack Nicklaus, Pawleys Plantation is the most classically Low Country course on this list — salt marshes, ancient live oaks, and a layout that demands your full attention without ever feeling unfair. The back nine, which weaves through tidal marsh, is one of the most visually stunning stretches of holes on the entire Grand Strand. It’s the course that makes first-timers understand what “Low Country golf” actually means.
Dunes Golf & Beach Club — the Grand Strand’s most storied course. Hole 9 is one of the most photographed in the Carolinas. Photo: Jim Maggio / Golf Tourism Solutions
The Dunes Club is Myrtle Beach golf history. Opened in 1948 and designed by Robert Trent Jones Sr., it’s hosted multiple Senior PGA Tour events and sits alongside the ocean in a way that reminds you why this stretch of coastline became a golf destination in the first place. The famous hole 13 — “Waterloo” — a 590-yard par 5 that wraps around the edge of a lake, is one of the most iconic holes in the Southeast. This is the one you come back home and tell people about.
Where to Stay — Three Picks for a Spring Golf Trip
Where you stay shapes the whole trip. These three options are all listed on myrtlebeachgolf.com — covering the full range from luxury golf villas to oceanfront resort stays.
One of the most requested upscale golf resorts on the Grand Strand. Stay right on the property with four designer courses — Love, Fazio, Dye & Norman — minutes from your door, plus Barefoot Landing for dining and entertainment.
- 4 on-site designer courses (Love, Fazio, Dye, Norman)
- Overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway
- Luxury villa-style accommodations
- Golf packages with best-rate tee time pricing
A true oceanfront resort with the beach at your front door. On-site dining, a waterslide water park, indoor and outdoor pools, and a fitness facility — centrally located for easy access to courses up and down the Grand Strand.
- Beachfront location on N. Ocean Blvd.
- On-site dining, pools, and water amenities
- Central access to all Grand Strand courses
- Stay & play golf packages available
A smart pick for golfers who want to be on the course without paying luxury resort rates. Myrtlewood Villas sit right alongside Myrtlewood’s two courses, and the central Myrtle Beach location puts the full Grand Strand within easy reach.
- Two on-site golf courses (Palmetto & Pines)
- Full condo-style accommodations
- Central location — great for exploring the Strand
- Excellent value for multi-night golf trips
Spring accommodations fill faster than most first-timers expect — especially during Can-Am Days (March 13–22) and around marathon weekend (March 1). If your trip overlaps with either window, book your stay and tee times together, as early as possible. A Golf Master can handle both in a single call.
The First-Timer Checklist
A quick-reference for everything to bring, know, and do before you tee it up for the first time on the Grand Strand.
What to Pack
- Light pullover or vest for early tee times
- Rain jacket — spring showers are brief but real
- One extra club for coastal wind
- Sunscreen — even at 68°F, you’ll burn
- Comfortable walking shoes for resort time
- Plenty of golf balls — especially if you’re playing Caledonia
What to Know
- Book tee times before you arrive — don’t assume availability
- Most courses have GPS carts included
- 36 holes a day is very doable in spring daylight
- Afternoon tee times are often cheaper than morning
- Courses in Pawleys Island are a 30-min drive south — worth it
- Pace of play is better than you’d expect — it’s a golfer’s town
Where to Eat
- Dead Dog Saloon — Murrells Inlet waterfront classic
- Sea Captain’s House — oceanfront, local institution
- Blue Drum — local favorite for dinner in MB proper
- Ask your Golf Master — they know the local picks
Rookie Mistakes to Avoid
- Booking too few rounds — you’ll wish you booked more
- Skipping Caledonia because of the price — book it
- Not checking the wind forecast before teeing off
- Underestimating the Pawleys Island drive from North MB
- Waiting until you arrive to sort out tee times
📋 Spring Golf in Myrtle Beach — Quick Reference
Ready to Book Your Spring Golf Trip?
A Golf Master will build you a custom package — the right courses for your group, lodging that works, and tee times already locked in. It takes one call.
Build My Spring Package →Or call us directly at (855) 409-2177 — we know these courses better than anyone.
