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Explore guide

Mornington Peninsula Golf

Australia's most concentrated cluster of serious public-access golf. Three world-ranked courses within 10 minutes of each other, all within 90 minutes of Melbourne.

3 world-ranked12 min read
Photo · Peninsula Insider

Two distinct golf corridors

Cape Schanck or the Bay Corridor

Both are worth a day. They are not interchangeable. The frame that matters before you book.

Cape Schanck / Fingal

World-ranked. Exposed. Worth the drive to the tip.

Flagship courses
St Andrews Beach (Tom Doak), Moonah Links (Peter Thomson), The National (Trent Jones Jr, Thomson, Greg Norman) — three of The National's four courses sit here; the fourth, Long Island, is at Frankston.
Access
St Andrews Beach and Moonah Links are fully public. The National's four courses are private members-only across both the Cape Schanck and Long Island sites.
Conditions
Coastal duneland. Exposed to Bass Strait wind. The same course plays differently on every visit.
Best for
Serious golfers. Destination weekends. Groups who want the bucket-list round. Stay-and-play packages.
Combine with
Peninsula Hot Springs (15 min). Cape Schanck boardwalk. Fingal or Flinders for lunch.
Bay Corridor — Mornington to Portsea

Accessible. Views. A round without the expedition.

Standout courses
Flinders Golf Club (clifftop hidden gem), The Dunes (Tony Cashmore links design), Eagle Ridge (Red Hill hinterland)
Access
Mostly public or semi-private. Mornington, Eagle Ridge, The Dunes, and Rosebud all take visitor green fees without calling ahead.
Conditions
Mixed terrain — clifftop views at Flinders, genuine links dunes at Rye, parkland at Merricks. More sheltered than the Cape.
Best for
Day trips from Melbourne. Pairing with a Red Hill winery lunch. Social and high-handicap groups who want a good day without a premium price.
Combine with
Red Hill and Main Ridge wineries. Flinders Hotel or the Mornington foreshore. Rosebud for affordable replay.

Cape Schanck / Fingal cluster

The world-class courses

Four courses within 15 minutes of each other at the Peninsula's southern tip. Two of the four are world-ranked. Three accept public green fees.

Public green fees Tier 2 ✦ Ranked
36 holes

Moonah Links

Fingal VIC 3939 · Peter Thomson, Ross Perrett

Open Course hosted Australian Open 2003, 2005

Moonah Links is the Peninsula's most complete golf property — two championship courses (Open and Legends), on-site accommodation, and the integrated infrastructure a small group needs. The Open Course hosted the Australian Open in 2003 and 2005; the Legends Course is the more forgiving sibling, better for mixed groups. Both are firm, links-style, and exposed to Bass Strait weather.

Public green fees Tier 1 ✦ Ranked
18 holes

St Andrews Beach Golf Course

Fingal VIC 3939 · Tom Doak

World top 100 in recent global rankings — verify year and currency before publishing specific ranking claims

St Andrews Beach is the Peninsula's strongest public-access golf story. Tom Doak architecture, world-ranking credibility, and an address anyone can book — that combination is rarer in Australian golf than the prestige market would have you believe. The course sits in coastal duneland near Fingal, with enough exposure to the Bass Strait weather to make the same round play differently depending on when you show up.

Insider readRated by locals as one of the two best bang-for-buck rounds on the Peninsula. World-ranked architecture at a public green fee is the pitch — and it lands.

Private — members Tier 1 ✦ Ranked
72 holes

The National Golf Club

Cape Schanck VIC 3939 · Robert Trent Jones Jr, Peter Thomson, Greg Norman

Widely regarded as Australia's strongest four-course private golf property

The National is the Peninsula's most ambitious golf property — four championship courses across two sites. Three sit on one sweeping Cape Schanck plateau: the Old (Robert Trent Jones Jr), the Moonah (Peter Thomson), and the Gunnamatta (Greg Norman). The fourth, the Long Island course, sits 50 minutes north at Frankston.

Insider readThe Gunnamatta course is known affectionately by locals as 'doesn't matter' — a forgiving Greg Norman layout where you can spray it off the tee and still score well. The reputation is as the fun course; the uplifter when your form has gone.

Public green fees Tier 3
18 holes

RACV Cape Schanck Golf Course

Cape Schanck VIC 3939 · Robert Trent Jones Jr

RACV Cape Schanck is the scenic one. The course plays along the clifftops and through the coastal scrub around the Cape Schanck lighthouse precinct, and the ocean is in play — visually and occasionally physically — on most of the back nine. It is not the Peninsula's most architecturally celebrated course (that's St Andrews Beach or The National), but it is probably its most dramatic setting.

Bay corridor · Mornington to Portsea

The accessible round

Seven courses running the length of the bay side. Clifftop views at Flinders, links dunes at Rye, parkland at Merricks. Mostly public access, mostly lower green fees.

Semi-private Tier 3
9 holes

Flinders Golf Club

Flinders VIC 3929

Flinders Golf Club sits above West Head at the southern edge of the Peninsula — a 9-hole course with some of the best views any Australian golfer can see from a tee box. The layout is short, scenic, and genuinely fun.

Insider readWord of mouth from Peninsula club golfers: more a friendly drinkers' club than an architectural pilgrimage. The views are still world-class — go for the cliffs and the post-round beer, not the design conversation.

Public green fees Tier 2
18 holes

Eagle Ridge Golf Course

Boneo VIC 3939

Eagle Ridge is the Peninsula's hinterland option — a parkland-feel 18-hole course set among gum trees and dams in the Boneo valley, away from the coastal exposure of the Cape Schanck courses. That makes it the better choice on windy days and in mid-winter when the links courses are playing hard.

Insider readTight off the tee — locals rate it the lesser of the Peninsula courses for that reason. The flip side: during daylight savings, the after-3pm twilight deals on cart and green fees are some of the best on the Peninsula.

Public green fees Tier 2 ✦ Ranked
27 holes

The Dunes Golf Links

Rye VIC 3941 · Tony Cashmore

Consistently ranked in Australian top-50 public courses

The Dunes is the Peninsula's other world-class public-access course — Tony Cashmore's links design carved through genuine dunes near Rye. Where St Andrews Beach feels restrained and strategic, The Dunes feels more dramatic: bigger elevation changes, more visible wind cues, more heroic lines off the tee.

Semi-private Tier 3
18 holes

Mornington Golf Club

Mornington VIC 3931

Mornington Golf Club is the closest Peninsula course to Melbourne — about 60 minutes from the CBD via the freeway. That proximity makes it the obvious choice for a day-trip round or an after-work nine, and the reason casual Melbourne golfers know it well.

Insider readWord of mouth from Peninsula club golfers: a sociable, accessible local club rather than a tournament destination. Pairs well with a Mornington foreshore lunch and a relaxed afternoon.

Public green fees Tier 2
27 holes

Rosebud Country Club

Rosebud VIC 3939

Rosebud Country Club runs three nine-hole courses (North, South, and East) that mix-and-match into 18-hole rounds. Not a prestige destination, but one of the most played Peninsula courses for a reason — public access, good value, reasonable conditioning, and a central location that sits between Mornington and the southern tip.

Insider readRated by locals as one of the two best bang-for-buck rounds on the Peninsula, alongside St Andrews Beach. The 27-hole mix-and-match format is the practical advantage.

Semi-private Tier 3
18 holes

Sorrento Golf Club

Sorrento VIC 3943

Sorrento Golf Club is a parkland course on the Peninsula's tip, more traditional and less dramatic than the nearby links courses. The layout is pleasant rather than celebrated — long-time members love it, and it has a friendly social reputation that Portsea (its more exclusive neighbour) does not.

Private — members Tier 3
18 holes

Portsea Golf Club

Portsea VIC 3944

Portsea Golf Club is the classic Peninsula member's club at the tip. Founded in 1924, it carries genuine Australian golf heritage and plays through some of the most spectacular clifftop terrain any Melbourne golfer will see without boarding a plane.

Course selector

For your game

Not every course suits every golfer. Here is how we'd route a visitor based on what they actually want from the round.

Single figures

The serious rounds

Golfers who want architectural challenge, exposure, and a course that holds up on replay.

  • St Andrews Beach Tom Doak design. World-ranked. Best architecture on the Peninsula at a public green fee.
  • Moonah Links — Open Course Peter Thomson's championship layout. Hosted the Australian Open. Rewards intelligent play over power.
  • The National — Ocean Course The most prestigious public round on the Peninsula. Exposed clifftop holes over Bass Strait. Book well ahead.
  • Flinders Golf Club 9 holes with some of the most dramatic views from any Australian tee box. Wildly underrated. Pairs with a Flinders lunch.
Mid-handicap

A great day out

Courses that deliver real quality without punishing the round. Good enough that you'll want to come back.

  • Moonah Links — Legends Course The Open Course's more forgiving sibling. Still championship quality; much more enjoyable for the 14–22 handicap range.
  • The Dunes Golf Links Tony Cashmore's links design near Rye. Genuine dune terrain, genuine links feel, and public access at accessible pricing.
  • Eagle Ridge Golf Course Hinterland parkland near the Red Hill wineries. Plays differently in all four seasons. Natural and well-maintained.
  • RACV Cape Schanck Ocean views, accessible layout, on-site accommodation. The resort package that lets the non-golfer have an equally good day.

The architects

Five designers, one peninsula

The Peninsula's concentration of serious course architecture is not accidental. Here is who built it and what they were trying to do.

Tom Doak
St Andrews Beach Golf Course

Regarded by most serious course architecture critics as one of the three or four best designers working today. Doak's philosophy — restore the land, resist the ornamental, reward strategic play — is fully present at St Andrews Beach. His only Australian design. The course improves on every visit because the design rewards you for understanding it.

Peter Thomson
Moonah Links (Open + Legends Courses); The National Moonah Course

Five-time Open Champion and arguably the most important figure in Australian golf. Thomson's course design philosophy followed his playing philosophy: intelligence over power, precision over length. The Moonah Links Open Course is his most publicly accessible Peninsula work. His National Moonah Course is private, and by most accounts the more architecturally interesting of his two Peninsula commissions.

Greg Norman
The National Gunnamatta Course

The Shark's only Peninsula course. Dramatically exposed, with clifftop stretches above Bass Strait that have no equivalent in Australian public golf. Private access only — members and reciprocal guests. If you have the access, it is the most visually theatrical round on the Peninsula.

Robert Trent Jones Jr
The National Old Course; The National Long Island; RACV Cape Schanck Resort

The global modernist. RTJ Jr's Peninsula footprint runs from the Cape Schanck headland north to Frankston, covering two of The National's four courses (the Old at Cape Schanck and the Long Island course at Frankston) plus the RACV resort layout. His Old Course at The National is the grandest of the four National layouts, designed for a club that was always intended to rival the best in the world. The RACV design is more accessible and suits the resort context it was built for.

Tony Cashmore
The Dunes Golf Links

Australian public golf specialist. The Dunes is his most discussed work, built into genuine sand dune country near Rye and consistently ranked among Australia's best public-access courses. Where Doak and Thomson work at the prestige end, Cashmore built the Peninsula's most accessible championship-quality public round — and it holds up.

The mixed group question

When one person plays, what does everyone else do?

The Peninsula solves this better than almost anywhere else in Australia. The non-golfer's day can be as good as the golfer's — if you plan it properly.

Cape Schanck / Fingal golf

While the golfer plays Moonah Links, St Andrews Beach, or The National:

  • Peninsula Hot Springs — 15 minutes from the Cape cluster. A full morning or afternoon session fills the time of any golf round.
  • Cape Schanck boardwalk — 45-minute clifftop walk to Pulpit Rock. The non-golfer gets the best scenery on the Peninsula.
  • Flinders town — Coffee, the Flinders Hotel beer garden, and a proper lunch. 15 minutes from the course cluster.

Bay corridor golf

While the golfer plays Flinders, Eagle Ridge, The Dunes, or Mornington:

  • Red Hill and Main Ridge wineries — A self-guided cellar door morning within 20 minutes of Eagle Ridge. Pairs perfectly for a post-round lunch rendezvous.
  • Mornington town — Main Street, the foreshore, and Mornington Racecourse if timing aligns. Full morning agenda for a non-golfer.
  • Peninsula Hot Springs — Also reachable from the mid-Peninsula corridor in 25 minutes.

Stay and play

Planning a golf weekend

A Peninsula golf weekend works when the accommodation is close enough that travel between the course and the stay does not eat the day. The RACV Cape Schanck Resort is the most integrated: on-property accommodation, an 18-hole course, and the spa within walking distance. Moonah Links has its own on-property stay. Both allow two rounds in two days without getting in a car between them.

For those not staying on a golf property, Sorrento and Blairgowrie are the strongest mid-Peninsula bases: within 20 minutes of the Cape Schanck cluster and within 15 minutes of the ferry for a Queenscliff morning. The full stay-and-play guide maps each accommodation option to its closest course and travel time.

Building a broader Peninsula trip around golf? The 3-day Mornington Peninsula itinerary shows how a long weekend can hold golf, wineries, hot springs, and the coast without feeling rushed.

Read the stay-and-play guide →
15 minutes from Cape Schanck courses to Peninsula Hot Springs
90 minutes Melbourne CBD to Moonah Links or St Andrews Beach
2 on-property accommodation options at the Cape cluster

Common questions

FAQ

What is the best golf course on the Mornington Peninsula?

Moonah Links Open Course for championship pedigree and full public access. St Andrews Beach for Tom Doak architecture and world-ranking credentials at a public green fee. The National Ocean Course for prestige — the most cited, most photographed, and most expensive option, accepting public green fees on the Ocean Course only.

For a mid-handicapper who wants the best round rather than the most famous address: Moonah Links Open Course is the correct answer. The challenge is real, the conditioning is excellent, and the round does not end with the score card as the main memory.

Can you play golf on the Mornington Peninsula without a club membership?

Yes. Moonah Links, St Andrews Beach, RACV Cape Schanck, Eagle Ridge, The Dunes, Mornington Golf Club, and Rosebud Country Club all accept visitor green fees without calling ahead. Flinders Golf Club and Sorrento Golf Club accept visitors on non-competition days — call ahead to confirm availability. Portsea Golf Club and The National's Moonah and Gunnamatta courses are private.

How much does golf cost on the Mornington Peninsula?

Green fees vary significantly by course and season — always verify current rates directly before booking. Broadly: The National Ocean Course and St Andrews Beach are at the premium end. Moonah Links is premium but offers better value for what you get. Eagle Ridge, The Dunes, Mornington, and Rosebud are the most accessible options. Midweek rates at most courses are substantially lower than weekend rates.

Is there accommodation near the Peninsula golf courses?

RACV Cape Schanck Resort is on-site with direct access to its 18-hole course. Moonah Links has on-property accommodation with stay-and-play packages covering both the Open and Legends courses. For the bay corridor clubs, Mornington and Sorrento have accommodation within 15 minutes of most courses in that corridor. The full stay-and-play guide maps each option with travel times and booking advice.

What is the difference between the Cape Schanck and bay corridor courses?

The Cape Schanck / Fingal cluster contains the Peninsula's world-ranked courses: St Andrews Beach, Moonah Links, and three of The National's four courses (Old, Moonah, Gunnamatta). The fourth National course, Long Island, sits 50 minutes north at Frankston and is the club's gateway from Melbourne. All sit in coastal duneland exposed to Bass Strait weather. The terrain is Links-adjacent and the quality of the design architecture is the highest on the Peninsula.

The bay corridor runs from Mornington to Portsea, with a mix of clifftop (Flinders), parkland (Eagle Ridge), dune-links (The Dunes), and bayside (Mornington, Sorrento, Portsea) layouts. More varied in character, generally more accessible in access and pricing, and better suited to a combined golf-and-winery day without driving to the Peninsula tip.

How far is Mornington Peninsula golf from Melbourne?

Most Peninsula golf courses are 75–105 minutes from Melbourne CBD via the Mornington Peninsula Freeway. The Cape Schanck / Fingal cluster — St Andrews Beach, Moonah Links, The National — is approximately 90–100 minutes. The Dunes (Rye) is in the same window. Mornington Golf Club is the closest course to Melbourne at around 60 minutes.

Weekend traffic on the Mornington Peninsula Freeway can add 15–30 minutes during summer and school holiday periods. Plan for an early departure on Friday afternoons or Saturday mornings in peak season.

What is the best time of year for golf on the Mornington Peninsula?

Autumn (March–May) and spring (September–November) are the strongest seasons — stable weather, firm course conditions, and shoulder-season pricing on green fees and accommodation. The coastal light in autumn is genuinely extraordinary on the Cape Schanck courses.

Summer (December–February) is busy and can be windy at coastal courses. Winter is playable on dry days but expect some course closures after heavy rain. Links-style courses like St Andrews Beach and The Dunes drain faster than parkland courses and often stay open when inland layouts close.

Last fact-verified 30 April 2026. Green fees, opening hours, and visitor access policies change — verify directly with each course before booking.

Curated by our editors.

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