Patrick Koenig
As part of GOLF’s rigorous assessment process for our newcomers Top 100 courses in the USA AND The best 100 courses you can play ranking, our fleet of 100-plus expert panelists identified the best golf courses in each state.
You can check out the links below to browse all of our course rankings, or scroll down to see the best courses in Tennessee. And if you’re looking to create your future ride, you’d be wise to let the new GOLF Course finder the tool helps you. Here, you can edit all of our lists – top 100 public, best munis, best short courses, best par-3s and more – or filter by price to create the itinerary perfect for your next trip.
Ranking of other GOLF courses: Top 100 courses in the world | Top 100 courses in the USA | The best 100 courses you can play | The 100 most valuable courses in the USA | America’s Best Municipal Courses | The 100 best short courses in the world
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Best Golf Courses in Tennessee (2024/2025)
SYMBOL GUIDE
# = Top 100 courses in the USA
Y = Top 100 you can play in USA
V = The 100 most valuable courses in the USA
P = Public/Resort
Ed. Note: Some subjects were removed from our ranking because they did not receive enough votes.
1. Honors Course (Ooltewah) (#)
Since our last US 100, the club asked Gil Hanse to modify this 1983 Pete Dye design by replacing the 10th and 11th greens in a similar configuration to theirs original. In addition, Hanse exposed two creeks in front of the 18th green, and this hole Home now ranks among Dye’s best closers, which is saying something. Located at the foot of White Oak Mountain in eastern Tennessee, the course has long been a wildlife sanctuary and a research institute on agronomy and various grasses. Immersed in nature, the player revels in the game’s rustic setting and 2021 saw the freeways revamped with the new Zeon Zoysia hybrid. Its thinner blades provide more release than the old Myer Zoysia, and the playing surfaces have once again reached optimum durability. A bastion of amateur golf, we look forward to the 2026 Women’s Amateur and the 2031 US Amateur (which marks the 40th anniversary of its first US Amateur).
2. Holston Hills (Knoxville)
3. Tennessee Golf Club (Kingston Springs)
4. Memphis Country Club (Memphis)
5. Spring Creek Ranch (Collierville)
6. TPC Southwind (Memphis)
7. Troubadour Golf and Field Club (College Grove)
8. Chattanooga Golf & CC (Chattanooga)
9. Hillwood Country Club (Nashville)
10. The Black Stream (Chattanooga)
This ranking is reserved for 18-hole courses only, but Sweeten’s Cove nine holes should also be on your shortlist.
How we rank our courses
For our newly released US Top 100 and Top 100 Playable lists—a process that helped us create the top 50 rankings in the country—each panelist was given a ballot consisting of 609 courses. . Alongside the list of courses were 11 “buckets” or groupings. If our panelists deemed a course to be among the top three in the US, they marked the first column. If they believed the rate was between numbers 4-10, they checked that column, followed by 11-25, 26-50 and so on up to 250+ and even a column for “remove”. Panelists were also free to write in courses they felt should have been included on the ballot.
Points were assigned to each bucket; to arrive at an average score for each course, we divide its overall score by the number of votes. From these point totals, courses are then ranked accordingly. It’s an intentionally simple and straightforward process. Why? Because it has historically produced results that are widely praised. Like the game itself, there’s no need to overcomplicate things or try to fix something that already works so well.
The key to the process is the experience and expertise of our panel. Hailing from 15 nations and all the golfing meccas around the world, each of our 127 hand-picked panelists has a keen eye for architecture, both regionally and globally. Many of our panelists have played more than 1000 courses in over 20 countries, some over 2000. Their handicaps range from +5 to +15.
Because the nature of course evaluation is so intensely subjective, no opinion counts. The only way, then, to build meaningful consensus is to incorporate this diversity of panelists and experiences into a ranking.
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