Golf Courses in Madrid: Tee Times, Prices & Where to Play (2026)
Nobody thinks of Madrid as a golf destination. That’s the advantage. While everyone crowds the Costa del Sol, Madrid has hosted the Open de España for over a century, Jon Rahm won here three times, the city has an Olazábal design and a Rees Jones championship course, and the Royal Spanish Golf Federation runs its national headquarters from a course 20 minutes from the airport. Green fees from $108, and you’re sharing the tee sheet with almost no tourists.
4 courses are bookable through online platforms — two with real-time pricing, three by inquiry. That’s a smaller list than Bangkok or KL, and this article is honest about why: Madrid’s best courses are private clubs. La Moraleja has four Nicklaus designs behind a membership wall. Club de Campo hosts the Open de España but is members-only. Puerta de Hierro has two Robert Trent Jones layouts and requires a member introduction. The five courses below are the ones you can actually book as a visitor — and two of them are genuinely excellent.
All prices are pulled from live booking listings as of June 2026 and are subject to change. Where we describe course features, we rely on verified information from the booking platform and publicly available course data.
The Madrid golf scene in numbers
All 4 bookable courses, side by side
Per person, 18 holes. Listed prices include green fee plus caddie, cart, and locker access (confirm at checkout).
Madrid golf courses you can book online
These 4 courses show confirmed pricing on the booking platform — you can select a date, choose a tee time, and book instantly.

Retamares Golf Club
The most interesting design in the Madrid set. Designed by José María Olazábal — two-time Masters champion (1994, 1999) and captain of Europe’s 2012 Ryder Cup team — Retamares features 8 lakes, mountain and city views, and the kind of strategic routing you’d expect from someone who won Augusta twice. 18 holes, par 72, 6,281 meters. Located in Alalpardo, about 30 minutes from the airport.
The course has hosted Madrid Ladies Masters (Ladies European Tour) and Challenge Tour events. Olazábal’s name carries weight for a reason — if you can navigate the inquiry booking, this is the course with the most design character.

Golf Santander
The premium pick. Designed by Rees Jones — known as “The Open Doctor” for his work preparing Bethpage Black, Torrey Pines, and Congressional for US Opens — Golf Santander is one of the longest courses in Spain at 7,498 yards from the back tees. Opened in 2005 in Boadilla del Monte, about 30 minutes from the airport.
The facilities match the design ambition: Jim McLean Golf School, a Seve Ballesteros short-game area, performance fitting lab, gym, and a pitch-and-putt course. European Tour players use this as a regular training base. Rated 8.2/10 on LeadingCourses — the highest-rated bookable course in Madrid.
If you play one course in Madrid and want the full championship experience, this is it.

Centro Nacional de Golf
The most logical choice for a visiting golfer. Centro Nacional is the headquarters of the Royal Spanish Golf Federation (RFEG), located just 20 minutes from the airport and reachable by taxi from the city center for around €15–20. It hosted the Open de España — Jon Rahm won here in 2019.
The course plays unlike anything else near Madrid: urban links-style, with terraced fairways, almost no trees, and genuine wind exposure. At 6,417 meters, it’s not the longest layout, but the open terrain and Madrid’s plateau winds make it play longer than the card suggests. The on-site Toptracer range and 6-hole pitch-and-putt add practice options if you arrive early.
Not pretty in the traditional parkland sense — functional, exposed, and honest. But tournament-proven and the most accessible course in the city.

La Finca Golf Madrid
Beyond Tiger Booking: Madrid’s Private Golf Scene
Madrid has roughly 20 courses in the metropolitan area. The five above are the ones accessible to visiting golfers through booking platforms. But understanding what else exists helps explain why Madrid’s golf scene is more serious than it appears:
Real Club La Moraleja has four courses, all designed by Jack Nicklaus — Europe’s largest private golf complex. Previously members-only, some visitor access may now be available through local booking platforms.
Real Club de Campo Villa de Madrid is the current Open de España venue — the course where Jon Rahm won three titles, with a Black Course designed by Javier Arana, Spain’s most revered golf architect. Private (member or guest only), but you can attend the tournament as a spectator: the 2026 Open de España runs October 8–11.
Club de Golf Olivar de la Hinojosa is the best-value public course near Madrid with a links-style layout close to the airport. Not on Tiger Booking, but worth contacting directly if you want a low-cost option.
Real Club de la Puerta de Hierro features two Robert Trent Jones designs and is one of Madrid’s most prestigious addresses. Member introduction required.
When to Play: Madrid’s Golf Calendar
Madrid is a high-plateau city — 650 meters above sea level, with a continental climate that’s drier and more extreme than the coast. Timing matters.
March – June is ideal. Temperatures climb from 15°C to 28°C, courses are green, and the city is alive without being overwhelmed by summer heat.
September – November is the other golden window. The Open de España is typically in early October (2026 dates: October 8–11 at Club de Campo), temperatures settle into the 15–25°C range, and the brutal summer heat has broken.
July – August: Don’t. Temperatures regularly exceed 38–42°C. Courses are stressed, fairways bake out, and playing 18 holes feels like endurance training.
December – February: Cold by Spanish standards — 2–8°C mornings, warming to 10–15°C by midday. Playable but not pleasant.
September 2026 bonus: Madrid hosts its first Formula 1 Grand Prix on September 11–13 at the MADRING circuit near IFEMA. A golf + F1 weekend in Madrid is an unusually compelling combination that no other destination in this series can offer.
What Your Green Fee Covers
- Included: Green fee for 18 holes. Cart is usually available for an additional fee but not always included — check at booking.
- Not included, not expected: No caddies. Spanish golf is walk-and-carry or walk-with-trolley. Pull trolley rental is available at every club. Electric carts can be rented but are not the default.
- Dress code: Enforced at every club. Collared shirt, tailored trousers or shorts, soft-spiked golf shoes. No denim, no T-shirts.
- Tipping: Not expected at Spanish golf clubs.
Before You Book: What Visiting Golfers Should Know
- Transport: Rental car or Uber/Cabify for Golf Santander, Retamares, and La Dehesa (30–50 min from the city). Centro Nacional is taxi-accessible from the center (~€15–20, 20 min).
- Language: Spanish-dominant. Staff at the listed courses generally speak functional English, but less fluently than in Southeast Asian golf contexts. Booking through an online platform eliminates the language barrier for reservations.
- Weekday advantage: Weekend tee times are harder to secure and more expensive. Weekday mornings are the sweet spot for visiting golfers.
- Elevation: Madrid sits at ~650 meters. Your ball will fly approximately 5% farther than at sea level. Club down on approaches — especially at Centro Nacional, where the wind adds another variable.
Frequently asked questions
Ready to play? Book your tee time
Real-time availability, confirmed pricing, instant booking on Tiger Booking.
Need a hotel in Madrid?
Stay central, drive out to the course in the morning.
