# Golf in Chiang Mai: serious courses at not-so-serious prices

> Chiang Mai's best golf courses, green-fee ballparks, caddie culture, the season to play and where to practise in town — an honest local guide.

Chiang Mai rarely comes up when people list Asia's golf destinations, and that suits the people who play here just fine. Within an hour of the old city there are a dozen or so courses threaded through rice fields and forest, ringed by mountains on almost every hole, where a full round with your own caddie often costs less than a weekend green fee back home. If you're here for a longer stay, golf is one of the easiest and most affordable hobbies to pick up — or pick back up.

## The courses around the city

The names you'll hear most often are all within a 25–50 minute drive of town. **Summit Green Valley**, near Mae Rim about twenty minutes north, is a flat, palm-lined Dennis Griffiths design that's kind to walkers and famously well kept. **Chiang Mai Highlands**, out in the hills to the east, is the course most rankings put at the top of northern Thailand — a Schmidt-Curley layout that has collected "best in Asia" awards and plays like it. Nearby, **Alpine Golf Resort** sits in a forested valley in San Kamphaeng with a proper Asian Tour pedigree. **Royal Chiang Mai**, north-east in San Sai, and the Gassan group's courses towards Lamphun — **Gassan Legacy** and the dramatic, dogleg-heavy **Gassan Khuntan** beside Doi Khuntan National Park — round out the classics, while **Lanna Sports Center** and **North Hill** offer cheaper, closer-to-town golf. None of them is hard to reach, but taxis don't cruise past fairways, so it's worth reading up on [how to get around Chiang Mai](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai) and arranging your ride back before you tee off.

![A golfer teeing off at first light with mist rolling over green mountains behind the fairway](/blog/golf-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## What a round actually costs

This is where Chiang Mai quietly embarrasses most Western golf destinations. At the value end — Lanna, North Hill and similar — a weekday round typically comes in at **roughly 1,000–2,000 baht**. At the flagship courses, a high-season package including green fee, caddie and usually a cart tends to land **somewhere between 3,000 and 5,500 baht** — roughly £70–£125 for the kind of course that would charge two or three times that in Europe, the US or Australia. Low season (roughly May to October) brings the prices down further still. Rates shift with season and day of the week, so always check current prices with the course or a local booking site before you commit. It's no coincidence that so many of the people we meet who are [thinking about retiring in Chiang Mai](/blog/retiring-in-chiang-mai) mention golf as part of the maths.

## The caddie culture

At nearly every Thai course, **a caddie is required, not optional** — and honestly, this is the best part. Your caddie reads greens you've never seen, finds balls you'd have written off, keeps your score, cleans your clubs and cheers your rare good shots with genuine enthusiasm. The caddie fee itself (typically a few hundred baht) is usually listed alongside the green fee, but the **tip is separate and expected**: somewhere around **300–400 baht per round** is customary, more if they've talked you out of three bad club choices. Hand it to your caddie directly at the end, with a thank you. It's a modest sum for you and meaningful income for them.

## The season to play

The glory months are **November to February**: dry air, cool mornings around 15–20°C, and mountains so crisp they look painted on. This is also peak season, so book tee times a few days ahead. One honest caveat: **March and April are burning season**, when agricultural smoke can push air quality into genuinely unhealthy territory — not the time to spend five hours outdoors exercising, whatever the green-fee discount. The rainy season (roughly June to October) is underrated: courses are green and empty, rates drop, and showers usually arrive late afternoon. Our guide to [the best time to visit Chiang Mai](/blog/when-to-visit-chiang-mai) covers the trade-offs month by month.

![A caddie in uniform handing a club to a golfer beside a lily-covered water hazard in late-afternoon light](/blog/golf-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Twilight rates, dress code and booking

Most courses offer discounted afternoon or twilight tee times — often heavily so — which pair nicely with the cool late light of the dry season; ask when you book. Dress codes are standard but relaxed in practice: a collared shirt, tailored shorts or trousers, no jeans or vests. Golf shoes are ideal but tidy trainers pass at most courses, and everything from clubs to shoes can be hired for a few hundred baht. Booking is refreshingly simple: phone or message the course directly, use a local tee-time site, or ask us — walk-ins on quiet weekdays usually get out too, though weekends belong to local societies.

## Practising without leaving town

You don't need a full round to keep your swing honest. **Star Dome Golf Club**, close to the city, has a large floodlit driving range plus a short lit course for evening play, and **Lanna Sports Center** on the northern edge of town combines its 27 holes with a range and putting greens. A bucket of balls costs pocket change, and both make an easy first stop while you're still [settling into life in Chiang Mai](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai). Fair warning from the team: the sunset-over-Doi-Suthep view from a driving range bay is a gateway drug. The full eighteen will follow.
