Dubai and Abu Dhabi Golf Travel Guide 2026: Desert Golf at Its Most Luxurious
Dubai and Abu Dhabi occupy a unique position in world golf — courses built not from natural terrain but from engineering ambition, irrigated into existence from desert, and maintained to a standard that rivals Augusta National in peak season. The golf is not links, not parkland in the traditional sense — it is a category of its own. Ultra-manicured, visually spectacular, climatically concentrated into five playable months, and set against one of the most distinctive urban skylines on earth.
For serious golfers the UAE is increasingly the winter golf destination of choice for European and UK players — a four-hour flight from London, guaranteed sun in January, and a course quality that delivers premium conditions year-round during the season. This guide covers the five courses worth playing and the four months worth flying for.
The courses
Emirates Golf Club — Majlis Course — Rating: 9.4/10
The Majlis Course at Emirates Golf Club is the standard by which all Dubai golf is measured. It has hosted the DP World Tour Championship since 2009 and produces the most dramatic finish in European Tour golf — the 18th hole, a par-5 with the famous Bedouin tent clubhouse as the backdrop, is one of the finest finishing holes on any resort course in the world. The course design by Karl Litten is genuinely strong — not a showpiece-only layout, but a course with strategic interest throughout 18 holes. Green fee: $300–380 depending on season and tee time.
The contrast between the maintained fairways and the Dubai skyline visible from multiple holes produces the most distinctively modern golf photograph available anywhere. It is entirely without precedent in links or parkland golf traditions, and entirely on its own terms, it is extraordinary.
Yas Links Abu Dhabi — Rating: 9.2/10
Yas Links is the most unusual course in the UAE — and one of the most unusual in the world. Kyle Phillips designed a genuine links-style course on Yas Island, using natural terrain movement and fescue-style turf management to produce playing conditions that are genuinely links-adjacent rather than just aesthetically links-referencing. On a calm day, it is the most enjoyable round available in the UAE. In the prevailing wind off the Arabian Gulf, it is a genuine test. Green fee: $200–280.
The juxtaposition with the Yas Marina Circuit — the Abu Dhabi Formula One track — visible from several holes is either charming or distracting depending on your relationship with motorsport. We find it charming.
Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club — Rating: 8.8/10
Dubai Creek occupies a prime location along the historic Creek waterway with the distinctive dhow sails of the clubhouse — a design landmark in Dubai architecture — visible from nearly every hole. The course is shorter and tighter than Emirates Golf Club, rewarding accuracy over power in a way that makes it particularly suitable for mid-handicap golfers who find the Majlis’s championship length daunting. Green fee: $180–250. The sunset round at Dubai Creek, with the Creek waterway lit behind the clubhouse sails, is the best visual golf experience in Dubai.
Abu Dhabi Golf Club — Rating: 8.6/10
Home of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship and designed in partnership with the same architects as Ryder Cup venues, ADGC offers championship-standard conditions with the most consistent maintenance quality of any public-access course in Abu Dhabi. The snake-shaped clubhouse is an architectural statement. The course is wide-fairway strategic golf — no gimmicks, no showpiece holes, just well-designed championship golf in exceptional condition. Green fee: $180–240.
Jumeirah Golf Estates — Earth Course — Rating: 8.4/10
Greg Norman’s Earth Course hosts the DP World Tour Championship and is a serious championship test — wide, fast, with greens that demand precise approach play. The Fire Course at the same facility is also available. Green fee: $250–320. Best suited to low-handicap golfers who want a championship layout rather than a visual experience.
When to go
October through March is the only viable window for golf in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. November through February is the peak — temperatures of 20–28°C, low humidity, and virtually guaranteed sunshine. October and March are shoulder months — warmer (28–33°C) but manageable in the morning. April sees temperatures approaching 35°C+ by midday; morning tee times only. May is borderline. June, July, August, and September are simply not viable for golf — 42–48°C, 80–90% humidity, and conditions that are dangerous for extended outdoor activity.
January and February are the sweet spot within the season — peak quality conditions, peak tour events (Abu Dhabi Championship in January, Dubai Desert Classic in February historically, though dates vary), and the highest demand for tee times. Book both accommodation and tee times 3–4 months ahead for these months.
Green fee budget and practical information
| Course | Peak Season (Nov–Feb) | Shoulder (Oct, Mar–Apr) |
|---|---|---|
| Emirates Golf Club — Majlis | $380 | $300 |
| Yas Links Abu Dhabi | $280 | $200 |
| Dubai Creek | $250 | $180 |
| Abu Dhabi Golf Club | $240 | $180 |
| Jumeirah Golf Estates — Earth | $320 | $250 |
| 4-round recommended total (peak) | ~$1,230 | ~$930 |
Getting there: Emirates, flydubai, British Airways, and Virgin Atlantic all fly direct from London to Dubai (DXB) — 7 hours. Abu Dhabi (AUH) is accessible via Etihad from multiple UK airports. Dubai and Abu Dhabi are 90 minutes apart by road. A trip that combines four Emirates Golf Club rounds with a Yas Links round and two Abu Dhabi rounds is entirely practical in a 7-day visit.
Accommodation: The Montgomerie hotel at Emirates Golf Club, the Viceroy on Yas Island, and the St Regis Abu Dhabi are the best golf-adjacent stays. Dubai’s Marina district and Downtown are 20–30 minutes from Emirates Golf Club by taxi and provide better restaurant and leisure access than on-course hotels.
Simulator prep
Dubai golf rewards a different game to links. Approach shots must stop quickly on firm, fast greens — spin is the primary tool, not trajectory. Practice high-spin approach shots in your simulator, and specifically practice greenside control from 40–80 yards. The Majlis greens run at 11–12 on the Stimpmeter in peak tournament condition — pre-week play is typically 10. Our simulator software guide covers which platforms model fast greens most accurately for this kind of preparation.
All green fees current as of 2026. Verify directly with each club. All links are affiliate links — see our affiliate disclosure.