We-Ko-Pa Golf Club

We-Ko-Pa Golf Club is a 18-hole, par 72 golf course located in Fort Mcdowell, Arizona, measuring 7225 yards. Cost tier: Elite. A driving range is available on site.

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18200 E WeKoPa Way, Fort Mcdowell, AZ 85264

An elite 18-hole desert course in Fort McDowell, AZ, playing 7,225 yards at par 72 with a driving range on tribal land.

18 Holes
Par 72
7225 yards
Elite
Driving Range

About This Course

We-Ko-Pa Golf Club plays 7,225 yards at par 72 over 18 holes on the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation. The Cholla Course (one of two layouts at the facility) is a desert design with natural terrain, saguaro cacti, and minimal artificial contouring. The course preserves the raw desert floor and routes holes through arroyos and around rock formations. A driving range is available.

Located on WeKoPa Way in Fort McDowell, northeast of Fountain Hills, the club is priced at the elite tier and is open to the public. The facility also includes the Saguaro Course. We-Ko-Pa is frequently cited among Arizona’s top public-access courses. Desert Canyon, FireRock, and Eagle Mountain are nearby, placing this course on the eastern edge of the Scottsdale golf market.

Featured In

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March 31, 2026

Best public golf courses in Arizona and Scottsdale

Arizona is one of the premier golf destinations in the country, and the Scottsdale-Phoenix corridor is ground zero. The Sonoran Desert provides a setting that no other golf region can match - saguaro cacti, red rock formations, McDowell Mountain backdrops, and over 300 days of sunshine a year. But the quality goes beyond scenery. Arizona’s best public courses feature designs by Coore & Crenshaw, Tom Fazio, Tom Weiskopf, and Jay Morrish, built across terrain that produces dramatic elevation changes, canyon carries, and strategic desert-wash hazards. The GolfPass 2026 Golfers’ Choice rankings analyzed nearly 20,000 reviews of Arizona courses to compile their annual list. Golf Digest and Golfweek also rank multiple Arizona courses nationally. Scottsdale and the East Valley Scottsdale is the capital of desert golf, with more top-ranked public courses per square mile than almost anywhere in the country. TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course plays 7,261 yards at par 71 and is home to the WM Phoenix Open - the best-attended event on the PGA Tour. The course is defined by its par-3 16th hole, which transforms into a 20,000-seat stadium during tournament week. The rest of the year, it plays as a well-conditioned resort course with risk-reward holes throughout. Golfweek...
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March 2, 2026

Best spring golf destinations in the United States

Spring is the best time of year to plan a golf trip in the United States. Temperatures across the Sun Belt sit in the 70s and low 80s, courses are in peak condition after winter overseeding programs, and green fees at many resort destinations drop below their winter-season highs. The window between mid-March and late May offers the strongest combination of weather, course quality, and value anywhere in the country. Here are 10 regions worth targeting for your next spring golf trip, along with specific courses to put on your list. Scottsdale and Phoenix, Arizona The Sonoran Desert is at its best in spring. Daytime highs in March and April average 80 to 85 degrees in Scottsdale, and rainfall is almost nonexistent. The desert wildflowers bloom across the hillsides, and the courses are green from winter overseeding. Scottsdale has one of the highest concentrations of quality public golf in the country. Troon North Golf Club in north Scottsdale plays 7,070 yards through boulder-strewn desert terrain. We-Ko-Pa Golf Club on the Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation east of town offers two courses with unobstructed desert and mountain views, since tribal land restrictions prevent any residential development along the fairways. Quintero Golf Club...
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March 1, 2026

The best public golf course in every state

The United States has more than 14,000 golf courses open to the public, spread across deserts, coastlines, mountains, prairies, and everything in between. Choosing just one standout public course per state is a difficult exercise, but it forces a useful question: if you had a single round to play in each state, where would you go? The 50 courses below are all accessible without a private membership. Some are resort courses with green fees north of $200, while others are municipal gems where a round costs less than dinner. All of them reward the trip. Northeast The northeastern states pack a lot of golf history and terrain variety into a small geographic footprint. Coastal links, mountain resort courses, and classic parkland layouts built by Donald Ross and A.W. Tillinghast are all within a few hours’ drive of each other. Connecticut: Keney Park Golf Course – This 1927 Jack Ross design in Hartford has been called one of the best municipal courses in New England. The layout runs through mature hardwoods with firm, undulating greens that reward careful approach play. Green fees stay affordable, making it a genuine public treasure. Delaware: Baywood Greens – An 18-hole championship course in Long Neck...
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A path through grassy dunes on a links-style golf course by the sea

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Types of golf courses explained from links to parkland and beyond

Golf courses are not all built the same way. The terrain, climate, ownership model, and intended audience of a course shape everything about how it plays, how long a round takes, and how much it costs. Understanding the major types of golf courses helps you pick the right one for your skill level, schedule, and budget. Links courses The original form of golf was played on linksland, the sandy, wind-swept coastal ground between the sea and inland farms in Scotland. True links courses share a set of defining features: firm, fast-running turf; very few trees; deep pot bunkers with steep sod-wall faces; and constant exposure to ocean wind. The terrain is usually rolling and uneven, with natural dunes shaping the holes rather than heavy earthmoving. In the United States, genuine links-style courses are rare because the right combination of coastal land and sandy soil is hard to find. The most celebrated example is Bandon Dunes Golf Resort on the Oregon coast, where multiple courses including the Sheep Ranch sit on rugged bluffs above the Pacific. On the East Coast, Kiawah Island Golf Resort Ocean Course in South Carolina plays along the Atlantic with wide-open sight lines and relentless wind. Whistling...
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18200 E WeKoPa Way, Fort Mcdowell, AZ 85264

An elite 18-hole desert course in Fort McDowell, AZ, playing 7,225 yards at par 72 with a driving range on tribal land.

18 Holes
Par 72
7225 yards
Elite
Driving Range