Golfweek’s Best 2023: Top 50 casino golf courses in the U.S.

Up for a great mix of casino fun and golf?

Welcome to Golfweek’s Best 2023 Casino Courses in the United States. This list focuses on courses owned and/or operated by or in conjunction with casinos, with data pulled from Golfweek‘s massive database of course rankings.

The hundreds of members of Golfweek‘s course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on our 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final rating for each that is then used to compile the Golfweek’s Best course rankings.

Listed with each course below is its average rating, location, designer(s) and whether the course is modern (m, built in or after 1960) or classic (c, built before 1960).

* New or returning to the list

San Diego golf: Where to play, stay and party in the U.S. Open’s host city

From Torrey Pines to Barona Creek and beyond, there’s plenty of courses to play and things to do in San Diego’s inviting climate.

A few years ago, I was working on a story about America’s municipal courses that could use a nip and tuck. Someone suggested Coronado Golf Course nestled in the serene, upscale beach community of Coronado, just minutes from downtown San Diego. For setting, playability and price, it’s arguably one of the country’s great munis, but could it be even better?

I reached out to my friend Tod Leonard, then the longtime golf correspondent for the San Diego newspaper (who has since joined Golf Digest) and an authority on golf in his neck of the woods, and proposed my question. His answer was short and sweet: He wouldn’t change a thing.

That about sums up how I feel about San Diego, one of those cities that is lovely to visit and even better to call home. It’s a hard city to squeeze into a phrase.

For starters, it capitalizes on one of the Pacific Coast’s best harbors, which has made it a home of a Navy and Marine Corps base since 1846. It has a tourist neighborhood with a Victorian Gaslamp District, beloved by baseball fans streaming out of Petco Park, conventiongoers and college students. While outclassed by the Bay Area and neighboring Los Angeles in attracting foodies, it has developed a vibrant roster of restaurants. Its world-class zoo and 1,800-acre Safari Park, 30 miles northeast, draws throngs every day. So do Sea World and Legoland. And Mexico – Tijuana, Baja California and the rest – beckons a few minutes from San Diego’s southern boundary.

It is Spanish tiles, palm trees, tropical blooms, year-round flip-flops, bonfires on the beach and fresh fish tacos – try the Taco Stand with locations in La Jolla, Encinitas and downtown San Diego or Oscars Mexican Seafood with locations in Pacific Beach and Hillcrest, as suggested by native Xander Schauffele.

The city, however, may be most famous for its glorious sunsets. If San Diego has a cohesive identity, it’s a shared embrace of an easy, breezy Southern California casualness.

And, of course, there’s the golf.