The first addition to the St Andrews family came in 1895, when the ‘New Course’ was added.
The St Andrews New Course, must be the oldest ‘new course’ in the world, and benefited to a large extent from the earth moving age and evolution in course design, as head green keeper ‘Old’ Tom Morris oversaw its layout and completion.
The New Course is often said to be the towns folks favourite and there is certainly a body of opinion that it’s the most complete test of a links golfer that St Andrews has to offer
With links land beginning to run out, the Trust were forced to look slightly further afield when they introduced their most recent 18 hole course.
Perched on top of the cliffs overlooking the town below, the David MacKlay Kidd designed Castle Course, was opened in 2008, and is a couple of miles outside of St Andrews. It’s not a true links even if it bears the unmistakable character of one. It’s certainly the most aesthetic of the St Andrews courses and is quickly gaining in popularity now as it begins to climb the rankings. It’s a hilly design but as the architects reputation continues to grow, there’s a sense that perhaps the Trust have landed with the Castle
By the 1890’s however the game of golf was enjoying a terrific expansion in popularity as the railway opened the links of Scotland up to playing populations that were otherwise prevented from reaching them. In 1897 St Andrews added its third links, the Jubilee course, which was squeezed in between the other two and named in honour of Queen Victoria. In 1988 Donald Steel revised the layout to Championship standards. Many now regard the Jubilee as the toughest course on these fabled links
The Craigtoun Course is the renamed ‘Dukes Course’ (the Dukes in question suffering from a bit of reputational issue) so the course took the name of nearby country park. The Craigtoun Course was previously operated by the Old Course Hotel and built to a Championship standard but joined the Links Trust stable in 2026.
It’s linksy in character but probably plays on terrain we would more accurate describe as heathland, as its located about 3 miles in-land from the coast (similar distance to the Fairmont courses, albeit they stay on the coastline albeit on a cliff top)
Before its switch, it was generally held to be of a similar standard to the New or Castle Course
The fourth addition to the family came in 1914, when Harry S Colt of Pine Creek and Royal Portrush built the Eden Course. With much of the more promising links land now claimed, attention began to focus along the seaward side of the links and making greater use of the river estuary as it flows out into the North Sea. Colt built a course that made use of the natural folds in the terrain and didn’t seek to over-bunker it. The Eden is a quite subtle addition to the clan and a lot more tricky than people imagine. It’s a bit shorter than the New, ‘Jube’ and Castle and can prove particular popular with the towns students, or overseas visitors who’ve arrived in St Andrews in the early afternoon and who are welcoming of a ‘sighter’ to help ‘get their eye in’
The two Championship courses operated by the Fairmont Hotel have something of a Cane and Abel relationship given that they periodically pinch holes from each other. The Kittocks was traditionally considered the more challenging of the two. After Sam Torrance oversaw a renovation to restore parity with the Kittocks, the second of the Fairmont family reopened in 2009, and many now consider it to have surpassed the Kitttocks. Indeed, that sense was probably confirmed when in the ‘covid season’ of 2020 the Torrance hosted a European Tour event
Both courses are cliff top layouts with stunning views looking back into St Andrews, and the ever moody North Sea. On a windy day, it can require some nerve to play. The feature holes at bother are also the 17th, a dog-leg par 4 where the approach shot is a forced carry over a cleft in the cliff line at the Kittocks, and a par 3 with a forced carry over a cleft on the Torrance.
In truth, any St Andrews course can pretty much be added to any St Andrews focused package to help reinforce. You might think that this starts to look a bit like ‘fill’, but there is also a strategic element to the decision too.
A vast majority of overseas golfers travel to St Andrews with the objective of playing the Old Course. It’s kind of difficult to just rock up and play the Old Course however. We need to lay a little bit of a siege to it (without allowing it to completely dictate and pin us in). This means ‘running the numbers game’. So long as we’re prepared to use the ‘singles ballot’ then a strategy that attacks Weds to Sat should put us close to the threshold of expectation. We’d normally expect to be in the region of 85%+
Whilst we’re ‘waiting out the Old Course’ however, we have golf to play, and if we don’t want to travel too far to do so, or have a bit of a budgetary consideration to stay on top of, then the Other Golf Courses in St Andrews offer us opportunity
Sometimes we might choose to prebook the Other Golf Courses in St Andrews, sometimes you might prefer the flexibility of not doing so, and to book them as we go along. OK, this latter strategy has an element of risk to it, but its normally sufficiently manageable for us to accept
Not all the tee-times for the Other Golf Courses in St Andrews are pre-sold. Some are held back for issue the day before play. These are sold at 07.00.01 for play the following day, and when we say one second past seven o’clock, we mean it!
We sit there with preloaded number, a countdown clock on-screen, and armed with a little bit knowledge about how to expedite the process in getting through the Trust’s switchboard. Faraway Fairways shouldn’t perhaps brag about this (as nothing is more certain to guarantee a future failure) but we can usually land on the first ten calls waiting, which is enough to get a round
We don't need to make this an ordeal by 101 filtering questions! In reality there are probably little more than half a dozen things we need to know to build out a proposal. The guidance below might help you frame answers
Duration - usually best expressed as a range up to a maximum
Time of year - can be anything from a specific date range to a named season
Travel class - Faraway Fairways uses 'Luxury', 'Premier' or 'Affordable' for generic purposes. You might choose to reference the international 'star' rating system. We're only looking for something to help steer us into the right sector
Self drive or hired driver - In broad terms, self driving is normally less expensive, and much more flexible, but some folk just don't want to do it
Must play courses/ must do places - a few name checks is all that's needed