Worth It? NYC to Pebble Beach Golf

It’s been unusually cold in Connecticut this winter—snow banks lining every street, ice on the driveway, and every golf course in the state locked up tight until at least March. I’ve been grinding rounds at XGolf and GSPro, playing Pebble Beach virtually more times than I can count, but there’s something about staring at a simulator screen that makes you want the real thing even more. Then a coworker mentions that there’s a webcam on the first tee of Pebble Beach and suddenly I’m looking at flights, checking tee times, and convincing myself that now is the time. I want to shank a ball off the tee myself, not watch others do it!

Get me out of the snow!

What makes Pebble Beach matter? It’s not just one course—it’s an entire golf ecosystem. Pebble Beach Golf Links gets the glory (and the U.S. Open rotation), but Spyglass Hill might be the better test, and The Links at Spanish Bay offers a true links experience on American soil. Add in Del Monte and The Hay for variety, and you’ve got five days of golf that could keep any architecture nerd busy for a week. The setting is unmatched—dramatic cliffs, Monterey pines, crashing waves, and firm, fast conditions that demand every shot in your arsenal.

For a trip running $5,500-7,500 over four days, is it worth it? Let’s break down what you’re actually getting for that money.

Love those dramatic ocean cliffs

Golf

The Pebble Beach experience revolves around three championship courses, each with its own personality. You’re not just checking boxes—you’re experiencing three distinct philosophies of coastal golf design, all within a few miles of each other. The common thread? Firm, fast conditions, relentless wind, and greens that punish anything less than precise approach shots.

CourseDescription
Pebble Beach Golf Links
18 holes, 6,828 yards
Jack Neville’s 1919 masterpiece remains the crown jewel, and green fees north of $600 don’t deter anyone. The opening holes meander inland through Monterey pine, setting up the spectacular oceanside stretch from 4 through 10. The 7th—109 yards straight at the Pacific—might be the most photographed par 3 in golf. The 8th plays uphill to a cliffside green where anything right is gone. The closing stretch (17-18) along Carmel Bay has decided major championships. The greens are small, elevated, and lightning-fast. It’s strategic rather than overpowering, demanding course management over raw distance. One round isn’t enough.
Spyglass Hill Golf Course
18 holes, 6,960 yards
Robert Trent Jones Sr. built Spyglass in 1966, and many consider it the toughest track on the peninsula. The opening five holes play along the dunes with ocean views, then the course plunges into Monterey pine forest for a completely different back nine. It’s longer than Pebble, tighter off the tee, and the greens are even more severe. The 4th hole—a downhill par 3 over a bunker-filled wasteland—sets the tone. You need every club in the bag, and even then, bogeys pile up fast. Green fees run around $450.
The Links at Spanish Bay
18 holes, 6,821 yards
Jones, Tom Watson, and Sandy Tatum collaborated in 1987 to build a true links course on American soil. This is the most forgiving of the big three, but “forgiving” is relative—the wind howls off Monterey Bay. The front nine hugs the coastline with stunning ocean views and firm, bouncing fairways. The back nine moves inland but maintains the links aesthetic with rumpled terrain and pot bunkers. Spanish Bay rewards creativity over power. Bump-and-runs work better than high flop shots. It’s the most fun round of the trip. Green fees hover around $325.
Del Monte Golf Course
18 holes, 6,339 yards
The oldest course on the Monterey Peninsula (1897), Del Monte offers a historical palate cleanser between the heavy hitters. It’s shorter, tree-lined, and plays more like a parkland course. Green fees run around $130—cheap by Pebble Beach standards—and it’s a solid warm-up round or a recovery day after Spyglass beats you up. Don’t skip it entirely, but don’t expect it to compete with the marquee tracks.
The Hay<br>9 holes, par 3 courseTiger Woods and Coore & Crenshaw collaborated on this short course that opened in 2021. Holes range from 47 to 106 yards, all built on the site of Peter Hay’s original pitch-and-putt. It’s pure fun—no tee times needed, walk-up play, and it’ll cost you around $50. Squeeze it in before dinner or use it to work on your wedge game. Low commitment, high entertainment value.

The through-line across all three championship courses? Coastal conditions, firm turf, small greens, and wind that changes everything. One round of Pebble is mandatory. Spyglass is the better golf course. Spanish Bay is the most fun. You need at least three days to do it justice, and even then, you’ll leave wanting to come back.

Scene

You’re staying at The Lodge at Pebble Beach or The Inn at Spanish Bay, both on-property resorts that eliminate the hassle of off-site logistics. The Lodge sits right on the 18th fairway of Pebble Beach, offering immediate access to the golf shop, practice facilities, and coastal views. Rooms run $900-1,500 per night depending on the season, and you’re paying for convenience as much as luxury. The Inn at Spanish Bay is slightly more affordable ($700-1,200/night) and offers a quieter, more relaxed vibe with direct access to Spanish Bay’s first tee. Both properties deliver the full resort experience—impeccable service, coastal elegance, and the kind of atmosphere where everyone’s talking about their round over drinks.

Dining on the Monterey Peninsula is top-tier. At The Lodge, Stillwater Bar & Grill overlooks the 18th green and Carmel Bay—perfect for post-round drinks and upscale American fare. The Bench at the Lodge serves breakfast and casual bites. Over at Spanish Bay, Roy’s at Pebble Beach delivers Hawaiian fusion with Pacific Rim influences. For off-property options, head to Carmel-by-the-Sea for Casanova (French/Italian) or La Bicyclette (rustic European). Expect $75-150 per person for dinner at the nicer spots.

Non-golf amenities include world-class spas at both resorts, miles of coastal hiking trails along the 17-Mile Drive, and easy access to Carmel’s art galleries and wine tasting rooms. The Monterey Bay Aquarium is a 20-minute drive if you need a break from golf. This trip works best for golfers who want the full luxury experience—couples, buddy trips, or anyone celebrating a milestone round.

Perfect geography

Cost

Here’s what a four-day, three-night trip looks like:

DayItinerary
Day 1Fly into San Francisco or Monterey (SFO offers more options), drive two hours down the coast. Check in at The Lodge mid-morning. Play Del Monte to shake off travel rust.
Day 2Spyglass Hill in the morning. Lunch at Roy’s. Free afternoon to explore Carmel or hit the spa.
Day 3Pebble Beach Golf Links—book the earliest tee time you can get. Post-round drinks at Stillwater overlooking the 18th.
Day 4Spanish Bay in the morning. Play The Hay for fun. Head to the airport.

You could add a fourth round, but three championship courses plus The Hay feels like the sweet spot.

CategoryCost (Per Person)Notes
Flights$400SFO roundtrip from NYC
Rental Car$3004 days, split between 2 golfers
Lodging$1,8003 nights at The Lodge, shared room
Golf$2,200Pebble ($650), Spyglass ($475), Spanish Bay ($350), Del Monte ($150), The Hay ($50)
Food & Drinks$6004 days, $150/day avg
Total$5,300Per golfer, shared lodging

Costs can climb higher depending on room choice (ocean-view suites push $2,000/night), extra rounds, or splurging on dinners. Budget $6,500-7,500 if you’re staying at The Inn, adding another round, or upgrading accommodations. The golf alone eats up 40% of your budget, and there’s no way around it—this is expensive golf.

Amazing views [From the Fried Egg]

Prepare in CT

Pebble Beach demands precision iron play, firm-and-fast creativity around the greens, and the ability to manage wind without losing your mind. The courses reward strategic thinking over brute force, and the small, elevated greens punish anything short or offline.

The best way I’ve found to prepare for Pebble Beach’s coastal conditions is at Grassy Hill Country Club in Orange, CT. I know it’s private, but if you can wrangle a guest round, it’s worth it. Grassy Hill’s CB Macdonald and Seth Raynor design features the same template holes, strategic bunkering, and firm playing surfaces you’ll face on the Monterey Peninsula. The 4th hole’s redan green complex and the 11th’s biarritz are perfect proxies for the kind of shot-making Pebble Beach demands.

Read our Grassy Hill Country Club review

I’m currently working on a specific drill to prepare for the knockdown iron shots I’ll need at Pebble Beach, especially on holes like the 8th at Pebble (uphill into wind) and the 4th at Spyglass (downhill with trouble everywhere). The drill focuses on trajectory control with mid-to-long irons—5-iron through 8-iron—because those are the clubs I’ll be relying on most when the wind picks up.

Highest Yield Drill to Practice

I’m grinding knockdown iron shots at the range—the single most important skill for Pebble Beach’s wind. Here’s the drill: take your 7-iron to a 150-yard target. Move the ball back two inches in your stance, hands forward, weight 60% on your front foot. Three-quarter backswing, abbreviated chest-high finish, weight entirely forward at impact. The goal: penetrating flight that peaks at two-thirds normal height, lands at 145 yards, and releases forward with controlled roll.

The key feeling is maintaining forward shaft lean through contact—you’re trapping the ball, not sweeping it. I’m hitting 20 balls in a row, tracking success rate. Right now I’m at about 60%—the misses either balloon (hanging back on my right side) or run too hot (over-rotating hands through impact).

This matters because when you’re standing on Pebble’s 8th tee with wind howling off the Pacific, a normal 7-iron balloons and drifts 30 yards offline. The knockdown keeps the ball under the wind and on line. Same for Spanish Bay, where firm turf rejects anything soft. Work on this drill with 5-iron through 8-iron—those are the clubs you’ll rely on most when conditions get nasty.

Great routings

Final Word

Would I go? Absolutely. This is the trip you make when you’re tired of thinking about it and ready to actually do it. Pebble Beach delivers on the hype—not because it’s easy or affordable, but because it’s the rare bucket-list experience that lives up to the mythology. The golf is world-class, the setting is unmatched, and walking the same fairways as Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, and Tiger Woods adds a layer of reverence you don’t get at most resorts.

Book this trip if you want the full pilgrimage experience, if you can justify the cost without wincing, and if you’re ready to play golf that will challenge every part of your game. Don’t wait until you’re “good enough”—you’ll never feel ready, and that’s the point. Go now, play badly, and come back smarter.