Golf Membership Cost in Las Vegas: What Private Clubs Really Charge
An editorial guide to what a private golf club membership costs across the Las Vegas valley — initiation fees versus dues, what drives the price, and how access actually works at TPC Summerlin, Red Rock, The Summit, Southern Highlands, DragonRidge, Anthem, and the incoming Amara.
There is no single answer to what a Las Vegas golf membership cost looks like. The figure depends entirely on which club you mean, and the spread across the valley's private clubs is enormous — from a five-figure initiation fee at one guard-gated community to a reported six-figure buy-in at the most exclusive address in Summerlin. This guide is meant to set realistic expectations before you call a membership office. Everything below is sourced from published course data, operator information, and player reviews; we do not claim first-hand membership at any of these clubs, and every dollar figure is reported rather than independently verified. Confirm current pricing with each club directly, because initiation fees and dues at private clubs change without much public notice.
One thing worth saying up front: a private golf club membership in Las Vegas is rarely just a golf transaction. At several of these clubs the membership is bound to real estate, to a guard-gated community, or to amenities — spas, tennis, fine dining — that have nothing to do with the course. That bundling is a big part of why prices vary so widely, and it is the first thing to understand before you compare any two clubs on initiation fee alone.
Initiation fee vs. dues: the two numbers that matter
Almost every private club separates its cost into two parts, and conflating them is the most common mistake prospective members make. The initiation fee is the one-time payment you make to join — paid up front when the club admits you. Dues are the recurring charge, billed monthly or annually, that you keep paying for as long as you hold the membership. A club can have a modest initiation fee and still be costly over a decade if its dues are high; another can demand a large buy-in but charge comparatively reasonable annual dues. On top of those two, many clubs layer additional line items: HOA fees if the club sits inside a residential community, food-and-beverage minimums, cart and trail fees, and capital-assessment charges for clubhouse renovations. When you ask a membership office about the cost, ask about all of it, not just the headline number.
It also helps to know that most private clubs offer tiers. A full Golf membership grants unlimited course access; Sports, Social, or Executive tiers cost less and trade away some or all golf privileges in exchange for clubhouse, fitness, pool, and dining access. If golf is not your only reason for joining, the lower tiers can change the math dramatically.
The most accessible: Red Rock Country Club
Of the established private clubs in Summerlin, Red Rock Country Club is the one with the most documented, and most attainable, membership pricing. The guard-gated community on 738 acres at Summerlin's western edge centers on two Arnold Palmer and Ed Seay courses — the members-only Mountain Course and the daily-fee Arroyo Golf Club. For full golf access, the club's Golf membership has been reported with an initiation fee of approximately $10,000 and monthly dues of roughly $975, covering unlimited play on both courses. Executive and Sports-only tiers are reported at lower price points for those who want clubhouse, tennis, and pool access without full golf privileges.
What makes Red Rock distinctive on cost is that you do not have to buy a home in the community to join, and there is also a genuine non-member route: the Arroyo Golf Club accepts daily-fee play, with green fees reported in the $85 to $189 range depending on season. For a buyer weighing whether a membership is worth it, that public-access course is a low-commitment way to sample the product first. Confirm current initiation and dues figures with the club, as the numbers cited here are reported.
The ceiling: The Summit Club
At the opposite end of the spectrum sits The Summit Club, the invitation-only Tom Fazio course on 555 elevated acres in The Ridges. This is the most expensive private golf membership in Las Vegas by a wide margin, and it is structured differently from the others: membership is tied to residential ownership inside the development, so the true cost of entry begins with buying a home in a market where a single transaction set the all-time Las Vegas residential sale record in May 2024.
On the club side, reported initiation fees range from $250,000 to $400,000, with annual dues of roughly $110,000 to $120,000 and HOA fees of approximately $30,000 per year. Those are large, hedge-worthy numbers — they appear in secondary reporting rather than on any public club document we located, and prospective members should verify them directly with the club. The Summit Club has no guest-fee program and no walk-in path; access requires sponsorship and, effectively, residency. If Red Rock represents the accessible floor of Summerlin private membership, The Summit Club is the reference ceiling against which everything else is measured.
The historic and the dramatic: TPC Summerlin, Southern Highlands, DragonRidge, Anthem
Several of the valley's most respected private clubs do not publish their membership pricing, and their operators tend to share figures only on direct inquiry. We are not going to invent numbers for them. What we can tell you is how each is positioned, which is itself a strong signal of where its cost lands.
TPC Summerlin — Bobby Weed's par-72 championship course, the site of Tiger Woods' first PGA TOUR victory in 1996 and the longtime home of the Shriners Children's Open through 2024 — is privately operated with access primarily through membership or corporate outings. Those corporate outings have been reported at approximately $250 per round, which is a useful access data point but not a membership cost; the club's initiation and dues are not publicly posted, so confirm them with the club. Tour-host pedigree like TPC Summerlin's typically commands premium pricing.
Southern Highlands Golf Club, about 30 minutes south of Summerlin, is built around the final collaboration of Robert Trent Jones Sr. and Jr. — its 12th hole bears a plaque marking it as the last hole the elder Jones ever designed. With a 42,000-square-foot clubhouse and a 24-hour guard-gated setting, it ranks among the city's most distinguished memberships, and its pricing reflects that tier even though specific figures are not published here. In Henderson, DragonRidge Country Club (a Jay Morrish and David Druzisky design carved into the McCullough Range in MacDonald Highlands, where membership is tied to property ownership) and Anthem Country Club (a Hale Irwin and Keith Foster layout in a guard-gated community roughly 30 minutes from Summerlin) round out the valley's private-club roster. Both are members-and-guests-only residential clubs; prospective members should inquire directly about current availability and cost, as neither publishes membership pricing in the sources we reviewed.
The wildcard: Amara Golf and Social Club
The newest entry is also the one with the most-discussed price tag. Amara Golf and Social Club is being built on the former Bear's Best Las Vegas site inside The Ridges, backed by Mulligan Holdings (Andrew Pascal and Mike Mixer) with a reported $300 million total investment and a Jackson Kahn Design course. Positioned as a health, wellness, and golf destination rather than a traditional country club, Amara has reported membership figures that have circulated widely: an initiation fee of $250,000, reported to increase at each threshold of 50 memberships sold, and monthly dues of roughly $4,000 covering family access to dependents age 25. Membership is reported to be capped at 265 — 250 general memberships plus 15 reserved for buyers of the on-site villas.
These figures trace largely to press summaries and real-estate sources rather than a primary club document, so we report them as stated and recommend confirming with the club. An October 2026 opening has been reported but not independently confirmed. What Amara illustrates clearly is the modern playbook for pricing a new private club in Las Vegas: a capped roster, an escalating initiation fee that rewards early joiners, and a wellness-and-social amenity stack that justifies dues well beyond what the golf alone would command.
What actually drives the price
Pull these clubs together and a few consistent cost drivers emerge. Access model is the biggest: an invitation-only club tied to residential ownership, like The Summit Club, will always cost more than a guard-gated club that also sells memberships to non-residents, like Red Rock. Course pedigree matters — a Tour-host venue or a historically significant design carries a premium. The surrounding real estate is inseparable from the membership at several of these clubs, so the true entry cost includes a home purchase. Amenities beyond golf — spa, fitness, dining, pickleball, tennis — push dues higher because you are funding far more than a course. And a deliberately low member cap, as at Amara, lets a club set initiation fees that rise as the roster fills. When two clubs quote very different numbers, the gap almost always comes down to some combination of these five factors.
How to actually find out what you'll pay
Because so few of these clubs publish pricing, the only reliable path is to contact each membership office directly and ask for a current schedule of initiation fees, dues by tier, and every recurring assessment. Ask specifically whether residency is required, whether there is a waitlist, and whether the initiation fee is refundable or escalating. For clubs tied to real estate, a Nevada agent with transaction experience in that specific community can often surface figures that are not advertised. Treat any number you read online — including the reported figures in this guide — as a starting point for that conversation, not a quote.
For a fuller picture of the clubs themselves, our guide to the best private golf clubs in Summerlin compares access routes, design pedigree, and the communities around each. And if a private membership is not the right fit, our roundup of the best public golf courses in Summerlin covers what is available without any membership at all.
Frequently asked questions about Las Vegas golf membership cost
How much does a golf membership cost in Las Vegas?
There is no single Las Vegas golf membership cost — it spans a wide range. At the more accessible end, Red Rock Country Club's full Golf membership has been reported with an initiation fee of roughly $10,000 and monthly dues near $975. At the top end, The Summit Club's initiation fees have been reported between $250,000 and $400,000 with annual dues of roughly $110,000 to $120,000. The incoming Amara Golf and Social Club has a reported $250,000 initiation fee and roughly $4,000 in monthly dues. All figures are reported and should be confirmed directly with each club.
What is the difference between an initiation fee and dues?
An initiation fee is a one-time payment to join a private club, paid up front when you are admitted. Dues are the recurring charges — typically monthly or annual — that you pay for as long as you remain a member. A club with a low initiation fee can still be expensive over time if its dues are high, so both numbers matter when comparing the true cost of a Las Vegas golf membership.
Which is the most expensive private golf club in Las Vegas?
Based on published reporting, The Summit Club in Summerlin sits at the top of the cost hierarchy, with reported initiation fees of $250,000 to $400,000, annual dues of roughly $110,000 to $120,000, and HOA fees near $30,000 per year. The Summit Club is invitation-only and tied to residential ownership, so membership effectively requires buying into one of the most expensive real-estate markets in Nevada. These figures are reported and should be verified with the club.
Can you join a private golf club in Las Vegas without buying a home?
It depends on the club. Some, like Red Rock Country Club, offer golf and social memberships that do not require owning a home in the community. Others, including The Summit Club, tie membership to residential ownership inside the development. Amara Golf and Social Club is a stand-alone membership club with a small on-site villa component. Always confirm whether residency is required directly with the club, as policies change.
Why do Las Vegas golf membership costs vary so much?
Price is driven by exclusivity and access model, course pedigree, the surrounding real estate, amenities beyond golf, and member cap. An invitation-only club tied to record-setting home sales, such as The Summit Club, costs far more than a guard-gated club that also sells golf memberships to non-residents, such as Red Rock Country Club. Tour-host prestige, designer name, and a capped roster all push initiation fees higher.