Guide

Las Vegas Golf Tee Times: How & Where to Book (Local Guide)

Everything locals know about booking golf in Las Vegas — from GolfNow deals to twilight windows and the courses worth your time.

Booking Las Vegas golf tee times looks simple until you start comparing rates across a dozen courses and three booking platforms and realize the same tee time can cost $40 or $140 depending on how and when you book it. Las Vegas runs on dynamic pricing — most public and resort courses tie their fees to demand, weather, and the time until the round — which means the gap between a tourist rate and a local rate can be significant. This guide covers every lever that matters: where to book, when to book, which time slots carry the best rates, and which courses to put on your list across the west side and the broader valley.

How we pick: We compare published rates across courses and booking platforms and draw on local knowledge and golfer feedback. We do not accept green fees or advertising in exchange for placement; our only interest is giving you accurate, actionable information for planning a real round.

Where to Book Las Vegas Golf Tee Times

There are two main channels for booking tee times in Las Vegas: the course's own website and third-party aggregators, with GolfNow being the dominant platform in the market.

Book Direct Through the Course

Booking directly through a course's own reservation system is almost always the cleanest option — no platform fees, no third-party cancellation policies, and occasional perks that are not available elsewhere. Most Summerlin and Las Vegas courses have straightforward online booking. For the Golf Summerlin trio — Palm Valley Golf Club, Highland Falls Golf Club, and Eagle Crest Golf Club — all three courses book through golfsummerlin.com. TPC Las Vegas books at tpc.com/lasvegas. Angel Park Golf Club books at angelpark.com. Siena Golf Club books at sienagolfclub.com.

GolfNow: The Main Third-Party Option

GolfNow is the largest tee-time aggregator serving the Las Vegas market and often lists rates that are directly competitive with — or occasionally lower than — booking direct, particularly for last-minute slots and twilight windows. The platform aggregates inventory from multiple courses, which makes it useful for comparison shopping across a day's options without visiting each course website individually. GolfNow also runs "Hot Deals" — deeply discounted last-minute times that courses release to fill gaps. If your schedule is flexible and you can commit within 24–48 hours of play, hot deals on GolfNow can produce the lowest green fees available for some of the valley's better public courses.

One important note: some courses do not list their full inventory on GolfNow, or hold back peak-demand slots for direct booking. Always check the course website alongside GolfNow before assuming you have seen the full picture.

Best Times of Day to Book Golf in Las Vegas

Time of day matters more in Las Vegas than nearly anywhere else in American golf, for two reasons: heat and dynamic pricing. Morning tee times (first light through roughly 9 a.m.) carry the coolest temperatures in summer and the highest green fees year-round because demand is strongest. Late afternoon and twilight slots flip the equation — prices drop, but heat climbs in summer and daylight compresses in winter.

Morning Tee Times (Dawn to 9 a.m.)

Peak prices, best conditions. In spring (March through May) and autumn (October through November), a dawn tee time at TPC Las Vegas or Angel Park puts you on course in ideal temperatures with a full round ahead of the afternoon winds. In summer, a 5:45 or 6 a.m. start is genuinely comfortable — Las Vegas mornings are cooler than the internet suggests, and desert courses are typically in their best shape early. If you are visiting and want the "signature round" experience, morning is the default choice.

Twilight Rates (Afternoon Onward)

Most Las Vegas public courses start twilight pricing at 12 p.m. or 1 p.m., with super-twilight (often called "afternoon twilight") kicking in around 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. The discount relative to peak morning rates can be substantial — sometimes 40 to 60 percent less. In spring and autumn, a 2 p.m. start gives you a full round in comfortable temperatures; in summer, the same time puts you in 100°F heat that discourages most golfers but suits those who are acclimated. The best twilight value in the Summerlin corridor is typically Palm Valley, where afternoon rates and GolfNow hot deals often combine to make a par-72 championship course accessible at executive-course prices.

Best Season for Las Vegas Golf Rates

Las Vegas golf pricing follows a predictable seasonal arc. Understanding it lets you either book the best-value trip or avoid the worst-value timing.

Peak Season: October Through May

The combination of ideal weather and high tourist volume drives green fees to their annual peak in autumn (October–November) and spring (March–May). During Shriners Children's Open week in October, the TPC Las Vegas corridor sees increased demand from golf-focused visitors, and rates at nearby public courses tend to climb in sympathy. Book early for October and March visits — 7 to 14 days in advance is often necessary to secure preferred morning tee times at popular courses.

Value Season: June Through August

Summer heat drives green fees down sharply across the valley. Courses that charge $150–$200 in spring regularly drop to $60–$90 (or less with hot deals) in July and August. If you are heat-tolerant and willing to play early, summer is when Las Vegas golf delivers its best value. The Golf Summerlin courses — particularly Highland Falls, which sits at 3,000 feet elevation — are more comfortable in summer than Strip-area courses, making them a smart choice for budget-conscious warm-weather golfers.

Booking Windows: How Far in Advance?

Different courses and platforms open their booking windows at different intervals. As a general rule for Las Vegas public courses:

  • Peak spring/autumn: Book 7–14 days out for preferred morning tee times at popular courses (TPC Las Vegas, Angel Park, Siena Golf Club). TPC Las Vegas and Angel Park are particularly sought-after and fill early on weekend mornings.
  • Summer weekdays: Same-day and next-day availability is common at most courses. This is when GolfNow hot deals produce their best results — courses release unsold inventory at steep discounts.
  • Las Vegas Paiute Golf Resort (northwest of the valley) and Las Vegas National (central Las Vegas, near the Strip) both tend to have more available inventory than the Summerlin corridor and can often be booked within a few days even in peak season.
  • Resort courses (Wynn Golf Club, Cascata, Shadow Creek) typically tie bookings to hotel reservations; plan around your room booking rather than your tee time.

Resident and Local Discounts

Las Vegas permanent residents and Nevada ID holders can access meaningful discounts that visitors cannot. The Golf Summerlin courses at Palm Valley, Highland Falls, and Eagle Crest all offer resident rate cards that are materially lower than rack rates — check golfsummerlin.com or call directly to confirm current resident pricing. Angel Park similarly extends discounted rates to Las Vegas area residents, and the morning slots at off-peak times (Monday through Thursday, early morning) can be particularly accessible. If you live in the valley and play regularly, a golf passport or season-pass product at your home course may offer better economics than booking round by round.

The Courses Worth Booking in Las Vegas

Booking logistics are only half the decision. Here is a quick map of where each course sits in the valley and what it is best for, to help you match the course to your trip.

West Side / Summerlin (Best for Visitors Staying Off-Strip)

TPC Las Vegas (public, par 71, Canyons village) is the strongest "bucket-list" public round on the west side — canyon scenery, PGA TOUR pedigree, and morning tee times that reward early booking. Angel Park Golf Club (public, 36 holes, par 71 Mountain Course) has won Best Golf Course in Las Vegas 14 of the past 15 years and is the most complete public facility near Summerlin, with the Arnold Palmer Mountain Course as the headline. The Golf Summerlin trio — Palm Valley, Highland Falls, and Eagle Crest — provides three distinct public options at generally lower price points, with Palm Valley (par 72, 6,849 yards, 68 bunkers) being the longest and most architecturally demanding. Siena Golf Club (semi-private, par 72, 6,843 yards, Schmidt-Curley design, south Summerlin) rewards precise shotmaking and is especially strong for mid-to-low handicappers who value architecture over scenery. For the full picture of courses, distances, and access, the Summerlin golf course map plots every option on the west side.

Central Las Vegas / Strip Area

Las Vegas National Golf Club (public, 1961 Bert Stamps design, central LV near the Strip) is the most historically significant and accessible public course close to the Strip corridor — a classic tree-lined parkland layout that provides a different character from the desert-canyon designs dominating the rest of the market. For Strip-based resort players, Wynn Golf Club (Tom Fazio, resort-access, par 70) is the only full-length on-Strip option; book through the Wynn resort.

Southeast / Henderson Corridor

Reflection Bay (Jack Nicklaus, public, Lake Las Vegas) and Rio Secco Golf Club (Rees Jones, public, Henderson) anchor the southeast quadrant. Both require a 20-to-30-minute drive from the Strip or Summerlin but reward the trip with distinct architecture and resort-quality conditioning. Cascata (Rees Jones, Boulder City) is the premium resort option in this direction — roughly 30 miles from the Strip, resort-access pricing, among the most dramatic settings in Nevada golf.

Northwest / Las Vegas Paiute Golf Resort

Pete Dye's three-course complex on tribal land northwest of the city — Snow Mountain, Sun Mountain, and the 7,604-yard Wolf Course — represents the most ambitious public golf facility in the valley. The drive is 30-plus minutes from Summerlin but the scale of the property and the quality of the Pete Dye routing justifies the trip for serious golfers.

Verdict: How to Book Golf in Las Vegas

For most visiting golfers, the practical booking approach is: check the course website first (for best availability and cleanest booking experience), then check GolfNow for the same slots (to see if third-party pricing is lower or if hot deals are available). Book morning tee times 7–14 days out in peak season; rely on last-minute GolfNow deals in summer. For Summerlin and west-side golf, TPC Las Vegas and Angel Park are the default "must-plays" on the public roster; Palm Valley and Highland Falls deliver strong value for regular rounds. And if you are in the valley year-round, resident rates at the Golf Summerlin courses and Angel Park make quality public golf genuinely affordable.

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