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The best value public golf courses near Philadelphia, from a Donald Ross gem to a heathlands-style links course — all under $90.

5 Best Value Golf Courses Near Philadelphia
Philadelphia's public golf scene punches well above its weight class. Within a 90-minute drive, you can play courses designed by Donald Ross, Bobby Weed, and Brian Ault — the kind of pedigree that would cost you $200+ in most parts of the country. Here are five courses near Philly where the quality far exceeds the green fee.
Jeffersonville Golf Club

Norristown, PA — 30 minutes from Center City
A Donald Ross design for $65 on a weekday is one of the best deals in Mid-Atlantic golf. Ross laid out Jeffersonville in 1931, and the bones of that golden-age routing are still intact — crowned greens, strategic bunkering, and approach shots that reward precision over power. At par 70, it's not a bomber's course. You'll need to think your way around.
West Norriton Township owns and operates the course, which keeps prices honest. Jeffersonville is consistently ranked among the top 10 public courses in Pennsylvania by Golfweek (#7), and it's earned features in LINKS Magazine and The Fried Egg — serious recognition for a township muni.
The club recently added six Trackman golf simulators and a restaurant called The Burgess, so there's reason to show up early or stick around after your round.
- Holes: 18 | Par: 70
- Green Fees: $65 weekday, $90 weekend, $45-60 twilight
- Senior (60+): $55 weekday
- Driving Range: No (simulators available)
- Website: jeffersonvillegolfclub.org
Pro tip: Book within the 7-day window to avoid the 15% advance booking surcharge. Weekday mornings are the sweet spot — you'll often have the course nearly to yourself.
The Golf Course at Glen Mills

Glen Mills, PA — 25 minutes from Center City
Bobby Weed designed Glen Mills to work with the land, not against it, and the result is one of the most dramatic public layouts in the Philadelphia area. The course winds through dense woodlands and wetlands with over 200 feet of elevation change — you'll feel it in your legs if you walk. Streams cut through rocky terrain on multiple holes, creating natural hazards that look intimidating but play fair.
Golfweek ranks Glen Mills tied for #4 among public courses in Pennsylvania, and PAGolfer slots it at #3. Those rankings aren't charity — the conditioning here is a step above what you'd expect from a public facility.
Winter rates (December through March) run $75 on weekdays and $85 on weekends and holidays, cart included. In-season rates are slightly higher, but even at peak pricing, you're getting a ranked course with a cart for under $100.
- Holes: 18
- Green Fees: $75 weekday, $85 weekend/holiday (winter rates, cart included)
- Senior: $70 weekday | Junior: $48 (after 1pm, walking)
- Driving Range: Yes
- Website: glenmillsgolf.com
Pro tip: The elevation changes are real. If you're walking, bring a rangefinder — distances play differently uphill and down. The 9-hole afternoon rate ($40) is a great way to sample the course on a tight schedule.
Inniscrone Golf Club
Avondale, PA — 45 minutes from Center City
Gil Hanse designed Inniscrone in 1998 — years before he'd go on to build the Olympic course in Rio and take on the blockbuster Cobbs Creek restoration in West Philly. This is early Hanse, and the bones are unmistakable: dramatic elevation changes, wind-swept native grasses, and greens that tilt and break in ways that demand your full attention. The slope rating of 140 is the highest on this list — this course has teeth.
Owned and managed by London Grove Township, Inniscrone flies under the radar compared to its better-known neighbors. That's a mistake. GolfPass ranked it #11 in Pennsylvania in 2024, Golfweek named it a Top 100 Modern Course in America, and The Fried Egg has featured it as one of the best public options in the Philly area.
At $46 on weekdays and $56 on weekends, Inniscrone is the cheapest course on this list — and possibly the best pure value play within driving distance of Philadelphia. Township ownership keeps the operation lean and the prices low. London Grove residents get an additional 10% off all rounds, but even at full price, you'd be hard-pressed to find a better deal on a course this well-regarded.
- Holes: 18 | Par: 70 | Yardage: 6,630
- Green Fees: $46 weekday, $56 weekend (winter rates)
- Slope: 140
- Twilight: $36 weekday, $46 weekend
- Senior (60+): $34 weekday
- Driving Range: Yes
- Website: inniscronegolfclub.com
Pro tip: The family special — one adult and one junior for $62 weekday or $72 weekend — is one of the best junior golf deals in the region. If you're looking to get your kid hooked, start here.
Wyncote Golf Club
Oxford, PA — 1 hour 15 minutes from Center City
Wyncote is the farthest drive on this list, but it's worth it. Brian Ault designed this heathlands-style course in 1993, and it plays unlike anything else in the Philadelphia area. At 7,012 yards from the tips with a slope of 130, it's a legitimate test. The firm, fast conditions reward a ground game — bump-and-run approaches, links-style wind management, and creative shotmaking off tight lies.
Golfweek ranks Wyncote tied for #8 in Pennsylvania. GolfPass has placed it as high as #2 in the state. The course tagline — "Golf, Pure and Simple" — isn't marketing fluff. There's no housing development lining the fairways, no wedding venue bolted onto the clubhouse. Just golf.
Weekday rates start around $45, with weekend peak rates climbing to $110. The midweek sweet spot is the best value: a ranked, heathlands-style course for under $50.
- Holes: 18 | Par: 72 | Yardage: 7,012 (tips)
- Green Fees: $45-70 weekday, $75-110 weekend
- Slope: 130 | Rating: 74.0
- Driving Range: Yes
- Website: wyncote.com
Pro tip: Play from the white tees (6,353 yards) your first time out. The course opens up strategically from the right distance, and you'll enjoy it more than grinding from the tips. Afternoon twilight rates are the move for budget-conscious golfers.
Paxon Hollow Golf Club

Broomall, PA — 15 minutes from Center City
Built in 1926 by Francis Warner and Franklin Meehan, Paxon Hollow is a golden-age design hiding in plain sight in Delaware County. At just 5,641 yards, it looks short on the scorecard. Don't be fooled — the classic design elements (small, sloped greens, tight doglegs, strategic bunkering) make it play significantly tougher than the yardage suggests.
Marple Township owns and operates the course, which is why you can play 18 holes of golden-age architecture for $55 on a weekday. It's also the closest course on this list to Center City — 15 minutes with no traffic. That convenience factor alone makes it a no-brainer for a quick weekday round.
The Fried Egg, which tends to spotlight architecturally interesting public courses over flashy resort layouts, has featured Paxon Hollow. That's a good sign that the design stands up to scrutiny from people who care about golf course architecture, not just conditioning.
- Holes: 18 | Par: 71 | Yardage: 5,641
- Green Fees: $55 weekday, $40-70 weekend
- Driving Range: Yes
- Website: paxonhollowgolf.com
Pro tip: Don't let the short yardage tempt you into leaving the driver at home. Several doglegs reward a well-placed tee shot, and the small greens demand accurate approaches. Bring your wedge game.
Planning Your Trip
Best time to play: April through June and September through October. Mid-Atlantic summers can be brutally humid, and winter rates (December through March) are cheaper but conditions are hit-or-miss.
How to book: All five courses offer online booking through their websites. Jeffersonville charges a 15% surcharge for tee times booked more than 7 days out, so plan accordingly. Inniscrone and Paxon Hollow are first-come, first-served enough on weekdays that walk-ons are often possible.
Suggested groupings:
- Morning at Jeffersonville, afternoon at Paxon Hollow — Both are inside 30 minutes of Center City and less than 20 minutes from each other. That's 36 holes of Donald Ross + golden-age architecture for about $120.
- Glen Mills + Inniscrone day trip — Head southwest on Route 1 and play these two Chester County gems back-to-back. They're 20 minutes apart.
- Wyncote destination round — Make this a standalone trip. The drive to Oxford is part of the experience — rolling Chester County farmland with no traffic once you clear West Chester.
Budget estimates:
- Weekday 18 at Inniscrone + Paxon Hollow: ~$101
- Weekend 18 at Jeffersonville: $90
- Weekday 18 at Glen Mills (cart included): $75
- Full weekday 36-hole day (Jeff + Paxon): ~$120
One More to Watch: Cobbs Creek
The biggest public golf story in Philadelphia right now is Cobbs Creek, where Gil Hanse is leading a $65M+ restoration of the historic course originally designed by Hugh Wilson (yes, the same architect behind Merion). Charlie Sifford learned to play here. The Olde Course is expected to open in Summer 2026, with Troon managing the facility. Green fees haven't been announced, but this will be a must-play the moment it opens. Keep an eye on cobbscreekgolf.org for updates.
Final Thoughts
The Philadelphia area is stacked with public golf that doesn't require a second mortgage. From a 1931 Donald Ross design to a modern heathlands course, you can play architecturally significant golf for $46-90 — well below what comparable courses charge in the Northeast. Use Roadie Golf to map out your route and find even more courses worth playing along the way.