Ask a British golfer to name a Spanish golf destination and the answers come quickly: Sotogrande, the Costa del Sol, perhaps Mallorca. All deserve their reputations. But there is a stretch of the Spanish coast that most UK players fly straight over on their way to the usual suspects, and it happens to be one of the most rewarding places in the country to swing a club. It is called the Costa Cálida, and it sits in the region of Murcia, in the south-east of Spain.
For years this has been Spain’s best-kept golfing secret, and there is a certain irony in that. Golf in Murcia is not some fledgling experiment. The region is home to more than twenty-one courses, backed by the regional government and its golf federation, and it draws roughly 165,000 golfers a year, whose visits generate around two million overnight stays across the region. This is a serious golf destination that simply hasn’t shouted about itself the way its neighbours have.
Twenty-one courses and counting, no two rounds the same
What sets the Costa Cálida apart is not just the number of courses but their variety. Within a compact area you can play a different layout every day for a week and never feel you are repeating yourself. One round might wind through desert-style terrain with the mountains as a backdrop; the next might sit almost on the shoreline, the Mediterranean glinting between holes. The region markets itself, fairly, as more than twenty-one courses, each with its own distinct character, and the concentration means you spend your time playing rather than driving between resorts.
That compactness matters more than it sounds. In many golf destinations the courses are scattered, and a week can involve long transfers that eat into the day. Here, courses, hotels, the coast and the airport all sit within a short radius of one another.
A climate built for golf
There is a reason the professionals and the package tourists have long favoured this part of Spain, and it is written into the landscape. The Costa Cálida enjoys more than 300 days of sunshine a year, comfortably above the European average. The name itself translates as “the warm coast”, and the region has leaned into it. For a golfer accustomed to the vagaries of the British forecast, the reliability alone is worth the flight.
Beyond the green
A golf trip is rarely only about golf, and this is where Murcia quietly pulls ahead. The region is a genuine gastronomic destination, drawing on the produce of the huerta the fertile market gardens often called the vegetable garden of Europe and the fresh fish of the Mar Menor lagoon. The signature dish, caldero del Mar Menor, is a rice-and-fish preparation cooked in the cast-iron pot that gives it its name, and it is worth ordering at least once. Wash it down with a local wine and you are drinking from three protected denominations of origin: Jumilla, Bullas and Yecla, all within the region.
The culture runs deep, too. Cartagena’s Roman theatre is one of the finest in Spain, unearthed only in recent decades and beautifully restored. The city of Murcia is anchored by a cathedral that has watched over centuries of history. And the Mar Menor, Europe’s largest saltwater lagoon, offers warm, shallow water and a string of beaches a few minutes from the fairways. It is entirely possible to play a serious round in the morning and spend the afternoon somewhere that feels a world away.
Where to base yourself
Accommodation ranges from resorts with their own course on the doorstep wake up, walk to the first tee to boutique hotels tucked into the old towns and larger properties looking out over the sea. Whether you are travelling as a couple, a fourball or a full golf society, there is a base to suit the trip, and prices tend to compare favourably with Spain’s more established golf hotspots.
A destination worth the detour
None of this is a well-guarded secret to the people who run golf in the region. A study by the University of Murcia has highlighted how central the game has become to the local economy, sustaining hotels, restaurants and jobs, and the region has invested accordingly. What has been missing is simply awareness among the very golfers it would suit best.
If you want to see the full picture in one place, the courses, the offers, the packages that combine a round with a room, Empire of Golf brings the region’s entire golfing offer together on a single platform. For a UK golfer looking for somewhere new, somewhere warm and somewhere refreshingly uncrowded, the quiet corner of Spain may not stay quiet for much longer. Better to discover it now.
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