Hawkswood Country Estate: The Ultimate Home Base for a St. Andrews Golf Trip
Three Private Lodges, a Driving Range, and 10 Minutes from the Home of Golf
By Brian Weis
Some golf trips are good. A few are great. And then there are the ones you talk about for the rest of your life. The ones where everything lined up, the courses were extraordinary, the accommodation was spectacular, and nobody had to sleep in a double bed with their buddy from college.
A week at Hawkswood Country Estate is that trip.
Tucked into the Fife countryside just 10 minutes from St. Andrews, Hawkswood is a 65-acre private estate with three luxury self-catering lodges that together sleep up to 30 golfers. It is not a hotel. There is no front desk, no checkout line, no stranger eating eggs across from you at breakfast. You take over the estate, set your own pace, and play some of the finest golf courses on the planet. A private concierge handles the logistics. You handle the excuses for your scorecard.
Here is how a seven-day trip shapes up.
WHERE YOU ARE STAYING
In Scotland, the locals call it self-catering. What Americans would recognize as a private vacation rental, only with considerably better taste in architecture and a hydro spa on the patio.
Hawkswood offers three lodges on the same estate, each with its own personality.
Hawkswood House: Five en-suite bedrooms sleeping up to 10, two lounges with wood burners, a formal dining room, a terraced balcony, and a private short game area right outside the door.
The Roundel: Built around a signature round room with panoramic views of the Fife countryside. Five en-suite bedrooms, its own short game area, and the kind of setting that makes you want to stay an extra night even when your flights are already booked.
Bowhill House: The social hub of the estate. A large dining area purpose-built for long group breakfasts, five en-suite bedrooms, and enough common space that 10 grown men can share it without anyone losing their mind by day three.
All three lodges include private hydro spas, fully equipped kitchens, memory foam super-king beds, complimentary Wi-Fi, and SKY television. A private chef can be arranged if your group would rather spend the evening talking about the round than cooking after it. Hawkswood can also arrange catering so the fridge is stocked and ready when you walk in the door.
Each lodge also has a lit putting and chipping green fitted with a sod-stacked bunker, which means the competition does not end when the round does. Late evening chip-offs to settle the day's bets are not only possible, they are basically mandatory. Every guest also has access to the estate's 270-yard private driving range.
Rent one lodge for a group of 10, two for 20, or take over the entire estate for up to 30. The estate sits in the quiet hamlet of Peat Inn, 10 minutes from St. Andrews and one mile from the Peat Inn restaurant, which holds a Michelin star and will become a recurring topic of conversation before the week is out.
UNDERSTANDING THE OLD COURSE BALLOT
Before you arrive, you need to understand how tee times on the Old Course work, because they do not work like anywhere else on earth.
The Old Course operates a ballot drawn exactly 48 hours in advance of the date you want to play. The ballot closes at 2pm each day, with results posted around 4:30pm. A group hoping to play on Wednesday submits their entry by 2pm on Monday. Thursday and Saturday tend to have the most ballot tee times available, which is worth building around when you plan the week.
To enter, you need a minimum of two players and a maximum of four. Each player's name, home golf club, and handicap are required. You can enter online through the St. Andrews Links app, by phone, or in person at the Old Pavilion next to the first tee. There is no charge to enter. You either win a time or you do not.
The move for a week-long trip is to enter every single eligible day you are in the country. Smart groups build a flexible schedule around ballot-friendly courses like Kingsbarns and Dumbarnie that will work with you on shifting tee times if the ballot comes through on short notice. Your Hawkswood golf concierge can help coordinate the whole process.
THE SINGLES DAILY DRAW
For golfers who strike out in the group ballot, or for anyone in the group willing to go it alone to get on the course, the Singles Daily Draw is worth knowing about.
Introduced in 2024 to replace the old overnight queue, the Singles Draw requires you to show up in person at the Old Pavilion or the Links Clubhouse between 9am and 5pm the day before you want to play. You complete an electronic form on a tablet and a photo is taken to confirm your identity. Results come by text message after 7pm. If you are drawn, you get slotted into an existing group that needs one more player to fill out their tee time.
It is not the same as playing with your group. You will be paired with strangers, you will not control your tee time, and success is far from guaranteed. But it is a legitimate path onto the most famous golf course in the world, and plenty of solo travelers have walked off the 18th green with a story they will tell for decades. If anyone in your group is serious about this option, commit to it from day one and keep entering every day until something comes through.
GETTING AROUND
Hawkswood runs a 16-seat luxury Mercedes mini-coach for guest transfers. Stays of three nights or more include one complimentary return transfer per day, covering St. Andrews, the East Neuk, and every course on this itinerary except Carnoustie. Book the coach in advance and your group arrives together, nobody misses the first tee, and everyone has to sit through the same post-round recap on the ride home.
DAY 1: ARRIVE, SETTLE IN, SET THE TONE
Flights into Edinburgh run about an hour from the estate. Dundee Airport is 30 minutes. Either way, plan to arrive by early afternoon, claim your room, and resist the urge to immediately squeeze in a round.
Spend the first evening on the estate. Fire up the driving range. Work the short game area. Shake off the travel. Hawkswood can arrange catering so the fridge is fully stocked on arrival, or bring in a private chef for the opening night. A proper group dinner at the estate sets the right tone for the week and gets the logistics conversations out of the way before you are trying to have them over a pint in a St. Andrews pub.
Before dinner, submit your first ballot entry for the Old Course. The concierge can walk you through it. You probably will not get drawn on day one. Enter anyway.
DAY 2: CARNOUSTIE
Lead with the hardest course on the list. Your legs are fresh, your expectations are calibrated, and you have the rest of the week to recover your confidence.
Carnoustie is 60 minutes from Hawkswood and deserves every minute of the drive. It has hosted the Open Championship eight times and is widely regarded as the most demanding test in championship golf. The Barry Burn crosses the 18th fairway twice, which sounds manageable until you are standing over your approach on the back nine with a score worth protecting.
If you need a single image to understand what Carnoustie is capable of, consider the 1999 Open Championship. Frenchman Jean van de Velde stood on the 18th tee needing only a double bogey to win the Claret Jug and somehow walked off with a seven. If Carnoustie can do that to a touring professional with the entire world watching, imagine what it has planned for your group on a Tuesday in October with a stiff wind off the North Sea.
Book caddies. Buy extra balls the night before. Do not tell anyone your handicap until after the round. Submit your ballot entry for the old course early!
Back at the estate, the lit chipping and putting green is waiting. Settle whatever side bets the round created before anyone goes to bed.
DAY 3: KINGSBARNS AND THE EAST NEUK
Kingsbarns Golf Links is 20 minutes from Hawkswood and makes a strong case for being the finest modern links course built in the last 30 years. The North Sea is visible from nearly every hole. The routing is natural and relentless. It was carved out of farmland along the Fife coast in 2000 and has looked like it has been there for centuries ever since.
After the round, drive the East Neuk. Stop in Anstruther. The Anstruther Fish Bar is one of the most celebrated chippies in Scotland. Fish and chips wrapped in paper, standing outside looking out over a working harbor on the Fife coast, is one of those experiences that sounds simple and lands as genuinely memorable. ((If you have time and looking for more golf, play Anstruther. One of the funnest nine golf courses in Scotland.))
Head back to the estate. Fire up the barbecue if the weather cooperates. This is a good night to cook together, open some fine whisky, and debate the scorecard so far. Submit the ballot before midnight.
DAY 4: NEW COURSE AND KEEP WATCHING THE BALLOT
The New Course at St. Andrews Links is 15 minutes from Hawkswood and earns considerably more respect than its modest name suggests. Opened in 1895, it carries the distinction of being one of the oldest new courses in the world, a line that sounds like a joke and is entirely accurate. It is a serious, full-length links test that plays alongside the Old Course and shares the same wild Fife weather. It is not the Old Course. Nothing is. But it is excellent golf on historic ground and the kind of round that would headline a trip almost anywhere else on earth.
Today is also the day to get serious about the ballot window for the Old Course. Midweek is the target. If the ballot comes through today, move the Old Course forward and reorganize the schedule accordingly. The itinerary has flex built in for exactly this reason. If not, enter again and keep the faith. The Jubilee Course is also available here if the New Course is fully booked. Originally opened in 1897 and redesigned to championship standard in 1988, it is consistently underrated and tougher than its reputation.
DAY 5: THE OLD COURSE AT ST. ANDREWS
This is the day.
The Old Course needs no introduction. It is the oldest golf course in the world, the spiritual home of the game, and the reason this trip exists. Walk it. Take a caddie. Not optional, not a luxury, the only correct decision. The St. Andrews caddies know every inch of this course, have watched thousands of rounds played in every conceivable wind condition, and will save you more strokes than you realize while also being outstanding company.
The course is full of moments you cannot prepare for until you are standing in them. The sheer width of the opening fairway. The shared greens that stretch nearly 100 yards across. The hidden bunkers that swallow shots that looked perfectly fine from the tee. And then there is the 17th.
The Road Hole is a 495-yard par-4 that requires a blind tee shot fired over the corner of the Old Course Hotel, specifically over the replica railway sheds where the words OLD COURSE HOTEL serve as your aiming point. The pros aim somewhere over the word COURSE or push it further right toward the L in HOTEL depending on how much of the dogleg they want to cut. Your caddie will tell you exactly where to aim. Commit to the line. Do not look at the out-of-bounds stakes to the right. It is genuinely bizarre and genuinely one of the greatest holes in golf.
After the round, walk into the Old Course Hotel. Even if you are not staying there, the visit is worth it on its own. The Jigger Inn is attached to the hotel, sitting right beside the 17th fairway. It dates to 1852 as the stationmaster's lodge and has been called the most famous 19th hole in golf. Order the Jigger Ale battered haddock and chips. Find a seat in the beer garden with a view of the fairway you just played and watch other golfers make the same mistakes you made an hour ago. It never gets old.
For the evening, the Road Hole Restaurant on the fourth floor of the Old Course Hotel is the right call. It overlooks the 17th hole and the Old Course, serves locally sourced Scottish produce with serious kitchen credentials, and is exactly the dinner you celebrate a round on the Old Course with. Book it well in advance. The Road Hole Bar is right next door and carries over 250 whiskies. That is not a coincidence. That is a plan.
This is the night to stay in town. Walk the old streets. Wander the golf shops around the Links because the group will spend money they did not intend to spend and everyone will be fine with it. The British Golf Museum is a short walk from the first tee if anyone wants historical context for the week. End the night at the Dunvegan Hotel, a proper St. Andrews local pub that has been listening to golfers recount their rounds for generations. You will fit right in.
DAY 6: CASTLE COURSE AND SCOTSCRAIG
Two courses, two very different experiences, one full day.
The Castle Course sits above St. Andrews with views of the town, the cathedral ruins, and St. Andrews Bay stretching to the horizon. It is the most visually dramatic course in the area, a modern design by Kyle Phillips opened in 2008, and it plays every bit as hard as it looks from the first tee. The elevation changes are significant, the wind exposure is total, and the views from certain tees are the kind that make you pause mid-pre-shot routine just to take them in.
Scotscraig is 25 minutes from Hawkswood and operates in an entirely different register. Founded in 1817, it is one of the oldest golf clubs in the world, a heathland and links hybrid that has served as an Open Championship qualifying venue for generations. Understated, historically significant, and a genuine test that rewards a controlled ball flight and local knowledge. Serious golfers simply should not skip it.
Two rounds is a full day. Manage the energy. The back nine at Scotscraig will test whatever is left in the tank. Dinner back at the estate, the private chef if you arranged it, and an early night. The lit chipping green is there if anyone needs one more bet settled before bed.
DAY 7: DUMBARNIE LINKS AND A FINAL GROUP DINNER
Dumbarnie Links opened in 2020 and has moved up the world rankings faster than almost any new course in recent memory. Designed by Clive Clark, it sits on the Fife coast with views across the Firth of Forth to the East Lothian links on the far shore. It is a genuine world-class layout and the fact that it is only 16 minutes from Hawkswood borders on unfair to every other golf destination on the planet.
After the round, one final dinner on the estate. This is the night for the private chef, the good bottle, and the long table at Bowhill House. Go around the table and have everyone name their round of the week. Arguments will break out. That is correct. That is the point.
DAY 8: ONE LAST LOOP AND HOME
The last morning belongs to whoever wants one more round. The Balgove Course at St. Andrews Links is nine holes, available without a ballot, and a fine send-off for a week of serious golf. Short, friendly, and a proper walk before the drive to the airport.
Get there early. You are going to be distracted thinking about next year's trip.
PRACTICAL NOTES
* Hawkswood is located in the hamlet of Peat Inn, approximately 10 minutes from St. Andrews
* Edinburgh Airport is approximately 60 minutes by car, Dundee Airport approximately 30 minutes
* The 16-seat Mercedes mini-coach is available for hire, with one complimentary return transfer per day for stays of three nights or more
* Golf concierge services include tee time booking, ballot assistance, club hire, transport coordination, and dining reservations
* Catering and private chef available on request. Ask about having the lodges stocked on arrival
* All three lodges include lit putting and chipping greens with sod-stacked bunkers, hydro spas, five en-suite bedrooms, and fully equipped kitchens
* The estate accommodates up to 30 guests across three lodges
BOOK HAWKSWOOD
One estate. Three lodges. Eight days. The courses of a lifetime.
Visit HawkswoodCountryEstate.com to check availability or inquire about custom golf packages.
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Revised: 04/01/2026 - Article Viewed 36 Times
About: Brian Weis
Brian Weis is the mastermind behind GolfTrips.com, a vast network of golf travel and directory sites covering everything from the rolling fairways of Wisconsin to the sunbaked desert layouts of Arizona. If there’s a golf destination worth visiting, chances are, Brian has written about it, played it, or at the very least, found a way to justify a "business trip" there.
As a card-carrying member of the Golf Writers Association of America (GWAA), International Network of Golf (ING), Golf Travel Writers of America (GTWA), International Golf Travel Writers Association (IGTWA), and The Society of Hickory Golfers (SoHG), Brian has the credentials to prove that talking about golf is his full-time job. In 2016, his peers even handed him The Shaheen Cup, a prestigious award in golf travel writing—essentially the Masters green jacket for guys who don’t hit the range but still know where the best 19th holes are.
Brian’s love for golf goes way back. As a kid, he competed in junior and high school golf, only to realize that his dreams of a college golf scholarship had about the same odds as a 30-handicap making a hole-in-one. Instead, he took the more practical route—working on the West Bend Country Club grounds crew to fund his University of Wisconsin education. Little did he know that mowing greens and fixing divots would one day lead to a career writing about the best courses on the planet.
In 2004, Brian turned his golf passion into a business, launching GolfWisconsin.com. Three years later, he expanded his vision, and GolfTrips.com was born—a one-stop shop for golf travel junkies looking for their next tee time. Today, his empire spans all 50 states, and 20+ international destinations.
On the course, Brian is a weekend warrior who oscillates between a 5 and 9 handicap, depending on how much he's been traveling (or how generous he’s feeling with his scorecard). His signature move" A high, soft fade that his playing partners affectionately (or not-so-affectionately) call "The Weis Slice." But when he catches one clean, his 300+ yard drives remind everyone that while he may write about golf for a living, he can still send a ball into the next zip code with the best of them.
Whether he’s hunting down the best public courses, digging up hidden gems, or simply outdriving his buddies, Brian Weis is living proof that golf is more than a game—it’s a way of life.
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