Roaring River Golf Club offers a one-of-a-kind golf experience surrounded by the lush tropical beauty of Belize's Cayo District.
Belize is a place people fly to for reef diving, jaguar spotting, and Mayan ruins swallowed by jungle. Golf is not on the brochure. There is exactly one fully functioning course on the entire mainland, and it sits on the forested bank of a spring-fed river in the Cayo District, about an hour and fifteen minutes inland from Belize City. It is called Roaring River, and the short version is yes, you should play it. The long version is more fun.
WHERE TO PLAY
Let us set expectations honestly, because that is the only way this place makes sense. Roaring River is a par-64 executive layout running roughly 3,900 yards, eighteen holes built around nine double tee boxes, with a slope of 116. You are not going to confuse it with Pebble. What you are going to do is play golf in a jungle while crocodiles sun themselves in the water hazards and something like 120 species of birds heckle you from the trees. That is not a sentence I get to write about most courses.
It also happens to be the only course in Belize recognized by the R and A, which is the sort of credential that sounds enormous until you remember the competition is a field of one. The club leans into the absurdity beautifully. According to its own site, Roaring River hosts the Masters, the Ryder Cup, the Santander Sugar Cup, and the Belize Open. These are local events that borrowed some very famous names, and I respect the confidence enormously.
The holes earn their keep with quirk rather than length. The sixth asks you to launch a tee shot from an island tee box through a narrow window to find the fairway, which is exactly as intimidating as it sounds when you are standing on a patch of land surrounded by water in a foreign country. The eighth puts a pond directly between you and the green, so going for it in one is a decision you will either brag about or never mention again. The closing eighteenth gives you about 200 yards to carry water, a tidy little gut check to finish the round. Bring extra golf balls. The crocodiles are not returning yours.
Greens fees are affordable by any standard, gear rental is available, and beginners get free lessons, which tells you what kind of operation this is. Nobody here is going to make you feel underdressed.
WHERE TO STAY
This is where Roaring River pulls ahead of being a novelty. The resort runs on-site rooms right on the water, and they are genuinely nice. The King Suite runs from about $179 a night and is built for couples, the Superior Queen Double from around $199 sleeps up to four, and the Villa tops out near $299.
Every room has a private river-view balcony, a mini fridge, hot water, and high-speed internet, and they range from about 515 to 630 square feet, so you are not crammed in.
The pitch for staying put rather than driving in is simple. You wake up to a spring river running below your balcony, you walk to the first tee, and you never get in a car for the rest of the day. Guests routinely mention howler monkeys carrying on at night and parrots running the morning shift. It earns a solid 4 of 5 on Tripadvisor across nearly fifty reviews, and the owner has a reputation for personally sorting out tours and rides. That kind of hands-on hospitality is the whole point of a small place like this.
Then there is the food.
The on-site restaurant, the Meating Place, sits directly above the river and is widely tagged as serving the best steaks and shrimp in the country. It runs by reservation only, so call ahead and let them know you are coming. Order a Free Jack while you wait, a local Belizean pour you will not find back home, and watch the water roll by.
WHAT TO DO ALONG THE WAY
You are in Cayo, which is the adventure capital of Belize, so the off-course slate is loaded. Cave tubing on the Caves Branch River is the headliner, floating an inner tube through ancient cave systems the Maya once treated as the underworld. For the genuinely intrepid, the ATM cave delivers an Indiana Jones day of wading through tunnels to reach Mayan artifacts and remains still sitting where they were left.
Climb El Castillo at the Xunantunich ruins for a view that spills into Guatemala, go zip-lining through the canopy, or swing by the Belize Zoo on the drive in.
Play the only course in the country, sleep over the river, eat the best steak in Belize, and chase it all with a cave float and a Mayan temple. As detours go, that one is easy to justify.
