Short answer: yes. Donald Trump, through the Trump Organization, owns and licenses a global portfolio of golf properties. If you’re here, you probably want a clean list of courses, where they are, whether you can play them, and what it might cost. That’s exactly what you’ll get-plus a quick booking game plan and a no-drama update on what changed by 2025.
What you probably want to do next (your jobs-to-be-done):
Does Donald Trump have his own golf course? Yes-many. Through the Trump Organization, there’s a portfolio spanning the United States, Scotland, Ireland, and the UAE. Some are fully owned, some are on long-term leases or management contracts, and a few are licensed-branded partnerships where a local developer owns the property but uses the Trump name and management standards. If you’re comparing portfolios from a few years back, note that New York City’s Ferry Point is no longer a Trump-operated property (the city assigned the lease to Bally’s in 2023).
Here’s the practical way to parse the portfolio:
For quick scanning, this table shows where they are, how they’re positioned, and what you need to know before you try to book.
| Region | Property | Location | Ownership Type | Public Access | Notable Notes (as of late 2024-2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA | Trump National Doral Miami (Blue Monster + 3) | Miami, Florida | Owned/Resort | Yes (resort/daily-fee) | Four courses; Blue Monster is the headliner; past PGA Tour/WGC site; hosts LIV events. |
| USA | Trump International Golf Club, West Palm Beach | West Palm Beach, Florida | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private club near Mar-a-Lago. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Jupiter | Jupiter, Florida | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private; popular South Florida membership option. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Bedminster (Old & New) | Bedminster, New Jersey | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | 36 holes; hosted the 2017 U.S. Women’s Open (USGA); slated for 2022 PGA Champ before PGA of America moved it; hosts LIV events. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Colts Neck | Colts Neck, New Jersey | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private; known for practice facilities and member events. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Philadelphia | Pine Hill, New Jersey | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Former Pine Hill GC; views toward the Philly skyline. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Westchester | Briarcliff Manor, New York | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private; suburban New York market. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Hudson Valley | Hopewell Junction, New York | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private; rolling parkland setting. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Washington, D.C. | Potomac Falls, Virginia | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | 36 holes along the Potomac; Championship & Riverview courses. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Charlotte | Mooresville, North Carolina | Owned/Private | No (members/guests) | Private; Lake Norman waterfront holes. |
| USA | Trump National Golf Club, Los Angeles | Rancho Palos Verdes, California | Owned/Daily-fee | Yes (public) | Clifftop Pacific views; dynamic pricing; popular with traveling golfers. |
| Scotland | Trump Turnberry (Ailsa & King Robert the Bruce) | South Ayrshire | Owned/Resort | Yes (resort/daily-fee) | Historic Open venue; Ailsa redesigned. R&A has said The Open won’t return “for now.” |
| Scotland | Trump International Golf Links, Scotland | Balmedie, Aberdeenshire | Owned/Daily-fee | Yes (public) | Dramatic dunes links opened 2012; second course (MacLeod) approved and in development. |
| Ireland | Trump International Golf Links & Hotel Doonbeg | County Clare | Owned/Resort | Yes (resort/daily-fee) | Classic Irish links; redesign by Martin Hawtree after storm damage. |
| UAE | Trump International Golf Club, Dubai | DAMAC Hills, Dubai | Licensed/Managed | Yes (public & members) | Gil Hanse design; brand/licensing partnership with DAMAC; robust practice facilities. |
| UAE | Trump World Golf Club Dubai (planned) | Dubai | Licensed/Planned | No (not open) | Announced concept; not open as of 2024. |
| USA | Former: Ferry Point (now Bally’s Golf Links at Ferry Point) | Bronx, New York | Former City Concession | Yes (public) | Lease assigned to Bally’s in 2023; no longer Trump-branded/operator. |
Sources for portfolio status include the Trump Organization’s Trump Golf site, public statements from the R&A and PGA of America, City of New York announcements on concession assignments, and trade press like Golf Digest and Golf Magazine rankings (2023-2024 editions). Branding and operators can change; always check the course’s own site before you book.
Some Trump golf courses are easy to book; others are private and require an invitation. Here’s your quick guide.
Public/resort courses you can book directly:
Typical public green fees (ballpark, peak season):
Private clubs (members and guests only) include Bedminster, West Palm Beach, Jupiter, Colts Neck, Philadelphia (Pine Hill), Westchester, Hudson Valley, Washington D.C., and Charlotte. If you’re not a member, you’ll need to play as a guest of a member, attend a charity/corporate outing, or (occasionally) book through limited unaccompanied-guest programs if offered.
Step-by-step: how to get on a Trump course if you’re not a member
Membership basics (private clubs): Initiation fees vary widely by market-from tens of thousands of dollars at some regional clubs to well into six figures at flagship properties like Bedminster or Jupiter, plus monthly dues and minimums. Clubs may offer full golf, young professional, and social tiers. Details change regularly; get current terms directly from each club’s membership office.
Smart money tips:
If you’re picking one bucket-list round, here’s what stands out and why golfers care.
Trump National Doral (Miami): The Blue Monster is a storied tour setup-big water carries, wind, and a finishing stretch that can chew up handicaps. It hosted PGA Tour/WGC events through 2016 and has become a mainstay on the LIV Golf schedule. Expect resort polish, target-golf visuals, and Florida’s full weather spectrum. The three sister courses offer variety and are often friendlier for higher handicaps and quick replays.
Trump Turnberry (Scotland): The Ailsa is a historic Open venue (Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus’s legendary 1977 “Duel in the Sun” was here). After an extensive redesign, sightlines to the iconic lighthouse are even better, with a risk-reward finish that lingers in your memory. The R&A said in 2021 that The Open wouldn’t return “for now”-but historical pedigree and links architecture still make it a top-5 Scotland experience for many. King Robert the Bruce provides a more forgiving second day on property.
Trump International Golf Links, Scotland (Aberdeenshire): Massive dunes, elevated tees, and a constant sense of scale define this modern links. It’s less “classic rota” and more bold new-school links. Wind is a factor; play proper low shots and expect firm-and-fast bounces. A second course, the MacLeod, received planning approval and has been in development.
Trump International Golf Links & Hotel Doonbeg (Ireland): A photogenic Atlantic links with fairway contours that reward placement more than raw power. Storm damage years ago led to a sympathetic redesign by Martin Hawtree. You’ll want a caddie on your first go; local lines make a big difference in wind.
Trump National Golf Club, Los Angeles: Daily-fee and cliff-top. On a clear day, you’ll stare at Catalina and forget about your score. Fair warning: ocean breezes and tight lines can punish wayward drives. It’s a popular splurge round for SoCal golf trips that also hit Torrey, Rustic Canyon, or Angeles National.
How the politics affected events (facts only):
Those decisions don’t stop you playing the public/resort venues, but they do shape tournament calendars and sometimes availability around big weeks. For rankings, recent lists from Golf Digest and Golf Magazine (2023-2024) consistently feature Turnberry (Ailsa) near the top of UK & Ireland rankings, with Doral’s Blue Monster holding prestige in the U.S. resort category.
Use this to match your trip, budget, and skill to the right venue.
Which course is right for me?
Booking cheat sheet (5 rules of thumb):
Mini‑FAQ
Next steps by scenario
Pitfalls to avoid
Credibility check (where this info comes from):
If you just wanted the blunt answer-yes, he has his own golf courses-now you’ve got the where, how, and how much. If you’re choosing one for a special round, let the access type, season, and travel budget pick the winner for you.