Courses/Scotland/Argyll and Bute/The Machrie Links

The Machrie Links

Argyll and Bute, Scotland

Iconic traditional championship links with a modern flair

The Machrie Links
🏆 Top 100 UK & Ireland Links🏆 DJ Russell Design🏆 Historic Links (1891)

Scorecard

HoleTOT123456789OUT101112131415161718INTOT
Par72453444443354454344453772
SI810146212184165131711593711

About the Course

The golf course is ranked among the UK’s best and it’s easy to see why. It’s traditional links golf with a modern flair: dramatic dunes, rolling fairways, and greens that reward imagination. Power helps, but creativity wins here.

An iconic Scottish championship links stretching over 7000 yards from the back tees. An original Willie Campbell design dating back to 1891 and redesigned in 2018 by David J. Russell to modern championship standards, this course is now designed to be played in all conditions.

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Sherpa Review

by Jamie Fleming

Highly Recommended

There are plenty of great links courses in Scotland. What there aren’t many of are top ranked UK courses that make you slow down, look up from your scorecard, and realise the golf is only part of the story. The Machrie on Islay is one of those rare spots. It feels remote without being inconvenient, luxurious without being flashy, and serious about golf without taking itself too seriously. It’s the kind of place you come for a round and end up wishing you’d booked three nights instead of one.

The modern Machrie was redesigned by D.J. Russell, but the soul of the place still stretches back to 1891. It doesn’t feel manufactured or overly manicured, yet clearly plays like it. It feels like a proper links course that’s been shaped by wind, sand, and time. The fairways roll naturally, the greens sit into the land rather than on top of it, and the dunes frame holes in a way that looks completely unforced.

One of the early reminders of that comes at the 2nd, a par 5 that looks generous but has a burn waiting to collect anything pushed left by the sea breeze. It’s a classic links dilemma. Do you take on the bold line, or play safely right and accept a longer route to the green. The course asks these kinds of questions all day.

By the time you reach the 7th, you start to see the Machrie’s sense of humour. It’s a drivable par 4 in the right conditions, and from the tee the temptation is obvious. But anything that runs off the left side leaves a brutal chip back up a green that falls away from you. It’s the sort of hole that looks innocent on the card and causes more damage than the long ones.

The stretch from the 8th through the 9th is where the course really shows its teeth. The 8th is a narrow, thoughtful par 4 that demands two committed shots. The drive is played through a generous enough fairway, but the real test comes with the approach. There’s a huge swale guarding the front of a three-tiered green, and anything under-hit is simply not getting there. It’s one of those holes where the green looks bigger from the fairway than it did from the tee, but once you’re putting, you realise how subtle the tiers are. It’s not a hole you overpower. You have to place the ball and trust your distance.

Then comes the 9th, a downhill par 3 that is as much about nerve as it is about yardage. You’re hitting toward the sea, with the dunes and horizon creating a view that can easily distract you. The green is large, but it’s ringed by trouble. Long and you’re in the heather. Short and you’re scrambling up steep, awkward slopes. The wind plays tricks here, and it’s the kind of hole you could happily stand on the tee and hit three or four balls just to see how different each one behaves.

It’s not just the views that make the Machrie memorable. The course is in excellent condition, right up there with Scotland’s best, but it still retains that rugged, authentic links feel. It’s not polished to the point of losing its character. You still get those bouncy lies, the odd awkward stance, and the sense that you’re playing over real ground rather than something engineered to look like it.

The back nine continues in the same spirit. Holes weave through dunes, open out toward the sea, then tighten again. There’s constant variation. Some holes feel wide and inviting. Others feel like you’re threading a ball through a moving landscape.

The 15th is a good example of the Machrie’s green complexes. The putting surface is protected by swales to the left and runoff to the right, and if you miss it, your short game is properly tested. But it never feels unfair. There are always options, and often more than one way to play the recovery.

Then there’s the 17th, one of the most talked-about holes on the course. It’s a short par 4, but it’s full of drama. From the tee, you’re aiming over a ridge line on the left side of the fairway. If you carry it, you’re rewarded with a clear view of the green and a great chance at birdie. Miss that line, and you’re left with a blind approach over dunes, hoping you’ve picked the right club. It’s a throwback links hole, full of risk and reward, and it’s exactly the kind of design that sticks in your memory.

What makes the Machrie particularly appealing for golf tourists is how relaxed the whole experience feels. You never feel rushed. It’s easy to get into a rhythm here. The course is walkable, the views constantly change, and there’s a sense that you’re playing in your own corner of the world.

Off the course, the hotel complements the golf perfectly. The restaurant and bar overlook the course and Laggan Bay, and it’s the sort of place where you can sit with a drink after the round and watch the light change over the dunes. Local seafood features heavily on the menu, and the atmosphere is relaxed rather than formal.

For those who like to keep the clubs in hand, there’s also the Wee Course, a six-hole par 3 layout just a short walk from the hotel. It’s ideal for warming up or settling friendly bets in the evening. The Hebrides putting course, a scaled-down replica of the championship course, adds another playful element to the practice facilities, which are extensive and match the conditions of the main links.

Recovery options are equally strong. The outdoor sauna, hot tubs, and cold plunge area give the place a slightly Scandinavian feel, and after a day in the Atlantic wind, it’s exactly what you want. There’s also a clubhouse sauna and treatment rooms using local seaweed-based therapies.

Want to play it now? Check out our experience here.

💡 Best for:
Low handicappers, Mid handicappers, High handicappers, Mixed groups, Corporate groups, Golf societies, Championship experience, Links golf lovers, Scenic golf, Walking preferred

Course Preview

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Facilities

Gym
Sauna
Wood-fired hot tubs
Cold tub
Pool table
Treatment rooms
Table football

Location

The Machrie Hotel & Golf Links, Port Ellen, Isle of Islay, PA42 7AN, Scotland, UK

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The Machrie - 1 Night / 1 Round
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