The Old Course at St Andrews is not simply the most famous golf course in the world — it is the location where the modern game was codified, argued over, and finally standardised across the 18 holes that the Society of St Andrews Golfers established in 1764. Golf has been played on the links of St Andrews continuously since at least the 15th century, making this the longest uninterrupted golf site in existence. The course's features — the Swilcan Bridge, the Road Hole Bunker on the 17th, and the wide shared fairways that produce the most complex wind-and-positioning decisions in links golf — are not designed difficulties but accumulated historical accidents that the greenkeeping tradition has maintained with precision. Playing the Old Course is playing the document from which every other golf course in the world has been derived.
Access to the Old Course is managed by the St Andrews Links Trust through the daily ballot, advance singles allocations, and resort packages. The ballot provides the democratic access that the Links Trust has maintained as policy since the course became publicly managed in 1894; the resort packages through the Old Course Hotel guarantee the tee times that the ballot cannot. Richseen secures guaranteed access for all guests through the resort allocation, ensuring that the most requested single tee time in golf is confirmed before the journey begins.
This eight-day itinerary begins in Edinburgh — three days covering the Castle, the National Museum of Scotland, the Arthur's Seat walk, and the Michelin-starred restaurant culture of Leith — before moving to St Andrews for the Old Course round, Kingsbarns, and the Fife coastal links circuit. The Highlands transition to Gleneagles concludes the journey in the most comprehensively equipped golf and leisure estate in Scotland, with the Perthshire countryside providing the final context for a journey through the culture that created the game.
The Old Course at St Andrews — the 18th green, the Swilcan Bridge, and the Road Hole Bunker on the most historically significant golf links on Earth.
The Old Course at St Andrews is playable year-round, with peak season April to October. Tee times are secured through the Old Course Hotel resort allocation. Edinburgh is 50 miles (80 kilometres) from St Andrews by road; St Andrews to Gleneagles is 30 miles (50 kilometres). A private chauffeured vehicle is provided throughout the journey.
Every Richseen golf journey is individually crafted. Tee times, course access, and hotel availability are confirmed at the time of booking. St Andrews Old Course tee times are secured through the resort allocation — early engagement is recommended for peak-season travel.
Every detail — from your first evening on Princes Street to your final round on the Perthshire moorland — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From USD 20,000+ per person
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