Should You Bring Your Own Clubs on a Golf Holiday? The Case For and Against

What frequent flyer perks, damage statistics, and one snapped driver shaft can teach you about packing for a Golfing Getaway.

Every serious golfer has had the debate at some point before a trip: pack the clubs, or hire on arrival. It sounds like a small decision. It rarely is. Get it wrong and it can mean an extra hour at the baggage carousel, a damaged driver, or simply irons that never quite feel like yours. Here is what actually weighs on each side of the argument.

The Case for Bringing Your Own Set

There is no substitute for clubs you know. Your own irons carry the exact lie angle, shaft flex and grip wear that your swing has adapted to over years, and no rental set — however well maintained — replicates that. For golfers with a single-digit handicap, or anyone who has recently been fitted, the performance gap between “mine” and “borrowed” is not trivial. It shows up in distance control and, more than anywhere, around the greens.


Golfer checking in a golf travel bag at airport departures before a golf holiday

What It Actually Costs to Fly With Them

The honest answer is: more than most golfers expect, and not just in euros. TAP Air Portugal treats golf bags as special sports baggage, with fees typically running from around €45 to over €100 depending on route and season, and registration required at least 24 hours before departure . Budget carriers popular for short Algarve or Costa del Sol hops are no kinder — easyJet charges roughly £15 per 3kg increment above a 20kg allowance, on top of its own booking fee for the bag itself . Add the return leg, and a couple travelling with two sets can be looking at well over €200 in fees alone before a single green fee is paid. (Baggage Policies) ; (Greencard Golf)

The Risk Nobody Budgets For

Then there is the handling itself. Industry travel-insurance data puts golf club damage at around 1.2% of checked-bag journeys — a figure that drops below 0.1% with a proper hard case, which says a great deal about how soft-sided bags fare in an aircraft hold . Delayed or misrouted bags are a separate headache entirely: airlines classify a bag as officially lost only after searching for it, sometimes for up to 21 days on international routes, which is considerably longer than most golf trips last. A set that does not arrive on day one rarely arrives in time to matter.(Travel Arbitrage)


Golf clubs packed in a hard travel case with foam padding

Making the Call

For a golfer who plays one set of clubs, knows every millimetre of it, and is flying direct with a generous baggage allowance, bringing your own remains the better option — the performance benefit outweighs the fee and the modest risk. For anyone connecting through multiple airports, flying a budget carrier with tight weight limits, or simply travelling light, the arithmetic tips the other way. Hiring removes the fee, the risk, and the queue at oversized baggage — the trade-off is playing an unfamiliar set for the week.


Rental golf clubs ready for collection at a golf course pro shop in Portugal

Tee Times Golf Holidays offers golf club rental across its portfolio of courses in Portugal and Spain, from major brands delivered directly to the hotel or first tee — a straightforward way to sidestep the whole debate for a shorter trip.

Amendoeira Signs Water Reuse Protocol With Águas do Algarve

The resort’s efficiency awards now come with a signature on paper — and some serious plumbing next door in Vilamoura.

Amendoeira Golf Resort marked a quiet but considerable moment this week: a formal cooperation protocol with Águas do Algarve, committing the Silves resort to greater use of treated Água para Reutilização (ApR) on its two golf courses.

Signing ceremony for the Águas do Algarve water reuse protocol at Amendoeira Golf Resort, SilvesThe signing, held at the resort itself, closed a day in which Portugal’s Minister of the Environment and Energy, Maria da Graça Carvalho, opened some of the largest water infrastructure projects the Algarve has seen in years. For a region whose golf depends on rainfall it can no longer take for granted, the timing was not accidental.

The agreement was signed at Amendoeira by the resort’s CEO, Eng.º Parreira Afonso, alongside director João Fernandes and the administration of Águas do Algarve. Its purpose is specific: increase the share of treated, reused water irrigating Amendoeira’s Faldo and O’Connor Jnr. courses, reducing the resort’s reliance on groundwater and dams already under pressure from tourism, agriculture and a growing resident population.

Why the Algarve’s Golf Courses Are Watching Closely

Early Morning Irrigation Golf Course Algarve

Golf accounts for roughly 15 cubic hectometres of water use across the Algarve each year. Águas do Algarve’s own Water Efficiency Plan targets 8 cubic hectometres of treated reused water in irrigation by the end of 2025 — 71 per cent of it earmarked for golf courses. Reach that, and around half of the region’s forty-odd courses will be running at least partly on reused water rather than water drawn from boreholes and reservoirs. (Sul Informação)

The Bigger Story, Down the Road in Vilamoura

Amendoeira’s signature came at the end of a single, dense day of Algarve water announcements. That same Wednesday, Maria da Graça Carvalho inaugurated the new Água para Reutilização station at Vilamoura — now described as the largest wastewater reuse plant of its kind in Europe, built at a cost of around €13 million with roughly 12 kilometres of new pipework and ten delivery points feeding golf courses, gardens and farmland. (Algarve Marafado)

Founation Stone of the new desalination plant - Algarve

The minister also laid the symbolic first stone for the Algarve’s new desalination plant in Albufeira — a €107.92 million contract awarded to the Aquapor–GS Inima consortium, around €56 million of it funded through Portugal’s Recovery and Resilience Plan, designed to convert 16 million cubic metres of seawater into drinking water a year, with capacity to grow to 24 million. (Agroportal) A new wastewater treatment station at Albufeira Poente closed out the visit.

A Resort That Was Already Paying Attention

Amendoeira arrives at this protocol with some form. The resort already holds Green Key certification, Turismo de Portugal’s Sustainability Committed label, and the Save Water efficiency seal — recognition, in each case, for measurable changes rather than good intentions. (Amendoeira Golf Resort) Courses that plan for water scarcity now are the ones still worth playing in fifteen years.

Amendoeira Faldo Golf Course - Algarve

None of this changes what a round at Amendoeira feels like on the day — the Faldo’s tight, tree-lined finish is still the Faldo. But it says something about a destination when the golf infrastructure is built to outlast the next dry summer, not just survive it.

Algarve’s Two Biggest Tourism Bodies Confirm Merger to Form AETA

On Monday 6 July, Quinta do Canhoto in Albufeira hosted a milestone moment for Algarve tourism.

Some 250 people watched AHETA and AIHSA, the region’s two largest tourism business associations, sign a Memorandum of Understanding formally launching their merger into a single body: AETA, the Algarve Association of Tourism Companies.

Two Associations, One Long-Discussed Union

AHETA, founded in 1995 and representing hotels, tourism real estate and entertainment, and AIHSA, founded in 1971 and rooted in hospitality and restaurants, bring a combined membership of around 1,300 businesses to the new entity. Presidents Hélder Martins and Daniel do Adro both framed the merger as additive rather than a break from the past — a modern structure built to lead Algarve tourism’s future without erasing either association’s history. (Publituris)

A Full House of Regional and National Backing

AETA dignitaries at merger

The ceremony was presided over by Pedro Machado, Secretary of State for Tourism, Commerce and Services, who closed proceedings by welcoming a stronger, unified Algarve tourism sector as good news for Portugal’s wider economic competitiveness. André Gomes, president of the Algarve Tourism Region, and António Pina, president of the Algarve Intermunicipal Community, both spoke in support, while Albufeira’s mayor, Rui Cristina, was among those present, calling the merger a sign of the maturity and strategic vision of the region’s business community. Francisco Calheiros, president of the Portuguese Tourism Confederation, rounded out the institutional line-up. (Publituris)

Why This Matters for Golfers Booking a Trip

Industry consolidation rarely makes for gripping reading, but a region that speaks with one voice tends to invest more coherently in the things golfers actually notice — course maintenance, service standards, transfers that run on time. The Algarve has never lacked for courses. What this merger suggests is a sharper, better-resourced case for keeping them, and everything around them, at the level this destination is known for.


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