No peak season to dodge, no off-season to wait out, just the same welcoming weather window, twelve months running.
Most Spanish golf destinations are a trade-off. Book the Costa del Sol in August and you’re playing through serious heat; book it in January and you’re reaching for a jacket between holes. The whole calendar becomes a negotiation.

Four hundred kilometres south, off the coast of Morocco, the Canary Islands quietly opt out of that negotiation altogether. The trade winds and the cool Canary Current flatten the curve almost entirely — there’s no brutal summer to avoid and no proper winter to wait out, just a single, remarkably narrow temperature band that holds steady whichever month the flight happens to land in.
The numbers that matter
This isn’t a marginal difference, and it isn’t only a winter story. Tenerife and Gran Canaria sit around 20-21°C through January, mild enough that the sea stays swimmable through the coldest part of the year. Roll forward to August — peak Mediterranean heat everywhere else in Spain — and the islands only climb to around 24-29°C, kept in check by the same trade winds and current.

Compare that with Málaga, where January highs average 14-17°C and August highs push past 33°C. The mainland Costas swing through a 20-degree range across the year. The Canaries barely move 7 or 8 degrees in either direction. For a golfer, that means the calendar stops being a variable — any month works, and the round at hand never has to be rescheduled around the heat or the cold. (Guide to Canary Islands)
Volcanic architecture, not Mediterranean cliché
The other thing the Canaries offer that the mainland Costas can’t replicate is the terrain itself. These are young volcanic islands, and the courses built on them tend to show it. Abama in Tenerife sits carved into a ravine on the island’s northwest tip, framed by banana plantations and the silhouette of Mount Teide — Spain’s highest peak — looming behind it.

Anfi Tauro in Gran Canaria threads through a steep inland valley with elevation changes that owe more to Arizona desert golf than anything coastal Spain usually offers.Lanzarote takes this further still. The Lanzarote Golf Course and the more compact Costa Teguise sit on an island whose entire landscape was shaped by eruptions as recent as the 1730s — black volcanic soil, lunar ridgelines, a backdrop that looks nothing like the rest of Spain because, geologically, it isn’t.
Tenerife: altitude and ocean in the same round
Tenerife’s golf benefits from genuine variety, helped along by an island that rises from sea level to nearly 3,700 metres inside a few dozen kilometres. Real Club de Tenerife, founded in the early twentieth century, remains one of the most established clubs in the Canaries.

Further south, Amarilla Golf & Country Club plays along volcanic cliffs above the Atlantic, with several holes running close enough to the water that the swing thoughts compete with the view.
Gran Canaria: a continent in miniature
Gran Canaria is sometimes called a miniature continent, and the golf reflects that range. Maspalomas Golf Course runs along the edge of the island’s famous dunes — a links-style test with the Sahara-like sand dunes as a backdrop rather than the usual sea grass.

Real Club de Golf Las Palmas, meanwhile, is the oldest golf club in Spain, founded in 1891, and sits inside the rim of an extinct volcanic crater at Bandama — a setting that’s difficult to find anywhere else in Europe.
Where the rounds end the day
None of this matters much if the rest of the trip doesn’t hold up, and it does. The southern resorts on Tenerife and Gran Canaria are built for exactly this kind of break — proper hotels, good spas, and restaurants that take the local seafood seriously. Canarian cuisine has its own identity, distinct from the mainland: papas arrugadas with mojo sauce, fresh vieja parrotfish, and a wine scene shaped by volcanic soil that produces something genuinely unusual in the glass.
The golf, the climate, and the landscape all point the same direction: this is a destination that doesn’t ask the golfer to pick a season. There’s no “best time to go” caveat to factor in, no shoulder months to chase — just a calendar that stays playable from the first week of January to the last week of December.
Browse Canary Islands golf holidays and pick the month that suits you — not the one the weather dictates.







