Welcome to the Ferragudo Golf Course

A New Algarve Parkland course with Character, History and Strategic Variety.

At Tee Times Golf Holidays, we recently had the opportunity to visit Ferragudo Golf Course and experience the layout firsthand ahead of its official opening. Walking the course gave us valuable insight into its design, character, and playing experience, reinforcing our belief that it will become a popular addition to the Algarve golf scene.

Now that Ferragudo Golf Course is officially open, golfers can book tee times and golf holiday packages through Tee Times Golf Holidays, with access to the latest availability and our local expertise to help plan their visit.

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The Algarve’s reputation as one of Europe’s premier golf destinations continues to grow, and the arrival of Ferragudo Golf Course adds another compelling chapter to that story. Located in the Portimão area and developed under the umbrella of the Pestana Group, Portugal’s largest hotel and tourism operator, this new parkland layout introduces a refreshing blend of natural integration, strategic design, and historical character.

Ferragudo Golf Course tee-off and fairway

Rather than relying on dramatic elevation changes or heavy water usage, Ferragudo places its emphasis on routing, angles, and shot selection. The course is set comfortably within the Algarve landscape, where mature vegetation and natural contours frame a layout that feels both modern and timeless.

A Par-73 with Flexible Yardages

Ferragudo plays as a Par 73 and offers multiple teeing options to suit a wide range of golfers:

  • White Tees: 5,841 metres
  • Yellow Tees: 5,227 metres
  • Red Tees: 4,594 metres

This flexibility ensures the course can be enjoyed both as a championship test and as a more accessible resort-style round.

A Course Defined by Variety

One of Ferragudo’s defining strengths is the sheer variety of its holes. The routing avoids repetition, instead offering a sequence of short and long holes that demand constant adjustment in strategy. Players are required to think carefully about positioning, especially on approach shots where angles into greens are often more important than raw distance.

Ferragudo Golf - a course with variety

Water is notably scarce throughout the round, used sparingly to maximum effect. In fact, it only comes into play on the closing hole — the Par 5 18th (Stroke Index 6) — where a lake guards the approach to the green, providing a dramatic finishing risk-reward decision.

History Embedded in the Landscape

Perhaps the most distinctive visual and architectural feature of Ferragudo Golf Course is its integration of historic ruins across the property. These remnants of the past are not merely decorative; they form part of the course identity and visual rhythm.

Ferragudo Golf Tee and Chapel ruins

The most striking of these is an old chapel positioned at a natural crossroads of the layout, influencing play on holes 9, 10, 12, and 13. Plans have been suggested to restore this structure and repurpose it as a halfway house — a unique feature that could become one of the most memorable stopping points in Portuguese golf.

A Parkland Built for Shot-Making

Ferragudo is not a course that overwhelms with brute difficulty, but rather one that rewards thoughtful execution. The absence of heavy water hazards places greater emphasis on fairway positioning, controlled iron play, and creativity around the greens.

Ferragudo Golf Parkland Couse

The result is a layout that promises variety, rhythm, and constant decision-making — a course where no two holes feel the same, and where scoring depends as much on imagination as on power.

Final Impression

With its thoughtful routing, historic atmosphere, and strong integration into the Algarve landscape, Ferragudo Golf Course is positioned to become a notable addition to the region’s already impressive golfing portfolio.

It is a course that invites repeated play, not because it is overwhelming, but because it reveals itself differently with each round.

Ferragudo is not just another Algarve golf course — it is a new identity shaped by land, history, and design intelligence.

Ferragudo Golf Course is a welcome addition to an already strong Algarve portfolio — and reason enough to start planning a visit. Browse our Algarve golf holidays and see what the region has waiting for you.


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Golf in the Western Algarve: Why the Other Half of the Coast Deserves Your Attention

From Lagos to Carvoeiro, the courses west of the Golden Triangle are quieter, more varied, and consistently underestimated.

Most golfers booking a trip to the Algarve set their coordinates for the same stretch of coastline — Vilamoura, Quinta do Lago, Vale do Lobo. And it cannot be denied that these courses stand on their own as World-Class golf courses. The western half of the coast, however, runs its own game entirely, and has been doing so for a long time. And these courses deserve your attention.

Western Algarve Lagos

Lagos

Three courses sit in and around Lagos, each distinct enough to fill a week without repetition. Palmares is the most prominent — 27 holes redesigned by Robert Trent Jones Jr., combining parkland terrain with genuine links-style holes along the Meia Praia shoreline. The views across the Bay of Lagos from the upper sections are among the best you will find on any course in the country.

Designed by Howard Swan, the Boavista course does not receive the attention it deserves. Its two distinct sections climb to the highest point of the resort, before descending through landscaped valleys and water features to the clubhouse. The par-4 seventh, played against a backdrop of Atlantic and the Monchique hills, is worth the round on its own.

Espiche, the newest of the three, takes a softer approach — an undulating layout that works with the natural terrain rather than against it, and one that consistently rewards precision over power.

Palmares Golf Course, Lagos — 27-hole links-style layout with views over the Bay of Lagos, Western Algarve Boavista Golf Course, Lagos — Howard Swan design with Atlantic and Monchique hill views, Western Algarve Espiche Golf Course, Lagos — undulating layout set within the natural terrain of the Western Algarve
Portimão

Morgado presents the most generous setting in the area — a Seve Ballesteros design spread across a vast estate north of the city, with wide fairways, six par threes, and conditions that hold up impressively through the season. The scale of the property gives the round a sense of occasion that is difficult to find elsewhere in the western Algarve. Its neighbour, Álamos, is a par-71 layout with undulating fairways, well-placed bunkers, and steeply sloping greens that make the short game decisive. Views across the Monchique mountains and surrounding farmland make it worth seeking out, particularly for those spending longer in the area.

Penina needs no introduction to anyone who has followed golf in Portugal for more than five minutes. Sir Henry Cotton’s 1966 design — built on converted rice paddies — is the oldest course in the Algarve and hosted the Portuguese Open six times. It remains a flat, strategically demanding test that rewards course management over distance. The resort facilities are extensive. This is a base, not just a tee time.

Alto Golf offers a different proposition — elevated tees, sea views, and a layout that grows more demanding as the round develops. The par-5 sixteenth, with its substantial lake, has ended more than a few good cards.

Morgado Golf Course, Portimão — Seve Ballesteros design, Western Algarve Penina Championship Golf Course, Portimão — oldest course in the Algarve, designed by Sir Henry Cotton Alto Golf Course, Portimão — elevated tees and sea views, Western Algarve
Carvoeiro

Vale da Pinta and its neighbour Gramacho form a natural two-course combination around Carvoeiro. Vale da Pinta is the more celebrated of the two — ancient olive trees, uneven lies, and an atmosphere that feels older than the game itself. Gramacho is the more accessible partner, redesigned from nine holes to eighteen, with almonds, olives, and carobs providing the backdrop.

Silves Golf, a few kilometres inland, adds a third option — orchards and farmland framing a layout that is gentler in character but no less enjoyable for it.

Vale da Pinta Golf Course, Carvoeiro — ancient olive trees and undulating fairways, Western Algarve Gramacho Golf Course, Carvoeiro — almond and olive tree backdrop, Western Algarve Silves Golf Course — orchards and farmland setting inland from Carvoeiro, Western Algarve
Worth Knowing

Faro Airport is around an hour from Lagos — a manageable drive either way, and one that is easily sorted with a pre-booked transfer. The western Algarve is quieter than its eastern counterpart, particularly outside the summer months, which makes it a better choice for golfers who prefer an unhurried pace on and off the course. Lagos and Portimão both have proper food scenes — seafood that takes itself seriously, restaurants that fill up for the right reasons.

East, Central or West, whatever your choice, browse our full selection of Algarve golf courses or explore golf holidays in the Algarve to start planning an unforgettable trip.