Tupper Lake, New York
Adirondack Park

The Course
at Tupper Lake

Donald Ross Design
18 Holes · Par 71
Est. 1932
Call to Book a Round  ·  (518) 359-3701

Tupper Lake Golf Club

Golf in the Heart of
the Adirondacks

Carved into the side of Mount Morris in 1932, the Tupper Lake Golf Club is a Donald Ross design unlike any other in the region. 18 holes of tree-lined fairways, strategic bunkering, water features, and breathtaking Adirondack views — a genuine test of golf in a setting that has to be seen to be believed.

See It for Yourself

Take a
Tour

Donald Ross

The Design

A Donald J. Ross
Masterpiece

Donald Ross was born in Dornoch, Scotland and became one of the most prolific and celebrated golf course architects in American history. His designs are renowned for their strategic use of natural terrain, crowned greens, and subtle difficulty that rewards thoughtful play over brute force.

The Tupper Lake course is a true Ross layout — carved from the Adirondack landscape using the natural contours of Mount Morris, creating a course that is both stunning and strategically demanding.

Tupper Lake Golf Course

You Are in Good Company

Other Courses Donald Ross
Left His Mark On

Pinehurst No. 2

Pinehurst, NC

Ross's masterwork. Host of multiple U.S. Opens and considered one of the finest courses in the world.

Seminole Golf Club

Juno Beach, FL

Consistently ranked among the top 10 courses in the United States. Ben Hogan called it the best course he ever played.

Oakland Hills

Bloomfield Hills, MI

Host of six U.S. Opens. One of the most storied championship venues in American golf history.

Inverness Club

Toledo, OH

A four-time major championship host. Ross redesigned it in 1919 and it remains one of his most celebrated layouts.

Salem Country Club

Peabody, MA

One of the finest Ross designs in New England. Host of the 1954 U.S. Women's Open.

Tupper Lake Golf Club

Tupper Lake, NY · Est. 1932

Ross's Adirondack gem — carved from Mount Morris, open to the public, and one of the most scenic rounds in the Northeast.

Hole 10 at Tupper Lake Golf Club

A Course Worth Playing

Fairway Bunkers,
Water & Views

From the strategic fairway bunkers that demand precise tee shots, to the greenside bunkering that protects every approach, to the water features that come into play on key holes — the Tupper Lake layout keeps you thinking from the first tee to the last green. And the views of the Adirondack ridgelines from nearly every hole make it one of the most scenic rounds you will ever play.

Behind the Scenes

The Crew That
Makes It All Happen

The condition of this course does not happen by accident. Our grounds crew is out before first light every single morning — mowing, edging, raking, and manicuring every inch of the property so that when you step onto the first tee, everything is exactly as it should be.

The course features a full 18-hole irrigation system to keep fairways and greens playing at their best throughout the season — from the soft spring mornings of May right through the golden afternoons of October.

Tupper Lake Golf Club grounds crew
Irrigation system watering greens

18-Hole Irrigation

Perfect Conditions
All Season Long

A fully irrigated 18-hole system means greens are true, fairways are firm, and the course plays at its best no matter what the summer throws at it.

Come Play.
Walk-Ons Welcome.

Open to the public seven days a week from May through October, dawn to dusk. Give us a call to check availability or just show up — walk-ons are always welcome when the course is open.

Call Us  ·  (518) 359-3701

Stewardship & Sustainability

Rooted in the Adirondacks.
Committed to keeping them wild.

Tupper Lake Golf Club has called the Adirondack Park home since 1932. We believe that caring for this landscape is inseparable from the game we love — and we're taking real steps to ensure the course we tend today can be enjoyed for generations to come.

01

Water Conservation

Transitioning irrigation zones to weather-based smart controllers and maintaining fairways with drought-tolerant turfgrass suited to the Adirondack climate — reducing water draw from local watersheds season over season.

02

Reduced Chemical Input

Our maintenance program applies fertilizers and pesticides only where soil and turf testing identifies a genuine need — actively reducing synthetic inputs each year in favor of organic alternatives and targeted applications.

03

Native Habitat Preservation

Rough areas, tree lines, and buffer zones are managed as native habitat corridors. Designated no-mow zones along woodland edges support pollinators, songbirds, and the broader ecological community of the Park.

04

Carbon & Energy Reduction

Phasing out aging, high-emission equipment in favor of electric and low-emission alternatives as budgets allow. Facility lighting has been converted to LED throughout the clubhouse and maintenance buildings.

05

Waste & Composting

Clippings and organic material from maintenance operations are composted on-site and returned to the course as natural soil amendment. We are working to eliminate single-use plastics from clubhouse operations.

06

Transparency & Progress

We commit to sharing an honest update with our members and community each season — what improved, where we fell short, and what we're aiming for next. Sustainable golf is a long game, and we intend to play it honestly.

Our Promise

"The Adirondacks do not belong to us. We are simply its caretakers for a time — and we take that responsibility seriously."

— Tupper Lake Golf Club Management

Ongoing Commitments

Tracking and reviewing our water and chemical usage every season to hold ourselves accountable

Setting new, specific environmental benchmarks each year and sharing our progress openly

Making decisions about course maintenance with the long-term health of this land as a guiding priority

Staff training on sustainable turf management practices each season

Member education on how individual on-course choices contribute to stewardship

Ongoing investment in infrastructure that reduces our long-term ecological footprint

photo gallery

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