Golf the High Sierra
Bachelor party golf trip Reno Lake Tahoe championship courses
Trip PlanningSeptember 2025·10 min read

Bachelor Party Golf Trip: Reno & Lake Tahoe Guide 2026

Reno is the best-kept bachelor party golf secret in the West. Eight championship courses within 20 minutes of casino hotels, Lake Tahoe 45 minutes south, and a nightlife scene that doesn't require a $500 table minimum. Here's how to plan it right — from course selection to hotel blocks to keeping the non-golfers happy.

S
Sean Schaeffer
Golf the High Sierra · Since 2004
8
Courses within 20 min
45 min
Drive to Lake Tahoe
$600
From per person, 3 nights

Why Reno Is the Best Golf Bachelor Party Destination in the West

Vegas gets the reputation. Reno gets the golf trips. There are almost no championship courses near the Las Vegas Strip — the ones that exist require 30–60 minute drives through desert in 110-degree summer heat, and green fees run $250–$400 per round at the name-brand courses. Reno has eight championship courses within 20 minutes of downtown casino hotels. That's the whole case right there.

Add Lake Tahoe 45 minutes south — one of the most scenic golf settings in the country — and prices that run 30–50% below Vegas across hotels, restaurants, and entertainment, and you start to understand why groups who've done both stop going back to Vegas. Reno isn't the consolation prize. It's the better trip.

For West Coast groups flying from California, Oregon, or Washington, it's also a 90-minute flight versus a 2-hour flight to Vegas. You land, you're golfing by 1pm. Nobody loses a half-day to travel.

Vegas has the reputation. Reno has eight championship courses within 20 minutes of casino hotels — and Lake Tahoe 45 minutes south. Once groups make the comparison, they stop going back to Vegas.

Sean Schaeffer, Golf the High Sierra

The 3-Night Structure That Works Every Time

Three nights is the sweet spot for a golf bachelor party. Two nights feels rushed — you spend half of Day 1 traveling and half of Day 3 leaving. Four nights gets expensive and people start missing work. Three nights lets the group play two full rounds, have one proper night out, and actually recover.

Here's the structure GTHS has run with hundreds of groups over 20 years:

Night 1
Arrive, casino floor, group dinner
Day 2
ArrowCreek — the main event
Day 3
Tahoe day or second Reno round
Day 4
Wolf Run morning, fly home

Night 1 is arrival night — everyone's energized, nobody's tired from golf yet. This is the night to go hard. Group dinner at the Atlantis Steakhouse or Bistro Napa, then casino until 1am. Day 2 is the centerpiece round. Everyone plays their best when they're fresh. ArrowCreek Hills or Edgewood Tahoe goes here. Day 3 is the flexible day — either a second round in Reno or the drive down to Lake Tahoe for Edgewood. Day 4 is Wolf Run in the morning (fast pace of play, you're done by noon) and then the airport.

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Lock in the hotel room block first — before tee times
Casino hotels in Reno fill fast on summer weekends. Room blocks for groups of 10+ need to be secured 60–90 days out. GTHS secures preferred group rates — often including room credits and comp upgrades — that aren't available through Expedia or Hotels.com. The room block and tee times get locked simultaneously.
Atlantis Casino Resort Reno bachelor party golf lodging
Atlantis Casino Resort Spa — AAA Four Diamond, the most popular bachelor party golf base in Reno

Course Selection: Matching the Course to the Group

The biggest mistake bachelor party organizers make is booking the hardest course because it sounds impressive, then watching half the group struggle for five hours and hate every minute. Course selection should match your group's actual skill level — not the handicap the groom claims to have.

Here's how GTHS thinks about it:

  • ArrowCreek Lakes Course — The right pick for mixed-handicap groups (8–28). Forgiving enough that higher handicaps have fun, interesting enough that lower handicaps are engaged. Dramatic elevation changes, views across the Truckee Meadows, excellent pace of play.
  • ArrowCreek Hills Course — For groups where everyone breaks 90. More demanding, longer, and the course that makes people book return trips. Same stunning views, tighter fairways.
  • Wolf Run Golf Club — The best “fun golf” course in the market. Rolling terrain through native sage, reasonable difficulty, fastest pace of play of any course in Reno. The right call for groups where golf is the framing device, not the main event.
  • Red Hawk Golf Resort — Two courses (Lakes and Wetlands), both scenic, both mid-handicap friendly. Good option for large groups that want to split into two flights on different layouts.
  • Lakeridge Golf Course — Home to one of the most photographed holes in Northern Nevada: the island-green par 3 on hole 15. Every bachelor party group takes the same photo. It's become a tradition.
  • Edgewood Tahoe — The prestige round. PGA Tour venue, lakefront holes on 17 and 18, consistently ranked among the top public courses in America. Reserve this for groups where the majority can break 90, and book through GTHS for preferred tee times — the public queue fills weeks in advance.
One rule: never schedule Edgewood as the first round
Groups always want to open with Edgewood because it's the big name. Don't. Play a warm-up round first — Red Hawk or Lakeridge on Day 1 — and save Edgewood for when everyone's loose and playing their best. It's too good a course to waste on travel-day legs.
Edgewood Tahoe Golf Course Lake Tahoe bachelor party golf
Edgewood Tahoe — the bucket-list round, 45 minutes south of Reno

The Non-Golfers Problem — Solved

Every bachelor party has a few guys who don't golf. Maybe they played once in college and hated it. Maybe they're the groom's work friends who got invited and don't want to be left out. This is not a problem in Reno — casino resorts are literally designed for exactly this situation.

While golfers tee off at 7:30am, non-golfers sleep until 10am. They have the resort pool from noon, can book spa appointments, hit the casino floor, or find the sportsbook. Everyone converges at the steakhouse at 7pm, and non-golfers have perfectly good stories about their day. Nobody feels like a spare part.

GTHS coordinates spa packages and dinner reservations for the non-golf crew through the same group registration system the golfers use. The best man doesn't have to manage two separate itineraries — one system handles the whole group, golfers and non-golfers alike.

The best bachelor parties we run aren't all-golfer groups. They're mixed groups where the golfers disappear at 7am, the non-golfers have the pool and casino until 6pm, and everyone has better stories at dinner.

Sean Schaeffer, Golf the High Sierra

Nightlife: Don't Over-Schedule It

The most common mistake after choosing the wrong courses is over-scheduling the evenings. Every night doesn't need a plan. Golfers who played 36 holes in the mountain air at 5,000 feet don't need a 2am nightclub. They need a good steak and a casino floor they can walk off when they're ready.

Here's the rule: Night 1 is the big night — everyone has energy and nobody has played golf yet. Night 2 is dinner at a proper restaurant, casino, and reasonable bedtime. Night 3 (if you're staying three nights) is the send-off — nicer dinner, later night, but nobody is destroying their tee time on Day 4.

For restaurants: the Atlantis Steakhouse handles large groups well and the quality is genuine. Ruth's Chris at Silver Legacy is the safe pick if the group wants a brand name. Bistro Napa at Atlantis works for groups that want something slightly more varied than pure steakhouse. GTHS books group dinner reservations as part of every package — you don't show up with 14 people and no reservation.

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Pre-book every group dinner
Every GTHS package includes dining coordination. Atlantis Steakhouse, Ruth's Chris (Silver Legacy), and Bistro Napa all seat groups of 10–20 with advance booking. Weekend dinner reservations at the good restaurants fill 2–3 weeks out. Don't leave this to day-of — especially on a Friday or Saturday night.

Budget: What a Real Reno Bachelor Party Golf Trip Costs

Real numbers, not estimates designed to get you in the door:

  • 2-night, 2-round budget package (8–12 people): $450–550/person. Casino resort lodging, two rounds at Wolf Run and Red Hawk, group dinner coordination.
  • 3-night, 2-round mid-range package (10–16 people): $600–800/person. Atlantis or Grand Sierra lodging, ArrowCreek plus one other course, group dinner, casino night coordination.
  • 3-night, 3-round premium package (10–20 people): $800–1,100/person. Atlantis or Peppermill lodging, ArrowCreek Hills plus Edgewood Tahoe plus one Reno course, all group dining coordinated, transportation to Tahoe included.

GTHS group rates save 15–25% versus booking independently across courses and hotels. And there are no booking fees — what you see in the quote is what the group pays.

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One payment per person — no Venmo chaos
GTHS sends each group member a secure payment link through the registration portal. The best man sets the package; each member pays their share directly. No one person fronts $8,000 on a credit card. No Venmo requests. No one who 'forgot' to pay. This alone is worth the call.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything your group needs to know before booking.

Plan your bachelor party golf trip

We've run hundreds of bachelor party golf trips in Reno and Tahoe since 2004. Tell us your dates, headcount, and budget — we'll build the itinerary and lock in group rates within 24 hours.

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