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Hardest Golf Courses in New Mexico

The 25 most challenging golf courses in New Mexico, ranked by maximum slope rating.

The hardest golf course in New Mexico on Stymie is Angel Fire Country Club in Angel Fire, designed by Lebus & Paul Ortiz (opened in 1961). It carries a maximum slope rating of 150, stretching 6,670 yards from the back tees, placing it well above the USGA's neutral 113 and into the territory where bogey golfers should expect to lose 8-12 strokes versus their handicap. These 25 courses below are ranked by maximum slope rating, the single best proxy for "how punishing this course is" for the average golfer.

Across the full Stymie directory, the average maximum slope in New Mexico is 129 — above the typical US state benchmark around 125. 7 courses in New Mexico carry a slope of 140 or higher; a slope of 140+ is considered very difficult and demands accurate driving, distance control on iron shots, and patience around the greens.

If you're testing yourself or planning a buddy trip built around difficulty, start at the top of this list and play from a tee one set forward of your normal handicap range. Course difficulty is not the same as course quality — many of the hardest courses below also rank among the most enjoyable in the state, but the slope rating tells you to bring your A-game.

Ranked
25
Peak slope
150
Avg max slope
129
Slope 140+
7
#CourseSlope
1
Angel Fire Country Club
6,670 yds · Par 72 · Lebus · 1961Angel Fire
150
2
Picacho Hills Country Club
6,936 yds · Par 72 · Joe Finger · 1979 · PrivateLas Cruces
146
3
Sandia Golf Club
7,755 yds · Par 72Albuquerque
142
4
Tanoan Country Club
6,882 yds · Par 72 · Bruce Devlin · PrivateAlbuquerque
141
5
Truth or Consequences Municipal Golf Course
6,291 yds · Par 72Truth or Consequences
140
6
Twin Warriors Golf Club
7,736 yds · Par 72Santa Ana Pueblo
140
7
Red Hawk Golf Club
7,575 yds · Par 72Las Cruces
140
8
Pinon Hills Golf Course
7,218 yds · Par 72 · Ken Dye · 1989Farmington
139
9
Sierra del Rio Golf Course
7,329 yds · Par 72Elephant Butte
138
10
Black Mesa Golf Club
7,307 yds · Par 72 · Baxter Spann · 2003Española
137
11
Inn of the Mountain Gods Golf Course
7,166 yds · Par 73 · Ted Robinson · 1976Cloudcroft
137
12
Lovington Country Club
6,379 yds · Par 71 · Warren Cantrell · 1954 · PrivateLovington
135
13
Lake Carlsbad Municipal Golf Course
6,267 yds · Par 72 · 1974Carlsbad
135
14
Sonoma Ranch Golf Club
6,990 yds · Par 72 · Cal Olson · 2000Las Cruces
134
15
Tijeras Arroyo Golf Course
6,944 yds · Par 72 · 1971Kirtland Air Force Base
134
16
Ascarate Golf Course
6,892 yds · Par 71El Paso
134
17
Santa Fe Country Club
7,179 yds · Par 72 · Tom Bendelow · 1930Santa Fe
132
18
Albuquerque Country Club
6,484 yds · Par 70 · John Van Kleek · 1929 · PrivateAlbuquerque
132
19
Santa Ana Golf Course
7,045 yds · Par 72Santa Ana Pueblo
132
20
Riverview Golf Course
6,997 yds · Par 72 · 1958Kirtland
132
21
Artesia Country Club
6,220 yds · Par 72 · Ralph Plummer · 1946Artesia
131
22
Desert Lakes Golf Course
6,568 yds · Par 72 · 1950Alamogordo
131
23
Rockwind Community Links
7,112 yds · Par 72Hobbs
131
24
Puerto Del Sol Golf Course
5,934 yds · Par 70 · 1979Albuquerque
130
25
Eunice Golf Course
6,840 yds · Par 72Eunice
130

Frequently asked questions

What is the hardest golf course in New Mexico?

Angel Fire Country Club in Angel Fire, New Mexico is the hardest ranked course with a maximum slope rating of 150. Slope rating measures the difficulty of a course for a bogey golfer relative to a scratch player — 113 is average, 140+ is very difficult, and 155 is the maximum.

How many golf courses in New Mexico have a slope rating of 140 or higher?

7 golf courses have a max slope rating of 140 or higher in New Mexico based on the scorecards in the Stymie directory. A slope of 140 or above is considered very challenging for bogey golfers.

How does New Mexico's average difficulty compare to the rest of the US?

The average maximum slope rating across golf courses in New Mexico is 129, versus a US average around 125. A higher state average indicates courses that are, on the whole, tougher for mid-to-high handicap golfers.

What makes a golf course hard?

Course difficulty is driven primarily by slope rating (how much harder it plays for a bogey golfer than a scratch golfer), course rating (how a scratch golfer would score), total yardage, hazards (water, bunkers, forced carries), green speed, and rough length. Slope rating is the single best proxy for "how tough this course is."

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