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Newest Golf Courses in Connecticut

The 25 newest golf courses in Connecticut, ranked by most recent year of opening.

The newest golf course in Connecticut on Stymie is Gillette Ridge Golf Club in Bloomfield, designed by Palmer Course Design Co., opening in 2004. Modern golf courses tend to feature wider fairways, larger and more contoured greens, routing optimized for today's distance, and turf chosen for water efficiency — reflecting how the game and the construction industry have evolved.

6 golf courses in Connecticut have opened since 2000, against a statewide average build year of 1948. Most US state golf inventories saw their largest construction waves in the 1920s-30s and again in the late 1990s-2000s; since then, US golf-course development has slowed dramatically as the sport rebalances around existing inventory.

If you want pristine conditioning, modern practice facilities, and layouts designed around how the ball actually flies today, start at the top of this list. Newer courses also tend to be the most accessible — often built around real-estate communities with lodging on site, making them natural picks for golf-trip home bases.

Ranked
25
Newest
2,004
Avg year
1,948
Post-2000
6
#CourseEst.
1
Gillette Ridge Golf Club
7,191 yds · Slope 140 · Par 72 · Palmer Course Design Co.Bloomfield
2004
2
Wintonbury Hills Golf Course
6,711 yds · Slope 129 · Par 70 · Pete DyeBloomfield
2003
3
Fox Hopyard Golf Club
6,912 yds · Slope 140 · Par 71 · Roger RulewichEast Haddam
2001
4
Great River Golf Club
7,060 yds · Slope 148 · Par 72 · Tommy FazioMilford
2001
5
Pistol Creek Golf Club
Vero GolfBerlin
2001
6
Fairview Farm Golf Course
6,619 yds · Slope 126 · Par 72 · Dick ChristianHarwinton
2000
7
Guilford Lakes Golf Course
2,484 yds · Slope 71 · Par 54 · AlGuilford
1999
8
River Ridge Golf Course
6,698 yds · Slope 129 · Par 72 · Charles RusticiJewett City
1999
9
Tradition Golf Club at Wallingford
6,139 yds · Slope 123 · Par 70 · Alfred H. Tull · Semi_privateWallingford
1999
10
Orchards Golf Course
7,011 yds · Slope 134 · Par 72 · City PersonnelMilford
1997
11
Rolling Meadows Country Club
6,818 yds · Slope 125 · Par 72 · Al ZikorusEllington
1997
12
Topstone Golf Course
6,416 yds · Slope 127 · Par 72 · Al ZikorusSouth Windsor
1997
13
Tunxis Plantation Country Club
3,150 yds · Slope 135 · Par 35 · Al ZikorusFarmington
1995
14
Gainfield Farms Gold Course
Al ZikorusSouthbury
1994
15
Lyman Orchards Golf Club
1,556 yds · Slope 87 · Par 29 · Gary PlayerMiddlefield
1994
16
Putnam Country Club
MikePutnam
1994
17
Quarry Ridge Golf Course
7,201 yds · Slope 145 · Par 72 · Joe KellyPortland
1992
18
Vineyard Valley Golf Club
6,066 yds · Slope 119 · Par 72Pomfret
1992
19
Stonington Country Club
6,604 yds · Slope 139 · Par 73Stonington
1991
20
Whitney Farms Golf Course
6,534 yds · Slope 127 · Par 71 · Hal PurdyMonroe
1981
21
Airways Golf Course
5,845 yds · Slope 114 · Par 71 · Geoffrey CornishWest Suffield
1977
22
Blue Fox Run Golf Course
6,266 yds · Slope 127 · Par 70 · Joseph BrunoliAvon
1976
23
Portland Golf Course
4,012 yds · Slope 98 · Par 60 · Geoffrey CornishPortland
1974
24
Rolling Greens Golf Course
5,945 yds · Slope 130 · Par 70 · Geoffrey CornishRocky Hill
1974
25
Farmington Woods Golf Club
6,577 yds · Slope 131 · Par 72 · Desmond MuirheadAvon
1973

Frequently asked questions

What is the newest golf course in Connecticut?

Gillette Ridge Golf Club in Bloomfield, Connecticut, designed by Palmer Course Design Co., opened in 2004 and is the most recently built course in the Stymie directory for the state. Modern courses tend to feature wider fairways, larger and more contoured greens, and routing optimized for the modern golf ball.

How many post-2000 golf courses are in Connecticut?

6 golf courses in Connecticut have opened since 2000 according to the Stymie directory. The 21st-century courses tend to be longer (to challenge modern equipment), more forgiving for average players, and built with sustainable turf and water-management practices.

When was most of Connecticut golf built?

The average year of construction for golf courses in Connecticut is 1948, with the newest opening in 2,004. Most US states saw their largest course-building waves in the 1920s-30s and again in the 1990s-2000s.

Are newer golf courses better?

Not inherently. Newer courses generally have better drainage, more forgiving fairways, and more modern conditioning, but classic courses often feature design quirks and natural land use that newer designs don't replicate. The "best" course depends on what you're looking for: pure conditioning and amenities (newer wins) vs character and historic feel (older usually wins).

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