BRORA GOLF CLUB
🏴 Brora, The Highlands, Scotland
Designed by James Braid

Brora Golf Club occupies a stretch of linksland on the Moray Firth in the far north of Scotland, roughly fifty miles north of Inverness. The course was laid out by James Braid in 1923, though golf has been played on this ground since the 1890s. The routing runs along a narrow coastal shelf between the sea and the railway line, with the land rising gently toward the interior hills. The turf is classic links terrain—firm, fast-running, and shaped by wind and salt air—and the layout retains much of Braid's original character, with minimal modern intervention.
The course measures just over 6,100 yards from the back tees and plays as a par 69. Several holes run directly along the shoreline, while others move inland across rumpled dunes and hollows. Livestock—cattle and sheep—graze freely on the course, a traditional arrangement that adds to the sense of remoteness and simplicity. The greens are typically firm and subtly contoured, and the bunkering is straightforward, with pot bunkers and natural depressions defining preferred angles of play.
Brora remains a members' club with a modest clubhouse and an unpretentious atmosphere. It draws visitors seeking an authentic links experience away from the more traveled circuits of the Scottish coast. The setting is open and exposed, with views across the firth to the hills beyond, and the course offers a quiet, unhurried round in one of Scotland's more isolated golfing outposts.
Reviews
FOB V
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Brora at Brora Golf Club has a Course Vaults score of 8.6 out of 10 based on 13 explicit golfer ratings.
Brora was designed by James Braid.
Yes. Brora at Brora Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Brora is 69.
Brora plays 6,156 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Brora is 128.