Royal Cinque Ports

A pure links brute on England’s southeast coast. Royal Cinque Ports (Deal) is relentless, traditional, and utterly thrilling when the wind blows.

Slope Rating

143

Par

72

Yardage

7,245

Royal Cinque Ports, often simply called Deal, is a stern and underrated Open Championship venue just a few miles from Royal St George’s. It hosted The Open in 1909 and 1920 and was set to host more – but fierce coastal weather forced its removal from the rota. That tells you everything. Deal is one of the most demanding links courses in Britain. The front nine plays downwind and gives hope. The back nine turns directly into the wind and is among the toughest closing stretches in the UK. The fairways are firm and narrow, flanked by dunes and ridged rough. Greens are raised, fast, and subtly contoured – with plenty of run-offs and punishing surrounds. It’s traditional in routing and presentation – no trickery, no tricks, just pure links golf. When the breeze is up, and it usually is, it plays every inch of its 7,200+ yards. Loved by serious golfers and professionals preparing for The Open, Royal Cinque Ports is raw, uncompromising, and glorious.

Designer

Henry Hunter (1892); James Braid improvements

Opened

1892

Tee time availability

Fair

Special information

Excellent for competitive and serious amateur golf. Visitor play welcomed midweek. Strong connections to The Open venues nearby.

Tiger’s best round

Rory’s best round

Mens course record

66 – Club competition

Ladies course record

Round duration

4 hours 45 minutes

Caddy guide

Strongly recommended – essential for navigating wind and long carries

Buggies

Not permitted – walking only

A true links examination. Use the wind as your weapon. Keep ball flight low and avoid short-siding. If the back nine is into wind, manage expectations and stay disciplined.

Very tough, especially when windy. Play one shot at a time, avoid bunkers, and lean on your short game. Take extra club and play bump-and-run approaches where possible.

Intimidating in wind, but honest and scenic. Use forward tees and enjoy the experience rather than chasing numbers. Avoiding bunkers is more important than chasing distance.

Green speed

10 – firm and fast, especially in dry conditions

Wind

A defining factor – front nine often downwind, back nine into it. Wind shapes strategy every round.

Pace of play

Well managed – serious golf culture with good etiquette and flow

Nerves on the first tee

Moderate – understated setting, but narrow fairway and Open history create pressure

Clubhouse

Traditional and elegant – full of character and historic charm

The 16th is a brutal long par-4 into the prevailing wind with a ridged fairway and raised green. The 14th and 15th are also punishing in tough weather. The par-5 3rd offers a rare scoring chance early on. The closing hole is tight, demanding, and rewards only the boldest finish.

East Kent coast offers dry, links-friendly conditions, but wind is ever-present. Summer brings firm fairways and fast greens. Spring and autumn can be stunning but bracing.