Scotland: Whiskey + Golf

Prices starting at $6,500 per person

Experience Scotland through its most iconic traditions, golf and whisky.

Experience Scotland through its most iconic traditions, golf and whisky. Stay in a 12th-century castle set on a 19-hole course, play on legendary links, and enjoy private tastings of Scotland’s finest single malts. From the historic greens of St. Andrews to the rolling countryside beyond Glasgow, this journey blends sport, heritage, and timeless hospitality in true Scottish fashion.

Top 6 Highlights of Scottish Whisky + Golf Tour

  • Rowallan Castle Stay
    Live like royalty in a restored 12th-century castle surrounded by sweeping golf greens. Enjoy modern comfort paired with centuries of history just outside Glasgow.

  • Championship Golf
    Tee off on premier courses including Rowallan Castle’s private course, the renowned Dundonald Links, and world-famous St. Andrews, a golfer’s pilgrimage.

  • Whisky Tastings
    Savor a curated whisky tasting experience, exploring the regional character and craft of Scotland’s finest drams.

  • Auchentoshan Distillery Tour
    Go behind the scenes at one of Scotland’s most iconic distilleries, learning time-honored methods of whisky production followed by exclusive tastings.

  • Cultural Glasgow
    Spend time in Glasgow’s lively city center, known for its museums, galleries, shopping, and elegant afternoon teas: the perfect balance to days on the course.

  • Luxury & Leisure
    Relax between rounds with castle spa treatments, countryside strolls, and refined dining. Every moment is designed for comfort and discovery.

6 Days in Scotland

  • Land in Glasgow and transfer to your castle accommodation — which sets the tone for everything that follows. The day is intentionally unscheduled. Sleep off the flight, play an optional round on the course nearby, or head into Glasgow to get your bearings. A welcome evening at the castle brings the group together before the week begins properly.

  • Dundonald Links sits on the Ayrshire coast with views across to Arran and the Firth of Clyde, and it plays harder than it looks. The links layout rewards local knowledge and punishes overconfidence, which makes it one of the more honest tests on the west coast. The evening shifts to a private whisky tasting — single malts chosen to show the breadth of what Scottish distilling actually produces, with someone on hand who can explain why they taste the way they do.

  • A choice of days depending on what you're after. The private course is yours if you want another full round, played at your own pace without a tee time to chase. Glasgow is the alternative — a proper city with good architecture, genuinely good restaurants, and an afternoon tea at The Ivy that gives you a reason to come in from the rain.

  • The Old Course is the reason people make the pilgrimage to St. Andrews, and it earns the reputation. The course has been played continuously since the 15th century and the layout — the Valley of Sin, the Road Hole, the Swilcan Bridge — is familiar even to people who have never set foot on it before. The town itself is worth the afternoon: a small Scottish coastal university town with good independent shops, the ruins of a cathedral that was once the largest in Scotland, and a harbor that still functions as one.

  • Auchentoshan is one of the few Scottish distilleries that triple-distills its whisky, a process borrowed from Irish tradition that produces a lighter, more approachable single malt than most Scotch. The tour goes behind the process and into the warehouse. Back at the castle in the evening for a final dinner — a good moment to work out what everyone is taking home with them, in bottles and otherwise.

  • Transfer to Glasgow Airport for your return flight home.