Disney service and family infrastructure for golf trips where not everyone came for the golf.
$296–$495/night
Book direct via the property website
Disney's Hilton Head Island Resort occupies a waterfront position on Broad Creek as a Disney Vacation Club property with 123 studios and villas. Disney branding shapes the experience, with a pool and water slide, three dining venues, shuttle service, tennis, and bike rentals all aimed squarely at families and groups travelling with children.
For golf trips, the relevance is situational. Palmetto Hall sits roughly three miles away, and the Palmetto Dunes courses and Shipyard are within a short drive. The villa units include full kitchens, which keeps family dining costs in check across a longer stay, and Disney service holds to the standard you would expect. If your group is mixed, with one or two players heading to Palmetto Dunes in the morning while the rest stay back, the resort solves both halves of that equation cleanly. The pool complex and organised activities occupy non-golfers without leaving anyone idle.
$296 to $495 nightly, reflecting the Disney premium and the villa format. This is not the right base for a golf-only group; it is the right base when the trip is family-first and the golf rotation needs a comfortable home for everyone else.
Golf at Hilton Head, South Carolina

Hilton Head, South Carolina
A complete reconstruction of Hilton Head's first golf course, with water on nearly every hole and Spanish moss overhead.

Hilton Head, South Carolina
The only Arnold Palmer design in the area, with six sets of tees and green fees that start at $34.

Hilton Head, South Carolina
The lighthouse, the tournament, and a Pete Dye design that has not stopped being relevant for more than fifty years.

Hilton Head, South Carolina
Pete Dye returned to Sea Pines nearly four decades after Harbour Town and built a course that plays like a conversation between two eras.