$60–$100/night
Booking via Expedia
La Quinta on North Kings Highway is a standard chain hotel that happens to sit two miles from Pine Lakes, the oldest course in Myrtle Beach. None of the resort amenities that define the Grand Strand's condo-hotel properties, but none of the associated costs either. At $60 to $100 per night it is the lowest-cost option for a golf trip in the area.
The 120 rooms follow the Wyndham-managed La Quinta template: clean, consistent, and efficiently sized. Free breakfast is included, a meaningful daily saving for groups managing total trip cost. The pool is small but functional, and the pet-friendly policy is a minor differentiator if you are travelling with a dog. The Kings Highway location places you on the primary north-south corridor through Myrtle Beach, with straightforward access to courses in both directions. No kitchenettes, no golf packages, no concierge. The savings on four nights here, set against a mid-range condo resort, roughly equals the cost of an additional round at a quality course. For groups who view accommodation as utilitarian, the arithmetic is persuasive.
$60 to $100 nightly. Book direct or through standard booking platforms. Tee times at Pine Lakes, Caledonia, and the Barefoot Resort tracks need to be arranged independently.
Golf at Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
Rees Jones's mature tree-lined layout, quietly aging into its best version.

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
Pete Dye's contribution to Barefoot Resort: the longest, hardest, and most polarizing of the four courses.

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
The most visually refined of Barefoot's four courses, built by Fazio through pines, lakes, and waste bunkers.

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
Davis Love III's most playable design at Barefoot, routed through Lowcountry wetlands and live oaks.
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