$65–$120/night
Booking via Expedia
Myrtlewood Villas runs 250 units wrapped around the two Myrtlewood Golf Club courses, PineHills and Palmetto, in central Myrtle Beach. The on-site golf is solid mid-tier work, well-maintained and priced affordably, with stay-and-play packages that drive most of the property's value. PineHills is the stronger of the two, with more elevation change and tighter corridors than Palmetto's broader design.
The villas are older in vintage and straightforward in finish. One- and two-bedroom configurations dominate, with full kitchens that let groups manage meal costs. Pool and tennis facilities are basic. There is no spa, no fitness centre, and no real on-site dining beyond the course. This is, in function, a golf camp with kitchens. Most Grand Strand courses sit within 20 minutes, and the Broadway at the Beach district is less than a mile away for evenings out.
$65 to $120 nightly, the lowest you will find at any Myrtle Beach property with on-site course access. For groups building around volume golf at accessible price points, the combination of location, on-site courses, and rock-bottom rates is hard to beat. Book direct through the resort for stay-and-play packages, or check rates via the link on this page.
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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