Three championship courses by Watson, Palmer, and Nicklaus, all accessible without starting a car.
$123–$350/night
Book direct via the property website
Three championship courses by Watson, Palmer, and Nicklaus, all reachable from a 277-suite hotel without starting a car.
Reunion Resort and Golf Club is the most golf-dense property in Orlando. Three championship courses designed by Watson, Palmer, and Nicklaus radiate from a central resort community, and the 277-suite hotel sits within that community with direct access to all three. The resort infrastructure extends well beyond golf: 11 pools, a lazy river and water park, six tennis courts, a spa, and seven restaurants serve both hotel guests and the substantial vacation rental population that occupies villas across the property.
A full-week destination rather than a golf-only stopover. Expect suites larger than standard hotel rooms, with separate living areas that work for groups. For groups whose primary aim is to play the three Reunion courses, staying at the hotel simplifies every logistical element of the trip: tee time coordination, transport, dining, and rest-day activities all happen inside the resort boundaries. The hotel also makes an effective base for day trips to ChampionsGate Golf Club (15 minutes south), Bay Hill (30 minutes north), or Orange County National (20 minutes north).
$123 to $350 per night. The lower end, available in summer and early autumn, makes Reunion one of the better per-night values among golf resorts in the Southeast. Book direct through the resort or via the link on this page.
Golf at Orlando, Florida

Orlando, Florida
Arnold Palmer's living room, and the only Orlando course with genuine PGA Tour history.

Orlando, Florida
Nick Faldo's only North American design, built into lakeside terrain with elevation changes rare for Florida.

Orlando, Florida
The highest course rating in Florida, and the closest thing to links golf that Orlando produces.

Orlando, Florida
Greg Norman's parkland counterpart to the International, with 80 bunkers winding through former orange groves.