Arcadian Shores Golf Club
A Rees Jones design in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Arcadian Shores Golf Club blends elevated greens, strategically placed bunkers, live oaks, lakes, subtle sand-dune movement, and a convenient north-end location just minutes from the Atlantic.
The first solo Rees Jones design still has teeth.
Arcadian Shores Golf Club is one of the north end’s classic Myrtle Beach golf stops and an important course in Rees Jones history. Opened in 1974, the layout is widely recognized as Jones’ first solo design, long before he became known as “The Open Doctor.”
The course plays as a par 72 and stretches to 6,857 yards from the back tees. That number is not outrageous by modern standards, but Arcadian Shores protects itself with elevated greens, large bunkers, tree-lined corridors, well-placed lakes, and approaches that demand the ball arrive on the correct level.
Arcadian Shores also carries one of the most convenient addresses in the Myrtle Beach golf market. Located near Restaurant Row, the beach, and north-end lodging, it is a practical round for groups that want a classic design without a long drive before or after golf.
For a 2026 Myrtle Beach golf trip, Arcadian Shores is a smart pick for groups that want location, history, playable yardage, and old-school shot values. It is friendly from the right tees, but those raised greens and sand traps can still pick a pocket clean.
Rees Jones history
Arcadian Shores was the first solo design by Rees Jones, giving the course a meaningful place in Myrtle Beach golf and modern architecture history.
Elevated greens
Many greens sit above the fairway and are protected by large bunkers, making approach height, distance control, and miss location important all day.
North-end convenience
The course sits in the heart of Myrtle Beach’s north end, close to lodging, restaurants, the beach, and other major Grand Strand courses.
Arcadian Shores Golf Club gallery
A look at Arcadian Shores’ raised greens, lakes, live oaks, white bunkers, tree-lined corridors, and classic Rees Jones approach-shot demands.
How Arcadian Shores plays.
Arcadian Shores gives players a fair look from the tee, but the approach shots do the sorting. The raised greens, bunkers, and water features reward players who control distance and avoid short-sided misses.
The second hole sets the tone as a long par 3 with a forced carry and water guarding the right side. Later, the back-to-back par 4s at 13 and 14 bring some of the course’s most memorable lake-and-wildlife scenery.
For 2026 trips, Arcadian Shores is best for groups that want a centrally located classic with history and strategy. It is not a monster on the card, but poor approach angles can make the greens feel like little green rooftops.
| Tee | Yardage / Rating / Slope |
|---|---|
| Black Tees | 6,857 yards · 72.9 rating · 138 slope |
| Blue Tees | 6,446 yards · 71.3 rating · 133 slope |
| White Tees | 6,026 yards · 69.2 rating · 130 slope |
| Gold Tees | 5,628 yards · 67.4 rating · 119 slope |
| Red Tees | 5,113 yards · 69.4 rating · 117 slope |
What’s available at Arcadian Shores
Arcadian Shores offers the core pieces golf groups need for a full Myrtle Beach round: bar, restaurant, golf shop, carts, club rentals, driving range, and a clubhouse overlooking the 18th green and practice area.
Bar
Club Rental
Golf Carts
Golf Shop
Restaurant
Driving Range
Add Arcadian Shores to your 2026 golf trip.
Arcadian Shores Golf Club is a strong choice for groups that want a Rees Jones classic, north-end Myrtle Beach convenience, elevated greens, strategic bunkering, lake-framed holes, and a historic design that still asks for smart golf.
