
(Desert Mountain Club — America’s Largest Private Residential Golf System
Desert Mountain Golf Homes surround an amazing 7 Golf Courses! This is not a single course, not a destination stop, and not a lifestyle add-on. Desert Mountain Golf is a fully integrated, member-owned private system designed to deliver year-round access, variety, and predictability for people who intend to live with their golf — not schedule around it. When buyers talk about “owning the best golf in Scottsdale,” this is usually what they mean — whether they realize it or not.
The Golf, Precisely Defined
At the center is Desert Mountain Golf Club.
Access model: Private, member-owned
Public play: ❌ No
Resort guest access: ❌ No
Property ownership required: Yes (residency within Desert Mountain is required (maybe) for full golf membership)
Number of courses: 7
Total holes: 126
Desert Mountain is the largest private golf club system in Arizona and one of the largest in the country.
This scale is not incidental — it is the core value proposition.
The Seven Courses
Desert Mountain’s seven courses are not clones. Each has a distinct routing, elevation profile, and personality, allowing members to rotate play without repetition fatigue.
The current lineup includes:
- Cochise — desert target golf with open sightlines
- Geronimo — tighter corridors and strategic precision
- Renegade — bold elevation, modern desert drama
- Apache — playable, rhythm-driven routing
- Outlaw — quieter, member-favorite course for repeat rounds
- Chiricahua — technical, refined, and demanding
- Seven Desert Mountain — the newest course, modernized and routed for today’s equipment and play styles
All courses were designed by Jack Nicklaus or Nicklaus Design, creating a unified architectural philosophy without redundancy.
This matters because Desert Mountain is not about finding “the best 18.”
It’s about never being limited to one 18.
Why Scale Changes the Golf Experience
Most private clubs struggle with:
- tee-time congestion,
- course closures,
- tournament interruptions,
- and seasonal compression.
Desert Mountain largely avoids those issues because volume is spread across seven routings.
For members, that translates to:
- easier tee access,
- less pressure during peak season,
- variety without travel,
- and the ability to play around events or maintenance seamlessly.
This is why Desert Mountain attracts full-time residents and heavy-use golfers more than any other club in Scottsdale.
Membership Structure & Economics (Accurate, Defensible Ranges)
Membership Types and Costs
- Full Golf Membership: Initiation fee is roughly $250,000
, with monthly dues of roughly
$2500
- Seven Golf Membership: Focuses on the “Seven” course with a lower initiation fee of roughly $154,000
and lower monthly dues.
- Equity/Benefits: Members get access to seven courses, a spa, fitness center, tennis courts, and several restaurants.
Additional Fees
- Food & Beverage Minimum: An annual minimum of
2,500
is required, applicable to dining at the various clubhouses
Real Estate Is the Gate — By Design
Desert Mountain is a true residential club.
Key implications:
- You cannot “join first and decide later” on housing
- Golf access is structurally tied to property ownership
- Architecture, lot placement, and course routing were planned together
This alignment is why:
- homes trade with confidence across market cycles,
- golf access remains reliable even in peak season,
- and buyers view Desert Mountain as a long-term platform, not a lifestyle phase.
Unlike destination clubs, Desert Mountain is built for primary and extended-stay ownership.
Who Desert Mountain Golf Is For
Best fit for:
- Full-time or long-duration residents
- Golfers who play frequently year-round
- Buyers who value variety and access over novelty
- Owners who want predictability at scale
Not ideal for:
- Casual or seasonal golfers
- Buyers seeking one signature course
- Those uncomfortable with HOA and club governance
- Anyone wanting public or guest-heavy access
Desert Mountain is not subtle — but it is incredibly efficient.
How Desert Mountain Fits in the Scottsdale Golf Hierarchy
Desert Mountain defines its own category:
- TPC Scottsdale Golf = public tournament pedigree
- Troon North Golf = destination public desert golf
- Gainey Ranch / Scottsdale Ranch Golf = private, central livability
- Silverleaf Golf = ultra-private, precision access
Desert Mountain Golf = private scale — unmatched variety, controlled access, residential integration.
It is not the most exclusive.
It is the most complete.
The Bottom Line
Desert Mountain Golf works because it solves a problem no other club can.
It offers seven private Jack Nicklaus courses, full residential integration, and a governance model designed to protect access and experience over decades — not seasons. Buyers choose Desert Mountain when they want golf to be reliable, abundant, and permanent.
If Scottsdale National Golf is about isolation and Silverleaf Golf is about precision, Desert Mountain Golf is about infrastructure.
And infrastructure holds value.
Contact
If golf is the anchor of your Scottsdale strategy — and you’re evaluating Desert Mountain for membership, residency, or long-term planning — nuance matters.
Scottsdale Real Estate Associates provides golf-first guidance grounded in how these systems actually operate, not how they’re summarized.
Carefree and surrounding area Homes
Explore Nearby Golf Courses
Silverleaf Golf
Scottsdale National Golf
Troon North Golf
FAQ’s Desert Mountain Golf Homes
Do Desert Mountain golf homes include club membership?
Not automatically. Some homes may offer membership availability or a more direct path to joining, but buyers should never assume membership is included with the purchase unless the listing specifically states it.
Is Desert Mountain Golf Club private?
Yes. Desert Mountain is a private club community with multiple private golf courses and member-only amenities.
Is there a waitlist for Desert Mountain golf membership?
There may be, depending on the membership category and current demand. Buyers should verify current availability, wait times, and initiation structure directly with the club.
Are there lock-and-leave golf homes in Desert Mountain?
Yes. In addition to large custom estates, Desert Mountain offers villas and lower-maintenance properties that appeal to seasonal and second-home buyers.
Do all Desert Mountain villages offer golf access?
The homes are spread across multiple villages, and buyers often compare village location, course proximity, and access to club amenities when choosing a property.
How does Desert Mountain compare to Desert Highlands?
Desert Mountain generally offers a larger-scale club environment with more courses and a wider variety of neighborhoods, while Desert Highlands is smaller and more intimate.
What should buyers focus on when choosing a Desert Mountain golf home?
The main decision points are village location, membership availability, view orientation, lot size, maintenance level, and whether the buyer wants a seasonal or full-time property.
Why are Desert Mountain golf homes so desirable?
Buyers are usually drawn to the combination of multiple private courses, luxury homes, mountain views, and the ability to choose between large estates and lock-and-leave properties.
