Green Fees in the Veneto in 2026
The Veneto sells history at value prices. Circolo Golf Venezia, laid out among the Lido dunes in 1928, publishes a 2026 tariff of 95 euro on weekdays and 110 at weekends, with a 60 euro winter rate. Golf Club Padova tops the region at 130 to 150 euro, Arnold Palmer's Ca' della Nave lists 65 to 80, and Asolo's 27 holes under Monte Grappa start at 60. Here is the whole fee picture, Venice to Verona, course by course.
Photograph: Circolo Golf Venezia, via Google
The short answer
Budget 95 to 110 euro for the round you came for, Circolo Golf Venezia on the Lido, 130 to 150 for Golf Club Padova in the Euganean Hills, and 60 to 90 for nearly everything else. No other region in Italy puts this much golf history on this small a bill: the 1928 Venice course costs less midweek than a water taxi from the airport, the Arnold Palmer design at Ca' della Nave lists 65 euro, and three of the region's clubs run 27 holes apiece for fees that would barely buy a buggy on the Rome circuit. The structure is simple. Weekends add 15 to 20 euro almost everywhere, winter cuts the flagship nearly in half, and only Padova breaks the pattern by pricing high summer as its low season. Every figure here comes from club published tariffs and operator listings gathered in June 2026; fees move with season and demand, so always confirm directly before booking.
Veneto green fees by course, 2026
| Course | Indicative 2026 visitor fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Circolo Golf Venezia | 95 weekday, 110 weekend; 60 in winter | club published 2026 tariff; winter rate valid daily November to March; carts 50 |
| Golf Club Padova | 130 low season, 150 high season | club published 2026 rates; low season covers July and August; 27 holes at Valsanzibio |
| Golf della Montecchia | about 64 to 90 by season and day | operator listed 2026; 27 holes near Padua; Tom Macauley, 1988 |
| Ca' della Nave | 65 weekday, 80 weekend | club published 2026 tariff; Arnold Palmer design; 27 hole ticket 90 to 100 |
| Asolo Golf Club | 60 weekday, 80 weekend | club published rates; 27 holes at Cavaso del Tomba; cart 35; juniors half price |
| Golf Club Verona | 90 weekday, 110 weekend; 70 to 90 in winter | operator listed 2026; high season March to November; Custoza hills |
| Golf Le Vigne Villafranca | 60 weekday, 80 weekend high season | club published tariff, latest available; 55 to 70 October to March; international visitor rates |
Sources: club published tariffs (Circolo Golf Venezia, Golf Club Padova, Ca' della Nave, Asolo, Villafranca) and operator listings (Montecchia, Verona) gathered June 2026. Every figure is third party pricing that moves with season and demand, so always confirm directly before booking. Check tee times · Check hotel rates.
What you are paying for, course by course
Circolo Golf Venezia, the round you came for
The oldest club in the region and one of the oldest in Italy was begun in 1928 at Alberoni, the southern tip of the Venice Lido, where a Scottish architect named Cruickshank, sent out by Maxwell Hart of Glasgow, routed the first nine through dunes, pines and an old Austrian fort; C.K. Cotton added the second nine, and the full par 72 of just over 6,000 meters has been in play since 1951. The 2026 tariff reads like a clerical error for a course this storied: 95 euro on weekdays, 110 at weekends and holidays, and a 60 euro winter green fee valid every day from the start of November to the end of March. Nine holes cost 60 to 70, juniors play for 40 to 50, a ten round visitor package runs 800 euro, and a cart is 50. You reach it by vaporetto and a short bus or taxi ride down the Lido, which is half the fun.
The Padua pair, Montecchia and Padova
Padua keeps the region's two biggest spreads of golf. Golf della Montecchia at Selvazzano Dentro rolls 27 Tom Macauley holes of 1988 across the old Emo Capodilista estate, the club house a converted tobacco drying barn below a castle tower; operator listed 2026 rates run from 64 euro on a low season weekday to 90 on a high season holiday, with weekday discounts trimming it further. Twenty minutes south, Golf Club Padova at Valsanzibio folds three nines into the green wall of the Euganean Hills and is the region's priciest ticket: a club published 130 euro in low season and 150 in high, the twist being that its low season covers July and August, when the plain swelters and the smart money plays at dawn. Nine holes cost 45 all year and a cart 45.
Ca' della Nave, Palmer twenty minutes from the lagoon
At Martellago on the Venice mainland, Arnold Palmer and Ed Seay opened Ca' della Nave in 1988 around the sixteenth century Villa Grimani Morosini, threading water through a dozen of its 18 championship holes in a nod to the lagoon down the road. The club's 2026 tariff lists 65 euro on weekdays and 80 at weekends, with a 27 hole ticket at 90 to 100 for gluttons and a cart at 40. It is the easiest premium round to bolt onto a Venice city stay, and the closed Tuesday is the only scheduling trap.
Asolo, the 27 hole resort under Monte Grappa
North into the Treviso hills, Asolo Golf Club spreads 27 holes across the slopes at Cavaso del Tomba with Monte Grappa filling the skyline, plus a pool, spa and lodging that make it the region's natural stay and play base. Published rates list 60 euro on weekdays and 80 at weekends, a cart at 35, and a half price deal for juniors, startling value for the volume of golf on site. Prosecco country starts in the next valley, which settles the question of what to do after the round.
Verona and the Custoza hills
West toward the Garda moraine, Golf Club Verona at Sommacampagna is the old money round: a first nine traced by John Harris in the early 1960s, a second nine added in 1973, and a later sharpening by Baldovino Dassu and Alvise Rossi Fioravanti across a par 72 in the Custoza wine hills. Operator listed 2026 rates run 90 euro on weekdays and 110 at weekends from March to November, easing to 70 and 90 in winter. Ten minutes away, Golf Le Vigne at Villafranca di Verona is the value understudy among the vineyards: its published tariff for visitors without an Italian federation card lists 60 euro on weekdays and 80 at weekends in high season, 55 and 70 from October to March, with carts at 25. Both pair naturally with the resort courses of Lake Garda half an hour north, which we price separately, or a detour west to Lake Como.
How to time it, and how to save
Winter is the region's open secret. The Venice course's own tariff drops to 60 euro every day from November through March, sea fog and all, while Verona eases to 70 midweek and Villafranca to 55; the plain stays playable nearly all winter. In high season the savings are structural rather than seasonal: play weekdays, where the 15 to 20 euro weekend premium vanishes, use Venezia's ten round book at 800 euro on a longer stay, and remember that Padova inverts the calendar by pricing July and August as low season at 130. A sensible week runs Venice, Ca' della Nave and Asolo midweek, the Padua pair on the shoulder days, and Verona on the way to Garda. For the courses themselves see our Veneto destination guide and the how to play the Veneto guide; for the national picture, the Italy wide green fee guide, the Sardinia fee guide and our best courses in Italy ranking show where the Veneto sits, alongside profiles of Marco Simone, Olgiata, Biella Le Betulle, Royal Park I Roveri, Verdura and Argentario. If you would rather hand the logistics to someone else, our Italy golf tours desk builds the whole thing.
Plan your Veneto golf trip
Venice's 1928 course in the right week, the Palmer round and the Asolo hills around it, and the city built in: tell us roughly when and who is traveling, and one concierge prices the trip to the head, with no obligation.
Veneto green fee questions
How much does golf cost in the Veneto in 2026?
Less than almost anywhere comparable in Europe. Circolo Golf Venezia, the region's flagship since 1928, publishes a 2026 green fee of 95 euro on weekdays and 110 at weekends, with a 60 euro winter rate. Golf Club Padova is the most expensive round at 130 to 150 euro by season, while Ca' della Nave lists 65 to 80, Asolo 60 to 80, Golf della Montecchia roughly 64 to 90, Golf Club Verona 70 to 110 and Villafranca 55 to 80. All fees move with season and demand; always confirm directly before booking.
How much is the green fee at Circolo Golf Venezia?
The club's published 2026 tariff is 95 euro for 18 holes on weekdays and 110 euro at weekends and holidays, with a winter green fee of 60 euro valid every day from November through March. Nine holes run 60 to 70 euro, juniors play for 40 to 50, a ten round package for visitors costs 800 euro, and a golf cart is 50. For the oldest course in the region, laid out from 1928 among the dunes and pines of the Venice Lido, it is one of the great value trophy rounds in Italy.
What is the best value golf near Venice?
Ca' della Nave at Martellago, the Arnold Palmer and Ed Seay design opened in 1988 around the sixteenth century Villa Grimani Morosini, publishes 2026 green fees of 65 euro on weekdays and 80 at weekends, about 25 minutes from Venice by car. Asolo Golf Club's 27 holes below Monte Grappa list 60 euro midweek, and in winter the Venice course itself drops to a 60 euro fee valid every day, which makes the off season the biggest bargain of all.
When is the cheapest time to play golf in the Veneto?
Winter, by a wide margin. Circolo Golf Venezia's published winter green fee of 60 euro runs from the start of November to the end of March and is valid every day, nearly half its summer weekend rate. Golf Club Verona drops to 70 euro midweek from December to February and Villafranca to 55 from October to March. The one inversion is Golf Club Padova, which prices July and August as low season at 130 euro because the Po valley summer is fierce, so high summer is its bargain window.
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Researched and written by the GolfForKings editorial desk. Fees verified June 2026 against club published tariffs and operator listings. Last reviewed: June 2026.