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Adare Manor Golf: The Ultimate Guide to Ireland’s 2027 Ryder Cup Venue

Adare Manor Golf
Adare Manor will host the 2027 Ryder Cup. Credit: Tourism Ireland

They didn’t just build a golf course at Adare Manor. They built a stage.

A stage for history. For spectacle. For the moment when the Ryder Cup turns 100 years old and returns to Ireland, a country that wears the game like a second skin. That stage now sits in the heart of County Limerick, carved with precision into the old grounds of an estate that has seen kings, counts, and commoners pass through. Adare Manor Golf is what happens when vision meets obsession. When the goal isn’t just to impress, but to endure. JP McManus didn’t set out to create something nice. He set out to create something timeless. And with the help of Tom Fazio, he did just that.

In September 2027, Adare Manor will host the Ryder Cup: the 46th edition, played in the year that marks 100 years since the inaugural match in 1927. A moment the golfing world will watch, remember, and measure others against. But that week will only confirm what those who have already walked these fairways know: Adare Manor Golf was never meant to be part of the conversation.

It was always meant to lead it.

Adare Manor Golf
Adare Manor in all its glory — a modern classic, born for the Ryder Cup stage. Credit: Tourism Ireland

Adare Manor Golf at a Glance

  • Location: Adare, County Limerick, Ireland
  • Course designer: Tom Fazio (2016–17 redesign of the original Robert Trent Jones Sr layout, reopened 2018)
  • Length: 7,509 yards from the championship tees
  • Par: 72
  • Greens: Pure Distinction bent grass on a sand-capped subgrade, with SubAir systems beneath every green.
  • Water in play: 14 of 18 holes, with the River Maigue directly in play on the 14th, 15th, 16th and 18th
  • 2027 Ryder Cup: September 17–19. The 46th Ryder Cup, marking the centenary year
  • Green fee (high season): approximately €495 per round
  • Access: Hotel guests only; caddie service mandatory
  • Season: late May to mid-October. Closed Mondays (excluding bank holidays)
  • Owner: JP McManus (purchased estate 2015)
  • Official website: adaremanor.com

I had read about Adare for years before I went. I had seen the photographs, watched the flyovers, listened to people I trust describe it in the kind of hushed terms that usually mean a place has been oversold. So I arrived perhaps expecting to be a little disappointed. I wasn’t. If anything, the photographs undersell it.

ADARE MANOR GOLF: THE ORIGINS

Before it became one of the most exclusive golf destinations in the world, Adare Manor was a private dream built in stone. Its story begins in the early 19th century, when the second Earl of Dunraven commissioned a grand neo-Gothic manor house on the banks of the River Maigue, a home that would rival the great castles of Europe. It took 30 years to complete. That sort of patience still echoes here. You feel it the moment you walk into the entrance hall and look up: nothing has been rushed, and nothing seems to want to be.

For generations, the estate stood as a symbol of aristocratic ambition, surrounded by ancient oaks, walled gardens, and whispers of medieval Ireland. The land had always felt significant, a place where stories settled into the soil, but it wasn’t until the late 20th century that golf made its entrance. In 1995, a Robert Trent Jones Sr design introduced the first course at Adare. It had pedigree and prestige, hosting two Irish Opens and attracting admiration. But the seeds of something greater were already being sown.

When JP McManus purchased Adare Manor in 2015 for around €30 million, he wasn’t buying nostalgia. He was buying potential. What followed was a restoration so comprehensive it felt closer to resurrection. The manor was closed for nearly two years. Every stone was cleaned, every room reimagined, every tree considered. And when it came to golf, McManus turned to Tom Fazio, a designer renowned for theatre, symmetry, and spectacle. The old course was not renovated. It was erased. Fazio worked from a near-blank canvas between 2016 and 2017, keeping the broad routing but effectively rebuilding every tee, bunker, green and water feature. The course reopened in 2018, and from it emerged something extraordinary: a modern, tournament-ready masterpiece, built to host the biggest event in golf and stand shoulder to shoulder with the world’s very best.

Adare Manor was reborn. The Adare Manor Golf Course was reborn. And so too was Adare’s place in the story of Irish golf, not as a nod to the past, but as a bold new chapter.

Adare Manor Golf
The finishing stretch at Adare Manor is full of drama. Credit: Tourism Ireland

Adare Manor Golf: Ownership and Vision

It takes a certain kind of conviction to attempt what JP McManus has done at Adare Manor. Not just wealth, though that helps. But imagination. Taste. Patience. And a deep understanding of what makes people fall in love with a placem not once, but over and over again. McManus, one of Ireland’s most successful businessmen and philanthropists, is not someone who courts the spotlight. But he is someone who knows how to use it. And at Adare, he has created a venue that reflects his values: world-class, yes, but also warm, generous, and unmistakably Irish.

I asked a member of the team, on my visit, what it was like to work for someone with that kind of vision. The answer wasn’t what I expected. It wasn’t about pressure or perfection or expectation. It was about pride. About being part of something that mattered to a part of Ireland that doesn’t always get the spotlight. That stayed with me, because you can feel it on every fairway. The people who work here believe in what they are doing.

When McManus acquired the estate in 2015, he didn’t see a crumbling relic. He saw possibility. He saw a manor house that could be more than a hotel. A golf course that could be more than a resort layout. He saw, perhaps most importantly, a chance to put Ireland back on the biggest stage in golf and to do it properly. His vision wasn’t to recreate the past. It was to set a new standard. He poured more than €60 million into the redevelopment of the estate, overseeing every detail with quiet intensity. He brought in the best people,  from architects to agronomists, chefs to caddies, and gave them permission to pursue perfection.

What emerged wasn’t just a five-star hotel with a golf course attached. It was something rarer: a fully integrated luxury experience where the course, the manor, and the service speak the same language. Excellence without ego. McManus has long had a deep relationship with the game, as a player, as a patron, and as the host of the now-iconic JP McManus Pro-Am, which has raised tens of millions for Irish charities. But Adare Manor is his legacy project. A love letter to Irish hospitality. And a gift, ultimately, to the game itself.

That the 2027 Ryder Cup will be staged here isn’t a surprise. It’s a consequence.

Adare Manor
The stage for the 100th Ryder Cup. Credit: Tourism Ireland

Adare Manor Golf: the Augusta of Ireland?

There are golf courses that reveal themselves slowly. And then there are those that announce their presence from the 1st tee. Adare Manor Golf belongs firmly in the latter camp, not because it’s loud, but because it’s flawless. Polished. Poised. It knows what it is.

Adare Manor certainly isn’t understated. It doesn’t apologise for its perfection. It leans into it. The fairways are flawless. The greens hum with hidden technology. The course is both a tribute to the traditions of the game and a prototype for where it’s going next. It doesn’t look like anywhere else in Ireland because, quite simply, there isn’t anywhere else like it.

I will admit, walking from the practice area towards the first tee that morning, I felt the slight nervous flutter that great courses always seem to produce in me. Not because of the difficulty. Because of the occasion. There is a quietness around the opening hole at Adare that other resort courses do not have. Caddies talk in low voices. The wind moves through the oaks rather than against them. You sense, even before you have hit a shot, that this place takes itself seriously, and that you probably should too.

Tom Fazio was given a blank canvas and the full support of a visionary owner. The result? A course that wouldn’t look out of place alongside Augusta National not in ambition, not in precision, and certainly not in presentation. This is parkland golf at its most pristine.

Every green and fairway at Adare Manor Golf is built on a sand-capped substructure. SubAir systems hum silently beneath the surface, regulating moisture and ensuring Augusta-like conditioning year-round. The greens are surfaced in Pure Distinction bent grass, the same elite cultivar found on some of the world’s most exacting putting surfaces. You feel the difference under the spikes the moment you step on. It is firmer, faster, more honest than almost anywhere else I have putted in Ireland. There is no margin for a lazy stroke here. But it’s not just about perfection. It’s about purpose. The routing is thoughtful and balanced. The challenge is ever-present but fair.

Fazio’s design asks questions without shouting them. There are heroic carries, strategic angles, and bold visual framing. The bunkering is immaculate,  aesthetically elegant, but ruthlessly well-placed. And the greens? They’re vast, undulating surfaces that reward imagination as much as execution. I three-putted a couple of times before I worked out that the slopes here punish overconfidence more than they punish poor strokes.

Water comes into play on 14 of the 18 holes, with the River Maigue running through the property and entering directly into play on the 14th, 15th, 16th and 18th. That closing river stretch is where Ryder Cup matches will turn in 2027. The par-5 18th, which measures 585 yards, with the Maigue curling along its left side, will be the stage for some unforgettable drama. It is a finishing hole designed with Sunday in mind, risk and reward, beauty and danger, framed by the silhouette of the manor itself.

What sets Adare Manor Golf apart is not just how it looks, but how it plays. It is modern, but respectful. Demanding, but playable. Built for professionals, but not beyond reach. It is, simply put, a masterclass in how to build a golf course when you are told there are no limits.

The golf course at Adare Manor
Immaculate fairways, world-class design. Adare Manor sets a new standard. Credit: Tourism Ireland

Adare Manor Golf: The Course in Detail

Adare Manor Golf measures 7,509 yards from the championship tees and plays to a par of 72. Multiple teeing options bring the course back to a far more manageable length for visiting golfers and you should not be too proud to use them. I played from a sensible set on my first visit and was still tested on almost every hole. The championship tees are reserved for the world in September 2027. The course routes the River Maigue through the closing stretch and brings water into play on 14 of the 18 holes. The holes that stayed with me most are below.

HoleParYards Notes
75585A long, bending par 5 that will tempt the bold off the tee. I was not bold enough.
95633The course’s longest hole and its toughest. Stroke Index 1 playing back towards the manor. One of the most photographed views on the property, and rightly so.
113224A par 3 that looks more benign from the forward tees than it plays from the back. The green is an oasis of calm and menace in equal measure.
144439River Maigue comes into play. Where the Sunday singles could begin to turn in 2027.
154347A short par 4 along the river. Strategic angles reward thinking over bravado.
163157A short par 3 with the river and Ryder Cup theatre in play. Pin position will decide everything.
174523From the tips, the longest of par 4s – a brute. 
185585River Maigue all the way down the left, manor framed behind the green. One of the great finishing holes I have walked.

The closing stretch, 14th through 18th, is where most of the 2027 Ryder Cup drama is likely to unfold. Tom Fazio designed the run with Sunday singles in mind: each hole offering both risk-and-reward decisions and visually framed by water or the manor house itself. When I walked the 18th green for the first time and looked back down the fairway towards the tee, with the river running along the left and the manor presiding over the whole scene, I genuinely had to stand still for a moment. Some places earn their reputations slowly. Adare earns its in one walk.

Adare Manor
Adare Manor – where history meets ambition. Credit: Tourism Ireland
 

Adare Manor Golf and the 2027 Ryder Cup

It will be a century since the first Ryder Cup was contested when the teams gather at Adare Manor in 2027. One hundred years of rivalries, of legends, of Sundays that shook the sport. And on that landmark occasion — the 46th Ryder Cup — the eyes of the golfing world will turn to a village in County Limerick.

This is not a coincidence. This is a culmination.

Adare Manor Golf vs The K Club: Ireland’s Two Ryder Cup Venues

Ireland has been awarded the Ryder Cup twice. Having spent time at both venues, the comparison is more interesting than it might first appear.

 Adare Manor Golf (2027)The K Club (2006)
LocationAdare, County LimerickStraffan, County Kildare
DesignerTom Fazio (2016–17 redesign)Arnold Palmer (Palmer Course / North Course)
Course typeModern American-style parkland with river routingTraditional Irish parkland with River Liffey routing
Length7,509 yards7,337 yards
Par7272
Owner / patronJP McManusMichael Smurfit
Notable featureSubAir systems on every green and fairway; Pure Distinction bent grassMature parkland with River Liffey on the 16th, 17th, 18th
ResultEurope won 18½–9½ under Ian Woosnam
HistoryWill be written in September 2027First Ryder Cup hosted on Irish soil

The K Club delivered colour, crowds, and a lasting legacy for Irish golf. I remember the noise of 2006 even from the television; it was the year a generation of Irish golf fans fell in love with the event. Adare Manor in 2027 is following a meaningful predecessor, but the course itself feels engineered for a different era, bigger, sharper, more global, more polished. Whether that produces a better Ryder Cup or just a different one is a question we will all enjoy answering on the Sunday evening of 19 September 2027.

Adare Manor
Adare Manor borrows its name from the nearby village of Adare. Tourism Ireland

 

Adare Manor Golf: The Experience On and Off the Course

Luxury is a word that gets thrown around too easily in golf. But at Adare Manor, it’s not a slogan, it’s a standard. You feel it in the way you’re greeted at the gates, in the way the staff remember your name, in the silence of the fairways and the softness of the sheets. This isn’t a resort. It’s a world away.

On the course

From the moment you arrive, the experience is choreographed with care. My bags vanished into the ether before I had quite registered handing them over. Check-in happened without formality — almost as a side conversation as I was walking through the manor. If you’re playing golf, your clubs are already being prepped by the caddie team. The practice range, lined with brand new golf balls, not tokens, is as pristine as you would expect for a course of this standing. I spent twenty minutes there working through a wedge sequence and was genuinely sorry to leave.

When my round began, the pace was mine alone. I saw, I think, two other groups all day, and only from a distance. Because exclusivity here isn’t an upsell, it’s a principle. On the course, the service is as precise as the greens. Forecaddies are mandatory and guide you with quiet efficiency. My caddie introduced himself, asked one question about my game, and then quietly knew everything I needed for the next four hours. Cold drinks arrived without being asked. There’s not a blade of grass out of place. But it never feels forced. Adare Manor Golf doesn’t need to try hard. It just is.

At the hotel

A neo-Gothic masterpiece of soaring stonework and soaring standards, Adare Manor blends heritage with modernity in a way that’s almost theatrical. Corridors lined with oak panelling open into vast lounges of velvet and candlelight. Bedrooms are sanctuaries, deep baths, carved ceilings, pillow menus, riverside views. There is no such thing as a bad room here. The one I stayed in had a window looking out across the parkland, and on the first morning I sat with a cup of coffee and simply watched the light move over the grass for half an hour. Some places make you slow down. This is one of them.

The dining is equally layered. The Oak Room, Limerick’s first Michelin-star restaurant, serves seasonal Irish produce with the kind of creativity that doesn’t shout. We ate there one evening and I remember the way the room sounded as much as how the food tasted: low conversation, the soft clink of cutlery, no music, no over-attentive table-side theatre. The Drawing Room is all silver trays and champagne. Even the casual restaurants feel like they were designed for royalty on their day off. Afternoon tea becomes an event. Cocktails come with stories. And breakfast could run until noon, and no one would dare interrupt.

And somehow, it never feels stiff. The staff, many local,  bring warmth without pretence. They move with pace, but never pressure. There is time here. Space. Grace.

Beyond the course

Off the course, guests can spend hours in the The Spa, take archery lessons in the woods, or walk the estate with falcons circling above. You can ride horses through the parkland, or sip rare Irish whiskey by the fire. And in the village of Adare itself, just a short walk away, you’ll find thatched cottages, quiet pubs, and shopfronts that feel pulled from another century. I spent an unplanned hour in the village on my last morning and found, to my surprise, that I did not want to leave.

The genius of Adare isn’t that it offers luxury. It’s that it never forgets to offer warmth too.

Adare Manor Golf: How to Play

For many, playing Adare Manor Golf is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. But it’s not just a question of booking a tee time. Access is limited, availability is tight, and the experience is curated with intention. A few things I learned, sometimes the hard way:

Can anyone play Adare Manor Golf?

Only guests of Adare Manor are permitted to play the Adare Manor Golf course. This policy ensures a level of privacy, pace, and presentation that’s rare in modern golf. You cannot turn up for a round without checking in at the front desk first, and that is by design.

How much are green fees at Adare Manor Golf?

Green fees at Adare Manor Golf are approximately €495 per person in high season, subject to change. Caddies are not included. Access to the full practice facilities is included with all rounds. A two-night package for two, including accommodation in the Manor House, breakfast and a round of golf for two people, starts at around £3,000. All golfers must hire a caddie when playing The Adare Manor Golf Course; this is a pre-requisite, not an option. I would also say, having played it, that it is one of the few courses where I would have genuinely struggled without one. The slopes and angles need a local mind to read them properly.

When can I play Adare Manor Golf?

The course operates from late May through to mid-October. It is closed on Mondays (excluding bank holidays). Occasional closures for course conditioning may apply, particularly in the months leading up to the September 2027 Ryder Cup.

Booking tee times at Adare Manor Golf

Tee times should be booked at the time of your hotel reservation and ideally, well in advance. Summer months, Ryder Cup build-up years, and weekends are in exceptionally high demand. I booked four months ahead on my first visit and was told I had been fortunate to find availability.

Adare Manor Golf: format and etiquette

  • Forecaddies are mandatory and are available with advance notice.
  • Pace of play is expected to be smooth, the experience is deliberately unrushed.
  • Dress code is traditional: collared shirts, tailored trousers or golf shorts, soft spikes only.
  • Mobile phones should be used with discretion, especially near the clubhouse.

How do I get to Adare Manor Golf?

  • Shannon Airport (SNN) is the closest international gateway, just 40 minutes by car.
  • Dublin Airport is approximately 2.5 hours away via motorway.
  • Adare Manor offers chauffeur-driven transfers, valet parking, and even private helicopter arrival by arrangement.

Adare Manor Golf: my top tips, in hindsight

  • Book at least 3–6 months in advance for high-season stays.
  • Pair your round with a stay of at least two nights. One night is not enough to do justice to the dining, the spa, the estate and the village.
  • Take the caddie’s club selection on the par-3s. They know exactly what the wind is doing on each tee.
  • Eat at the Oak Room at least once.
  • Walk into the village in the morning. You will not regret it.
  • Bear in mind that Adare Manor is expected to be closed for extended periods in the months immediately before the 2027 Ryder Cup. If you want to play in the build-up year, book early.

Adare Manor Golf: Final Thoughts

Adare Manor Golf is many things. A masterpiece of design. A celebration of Irish hospitality. A playground for the world’s best golfers. But above all, it is proof of what can happen when ambition is matched by execution, when someone dares to ask, what if we made it perfect?

There’s a sense, as you walk its fairways or settle into one of the velvet chairs in the Drawing Room, that you’re part of something bigger than a golf trip. That this isn’t just about luxury or prestige or tournament pedigree. It’s about legacy. And presence. About what it means to create something enduring, not just for a weekend, or a Ryder Cup, but for decades to come.

When I walked off the 18th green on my round at Adare, I did what I always do when a course has genuinely moved me: I stopped, turned around, and looked back. The manor sat above the green in the late afternoon light. The river ran quietly along the left. A small group of golfers was just finishing their round on the 17th green behind us. And the whole place felt, in that moment, both very old and very new, exactly as it should.

In 2027, the golfing world will descend on Adare. The flags will fly. The fairways will hum with anticipation. And on that final Sunday, when the last match stands on the edge of the 18th green and the manor casts its long shadow across the river, Adare won’t just be a host. It will be the heartbeat. And those of us lucky enough to have played it before the crowds arrived, to have walked its flawless turf, to have felt the silence, the service, the soul, will know we were part of something very special indeed.

*To plan a golf trip to Ireland, see our Limerick golf guide and Tourism Ireland’s official golf travel hub.

ADARE MANOR GOLF SCORECARD

Adare Manor Golf Scorecard
The scorecard for Adare Manor Golf Course

ADARE MANOR GOLF COURSE MAP

Adare Manor Golf Course Map
The golf course map for Adare Manor

ADARE MANOR MAP

Adare Manor Golf Map
Adare Manor is a 2.5-hour drive from Dublin

Adare Manor Golf: Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Where is Adare Manor Golf located?

Adare Manor Golf is located in the village of Adare, County Limerick, in the southwest of Ireland. Often referred to as “Ireland’s prettiest village”, Adare is about 30 to 40 minutes by car from Shannon Airport and roughly two and a half hours from Dublin. The course sits on the 840-acre estate of Adare Manor, a neo-Gothic masterpiece overlooking the River Maigue.

What is Adare Manor Golf?

Adare Manor Golf is the championship parkland golf course on the grounds of the Adare Manor estate in County Limerick, Ireland. Redesigned by Tom Fazio between 2016 and 2017 and reopened in 2018, it is considered one of the most luxurious parkland golf courses in the world. It will host the 46th Ryder Cup in September 2027, the centenary year of the competition.

How much are green fees at Adare Manor Golf?

Green fees for visitors to Adare Manor Golf are approximately €495 per round during peak season. The course is open only to guests of the hotel, meaning a stay at Adare Manor is required to access tee times. The price includes access to the practice facilities, with caddie hire mandatory and not included in the green fee.

Can anyone play Adare Manor Golf?

Adare Manor Golf is open only to hotel guests; it is not open to the general public. To play, you must book accommodation at Adare Manor and arrange your tee time as part of the reservation. All golfers must use the resort’s mandatory caddie service.

Who designed Adare Manor Golf?

Adare Manor Golf was redesigned by American architect Tom Fazio, working over the original 1995 Robert Trent Jones Sr layout. The Fazio redesign took place between 2016 and 2017, with the new course reopening in 2018.

How long is Adare Manor Golf?

Adare Manor Golf measures 7,509 yards from the championship tees and plays to a par of 72. Multiple teeing options reduce the length significantly for visiting golfers.

What is special about the golf course at Adare Manor?

Adare Manor Golf is distinguished by its sand-capped greens and fairways, SubAir systems beneath every green and fairway, Pure Distinction bent grass putting surfaces, and the River Maigue routing through its closing stretch. Water comes into play on 14 of the 18 holes. Combined with the Tom Fazio redesign and the resort-grade service, it is widely regarded as one of the most technologically advanced and luxurious golf courses in the world.

What golf packages are available at Adare Manor?

Adare Manor golf packages are available as part of bespoke guest experiences booked through the hotel. They typically include one or more rounds of golf, luxury accommodation in the Manor, breakfast and fine dining options, spa access, and chauffeur service. Packages can be tailored for individuals, couples or small groups. Availability is limited in Ryder Cup build-up years.

When is the Ryder Cup at Adare Manor Golf?

The 2027 Ryder Cup at Adare Manor Golf takes place from 13–19 September 2027, with the three days of competition running from 17–19 September. It is the 46th Ryder Cup and marks 100 years since the inaugural match in 1927.

Can I see the Adare Manor Golf scorecard?

Yes, the Adare Manor Golf scorecard is available above. The course plays to 7,509 yards from the back tees, with a par of 72.

What is the history of Adare Manor?

Adare Manor was originally built in the early 19th century as a private home for the Dunraven family. Designed in a neo-Gothic style, the estate sits on historic grounds dating back to the 13th century. In 2015, it was purchased and meticulously restored by Irish businessman JP McManus, who transformed it into a world-class hotel and golf destination.

What is the connection between Adare Manor Golf and the Ryder Cup?

Adare Manor will host the 46th Ryder Cup in September 2027, marking 100 years of golf’s most famous team event. It will be the second time Ireland has hosted the Ryder Cup, following The K Club in 2006. Owner JP McManus played a crucial role in securing the bid.

Are there other golf courses in Adare, Ireland?

While Adare Manor Golf is the standout course, the wider region offers a strong cluster of options. Within the County Limerick and Clare region these include Dromoland Castle, Limerick Golf Club, Ballyneety Golf Club (host of the 2027 Junior Ryder Cup) and Shannon Golf Club. Within 1–2 hours you can also play Lahinch, Tralee and Doonbeg. Adare serves as a perfect base for a golf trip in southwest Ireland.

What is the best way to get to Adare Manor Golf?

The closest major airport is Shannon Airport (SNN), just 40 minutes away. Dublin Airport is approximately 2.5 hours by car. Many guests arrive by chauffeur transfer, helicopter, or rental car. The estate also offers valet parking and concierge arrival experiences.

When is the Ryder Cup at Adare Manor Golf?

The 2027 Ryder Cup at Adare Manor Golf takes place from 13–19 September 2027, with the three days of competition running from 17–19 September. It will be the 46th Ryder Cup and the first staged in Ireland since The K Club hosted the 2006 matches in County Kildare.

Adare Manor’s selection as host wasn’t about politics or paydays. It was about readiness. Infrastructure. Presentation. Atmosphere. And perhaps more than anything, belief — from the people who built it, and from the people who know what a Ryder Cup can do for a country.

What I noticed, walking the course in build-up year, is that the preparation does not look anxious. It looks intentional. There is no panic. There is no last-minute scramble. There is the calm, ordered work of a place that always knew this day was coming and started preparing for it years ago. That, more than anything, made me think the matches will be magnificent.

Adare Manor Golf offers a stage engineered for drama, with a closing stretch that could script chaos. Water comes into play on the 14th, 15th, 16th and the 18th, which bends left along the River Maigue, waiting patiently for a moment that will live forever. Behind the scenes, the vision has been driven by JP McManus — the same man whose Pro-Am has attracted the likes of Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, and Jon Rahm to these fairways. His influence in securing the Ryder Cup was quiet, but decisive. And when the deal was confirmed, it felt not like a surprise, but like something inevitable.

Preparations are well underway. Logistics, galleries, media, transport. But the bones are already there — the course, the hospitality, the welcome. All that remains is the theatre. And in September 2027, the greatest show in golf will return to Irish soil. Not as a favour. As a fitting home.

It will be a century since the first Ryder Cup was contested when the teams gather at Adare Manor in 2027. One hundred years of rivalries, of legends, of Sundays that shook the sport. And on that landmark occasion, the eyes of the golfing world will turn to a village in County Limerick.

This is not a coincidence. This is a culmination.

Adare Manor’s selection as host wasn’t about politics or paydays. It was about readiness. Infrastructure. Presentation. Atmosphere. And perhaps more than anything, belief — from the people who built it, and from the people who know what a Ryder Cup can do for a country. Ireland has been here before. The K Club in 2006 delivered colour, crowds, and a lasting legacy. But 2027 will be different. Bigger. Sharper. Adare Manor Golf offers a stage engineered for drama, with a closing stretch that could script chaos. Water comes into play on the 14th, 15th, 16th and the 18th, which bends left along the River Maigue, waiting patiently for a moment that will live forever.

Behind the scenes, the vision has been driven by JP McManus — the same man whose Pro-Am has attracted the likes of Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, and Jon Rahm to these fairways. His influence in securing the Ryder Cup was quiet, but decisive. And when the deal was confirmed, it felt not like a surprise, but like something inevitable. Preparations are well underway. Logistics, galleries, media, transport. But the bones are already there — the course, the hospitality, the welcome. All that remains is the theatre. And in September 2027, the greatest show in golf will return to Irish soil. Not as a favour. As a fitting home.

 
 
 

Claire's career as a journalist has seen her regularly write about some of the best restaurants, hotels and destinations in the world. She has also interviewed the past three Prime Ministers and has been a Digital Editor overseeing a number of newspaper titles. She is the founder of the content marketing company Smiths & Sons.

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