The course
Nine holes laid into the valley floor with small, true greens and generous fairways — friendly to learners, honest with low handicaps.
Tees & rates
White Sulphur Springs, MT
A nine-hole municipal course south of White Sulphur Springs — uncrowded rounds, small greens that ask honest questions, and a clubhouse that still feels like a town gathering place.
Photo: Arrowhead Meadows Golf Course
Why play here
Just south of town, the course sits between the Big Belt Mountains to the west and the Castle Mountains to the east. It’s a relaxed place to learn the game and a familiar place to refine it — open landscapes, fast-running fairways, and putts that don’t forgive a careless read.
Friendly pace
Public, municipal golf with quick rounds — most days you can play through if the group ahead waves you on.
Practice & lessons
Driving range and short-game work. Instruction available — ask about individual or group lessons.
Carts & walkers
Carts available; walking is encouraged. Bring a soft spike and a thoughtful short game.
Clubhouse
A warm clubhouse and deck to settle in before the round and decompress after.

Photo: Arrowhead Meadows Golf Course
A community course
Arrowhead Meadows is a community-supported course. The people you meet on the first tee are often the same people who help with mowing, hosting tournaments, and keeping the place humming.
What you’ll find
Nine holes laid into the valley floor with small, true greens and generous fairways — friendly to learners, honest with low handicaps.
Tees & ratesA warm gathering spot with a deck overlooking the course. Cold drinks when the bar is open, and conversation that lingers past sunset.
Visit the clubhouseMember tournaments, charity scrambles, and small private outings. We can host your group on a quiet weekday or a sun-drenched Saturday.
Plan an event
Photo: Arrowhead Meadows Golf Course
The experience
Whether you’re brushing up on your short game or chasing par on a breezy Montana afternoon, the routing rewards thoughtful shots into small greens. Play once and the course feels short. Play it twice and it starts to teach you something.
Call ahead for tee times — especially on busy weekends.