PGA National Resort

PGA National Resort in Palm Beach Gardens occupies a different tier from Florida's oceanfront resort circuit, anchored instead by golf and a sprawling sports-oriented campus across 360 rooms. The property sits within a gated golf community, giving it a distinct residential character that separates it from South Florida's beach-centric luxury hotels. It functions as a destination in its own right, drawing guests who treat the resort as the attraction rather than a base for exploring elsewhere.
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A Resort Built Around the Game, Not the Coast
Florida's premium resort market divides fairly cleanly between two orientations: oceanfront properties that position the beach as the primary amenity, and inland resorts where the built environment carries the full weight of the guest experience. PGA National Resort in Palm Beach Gardens belongs firmly to the second category. Situated at 400 Avenue of the Champions, the address alone signals the property's identity before a guest sets foot on the grounds. This is not a hotel with a golf course attached; it is a golf campus that happens to contain a hotel, and that distinction shapes everything from the spatial layout to the way the 360-room inventory is structured.
Palm Beach Gardens itself occupies a specific register in South Florida's geography. It sits north of West Palm Beach, away from the density and beach-facing development of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Palm Beach proper. The city was purpose-built around planned residential communities and was deliberately designated as the home of the PGA of America when the organization relocated from Duneida in 1965. That institutional history gives the area a different civic character than its neighbors: quieter, more internally focused, organized around courses and club life rather than waterfront promenades. For context on what else the Palm Beach Gardens dining and hospitality scene offers, see our full Palm Beach Gardens restaurants guide.
The Physical Scale of the Campus
At 360 rooms, PGA National sits in a different scale bracket than the intimate, design-led properties that have redefined American luxury hospitality over the past decade. Properties like Troutbeck in Amenia, SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, or Blackberry Farm in Walland have built their reputations on limited keys, high staff-to-guest ratios, and immersive programming within a contained footprint. PGA National operates at a fundamentally different scale, which changes the texture of the experience. A 360-room property has the infrastructure to host large tournaments, corporate group events, and golf packages simultaneously, which means the resort's energy shifts depending on what is on the calendar during any given week.
That scale also means the architectural and spatial approach is campus-style rather than boutique. The grounds sprawl across the gated PGA National community, with the five golf courses extending the resort's effective territory far beyond the hotel building itself. The design orientation here is functional and sport-led rather than aesthetic-led. Where a property like Amangiri in Canyon Point or Ambiente in Sedona subordinates the architecture to a specific landscape philosophy, PGA National subordinates design to program, with the built environment organized primarily to serve the movement of golfers, spa guests, and sporting event participants across a large site.
Where PGA National Sits in the American Resort Conversation
The American resort market has a tier of properties that function primarily as sport or wellness destinations, where the programmatic offering rather than the design narrative drives the booking decision. Canyon Ranch Tucson operates on a comparable logic in the wellness segment: guests come for the programming, the campus serves the programming, and the room itself is secondary to the daily schedule. PGA National runs a similar architecture of experience in the golf segment, with five courses, a designated Champion Course that has hosted the PGA Tour's Honda Classic, and a sports complex that extends the offering beyond golf into tennis, pickleball, and spa facilities anchored by the property's mineral pools.
Within Florida specifically, the comparison set is also instructive. The Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside and Little Palm Island Resort and Spa in Little Torch Key represent the oceanfront and ultra-intimate poles of Florida luxury. PGA National occupies neither pole. It is a mid-to-large format resort where the golf infrastructure is the draw, priced and positioned against other golf-anchored Florida resorts rather than against the design-led or beach-facing properties that dominate national luxury conversations.
Planning a Stay: What to Know Before You Book
Given the property's tournament calendar, timing matters significantly at PGA National. The Honda Classic has historically run in late February or early March, which concentrates a specific type of guest on property during that window and affects both availability and atmosphere. Guests seeking a quieter, more relaxed visit to the course and spa would do well to target shoulder weeks outside the peak winter tournament schedule, typically late November through early January or in the spring after the Tour event has passed. The resort's 360-room capacity means that individual leisure bookings are generally not as capacity-constrained as at smaller properties, but premium room categories and course tee times during high-demand periods warrant advance planning. The property does not list a dedicated phone number or website in current data records, so booking through direct resort channels or established travel agents familiar with the property is the practical route for guests with specific course or suite preferences.
For travelers building a broader Florida trip, PGA National anchors the northern Palm Beach County end of the itinerary, while Four Seasons at The Surf Club covers the Surfside and Miami Beach segment. Those extending north into the Atlantic Coast can also consider how the property fits against sport-and-nature-focused alternatives further afield, from Sage Lodge in Pray to Amangani in Jackson Hole, all of which share the sport-anchored resort logic even if the specific activity differs.
Quick Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PGA National Resort | This venue | |||
| Aman New York | Michelin 3 Key | |||
| Amangiri | Michelin 3 Key | |||
| Hotel Bel-Air | Michelin 3 Key | |||
| The Beverly Hills Hotel | Michelin 3 Key | |||
| The Carlyle, A Rosewood Hotel | Michelin 2 Key |
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- Elegant
- Scenic
- Sophisticated
- Iconic
- Wellness Retreat
- Family Vacation
- Romantic Getaway
- Business Trip
- Golf Course
- Destination Spa
- Garden
- Terrace
- Panoramic View
- Private Dining
- Wifi
- Pool
- Spa
- Fitness Center
- Room Service
- Concierge
- Business Center
- Valet Parking
- Ev Charging
- Kids Club
- Golf Course
- Tennis Courts
- Pickleball Courts
- Restaurant
- Bar Lounge
- Garden
- Waterfront
Upscale and refined with inviting lobby and pool areas; some guests note dated decor in rooms, but comprehensive amenities and attentive service create a luxurious, resort-style atmosphere.














