Tiger Woods and his TGR Design firm have agreed to craft a new layout called the Legacy Course at Diamante Cabo San Lucas, situated at the southern tip of the Baja Peninsula along Mexico’s west coast. The recently released plans confirm that the Legacy Course will be Woods’ third design at the master-planned Diamante community, joining the El Cardonal Course and the Oasis Short Course.
The Legacy Course is planned to feature more inland water than any other course in the arid Cabo area, as outlined in a recent media release. Five interconnected lakes, streams, cascades, and waterfalls will form part of its signature landscape. In a notable departure from many Cabo settings, the design will incorporate thousands of trees and lush tropical landscaping, with much of the course enveloped by a man-made dune to enhance the sense of a private sanctuary.
Tiger Woods’ involvement extends to the Legacy Golf Club at Diamante Cabo San Lucas, reinforcing the private, member-focused nature of the space within the Diamante development. The Legacy Club will offer just 250 family memberships, with initiation fees set at $300,000 and annual dues projected at around $60,000. Membership includes access to the full suite of Diamante Golf Club amenities, along with a contemporary wellness and fitness hub and a private beachfront recreation area at the Beach Club, among other offerings.
Legacy Golf Club itself will feature a 16-acre practice facility, a dedicated short-game area, and a private clubhouse, with the new course scheduled to open in early 2027. The Tiger Woods-designed Legacy Course will emphasize a combination of water elements and a large man-made dune that creates a heightened sense of privacy for players.
Woods described the Legacy Course as blending tournament-caliber strategy with a striking visual experience. He highlighted features such as drivable par-4s, long par-5s, deep bunkers, dynamic greens, and dramatic water elements—including creeks, waterfalls, and lakes—that collectively aim to deliver a world-class golf experience that is both challenging and enjoyable. He noted that the course would look and play unlike anything else at Diamante.
Diamante itself spans roughly 1,500 acres and already hosts two full-size courses plus the Oasis Short Course. The resort community includes Diamante Dunes, designed by Davis Love III and opened in 2009, which ranks No. 5 on Golfweek’s Best list for courses in Mexico, the Caribbean, South America, and the Atlantic Islands. The Woods-designed El Cardonal, which opened in 2014, sits at No. 30 on Golfweek’s Best’s regional rankings, and El Cardonal is also the site of the PGA Tour’s World Wide Technology Championship.
Jason Lusk, Golfweek’s travel and golf course architecture editor and the publication’s creative director, has long contributed to Golfweek and has worked on its design coverage for more than twenty years. This report originally appeared on Golfweek and discusses Woods’ new, exclusive private golf course project in Mexico to improve search visibility. The article carries a minimum length of 500 words.
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