Golf Clubs

Revere Golf Club Review (2026): Lexington vs. Concord — Which Course Is Actually Worth It?

Last reviewed: July 3, 2026
Revere Golf Club Review (2026): Lexington vs. Concord — Which Course Is Actually Worth It?
4
out of 5
★★★★☆
Recommended — book the Lexington Course exclusively for a first visit

GCR Score: 4.0 / 5

Verdict: Recommended — but only if you book the Lexington Course

Best For: Las Vegas tourists and Henderson locals who want genuine desert golf, Strip views, and the best practice facility in southern Nevada

Avoid If: You’re booking the Concord in summer, comparing to a $350 resort course and expecting equivalent conditioning, or playing late afternoon in July

Last Reviewed: June 28, 2026

Most golf courses in Las Vegas don’t show you Las Vegas. They’re walled off in subdivisions or buried in desert corridors where the only reminder you’re in Nevada is the heat. Revere Golf Club in Henderson is different. The Lexington Course plays through arroyos and across dramatic elevation changes with the Strip visible from multiple elevated tee boxes — and Buckman’s Grille lets you watch it light up at sunset over dinner. This Revere Golf Club review covers both courses, the very real difference between them, and the single booking decision that determines whether your round here is excellent or disappointing.

The short version: the Lexington Course is one of the best public-access rounds you can play in the Las Vegas valley. The Concord Course is fine — playable, scenic — but it’s held back by persistent bunker maintenance issues and a conditioning gap that shows up in reviews year after year. Book the Lexington. Everything else follows from that choice.

See all our golf club reviews to compare Las Vegas and Nevada options before you book your next round.

Club Overview

Photo

 

Image: Revere Golf Club

Detail Info
Club Type Public / semi-private (no membership required)
Location Henderson, Nevada (20–25 min southeast of the Las Vegas Strip)
Courses Lexington Course (opened 1999) + Concord Course (opened 2002)
Designers Billy Casper + Greg Nash, ASGCA
Total Holes 36 (two 18-hole courses)
Lexington — Par / Yardage Par 72 / 7,143 yards; Rating 73.6 / Slope 139
Concord — Par / Yardage Par 72 / 7,034 yards; Rating 72.8 / Slope 126
Green Fees (tourist) $60–$199 (dynamic; cart included)
Local / Clark County Rates $60–$75 (verified by ID at check-in)
Best Time to Visit March–May and October–November
Dress Code Collared shirt; no denim; soft spikes only
Official Website reveregolf.com
Phone (702) 259-4653

What I Liked

  • The Lexington Course plays unlike anything else in the Las Vegas valley. While most local courses are flat desert corridors, the Lexington works through arroyos and hillsides with genuine elevation change. Dramatic drop shots. Forced carries over canyon terrain. And views of the Las Vegas Strip from elevated tee boxes that you won’t find anywhere else in public golf at this price.
  • Buckman’s Grille is the best post-round dinner in Las Vegas golf. Floor-to-ceiling windows, panoramic Strip views, recently renovated, and genuinely good food. Staying for dinner as the Strip lights come on is consistently the highlight reviewers remember most — often more than the round itself.
  • The all-grass driving range is the best practice facility in southern Nevada. Local golfers cite this consistently. Most Las Vegas area ranges use mats. Revere uses grass tees. Combined with two putting greens, a short game area, and a separate chipping/bunker practice zone, the practice facility is better than most courses double its price.
  • 36 holes on one property makes for a real full golf day. Few public facilities in the Las Vegas market offer this. 36-hole packages provide discounted combo rates for tourists willing to play both courses over one or two days — one of the genuinely good deals in the market.
  • Local residents get one of the best values in Las Vegas public golf. Clark County residents pay $60–$75 for both courses with ID verified at check-in. The Sun City Anthem Annual Pass offers unlimited 36-hole play. For Henderson residents, Revere is the benchmark daily-fee option at a price that most American cities couldn’t touch for this course quality.

What I Didn’t Like

  • The Concord Course bunkers are a known deferred-maintenance problem. Multiple 2025–2026 reviews describe the sand bunkers as “hard-packed dirt,” “concrete-like,” and “full of rocks.” This isn’t a seasonal issue — it’s a persistent conditioning gap that has shown up in reviews for at least two years. If you play the Concord expecting the same quality as Lexington, you’ll be frustrated.
  • The Concord rough is not overseeded in winter. The Lexington Course gets fully overseeded with ryegrass from October through April, giving it that lush green look through the cooler months. The Concord does not. In late fall and winter, the Concord rough is sparse and brown while the Lexington looks pristine. Another reason to book the Lexington first.
  • Weekend pace of play can be genuinely slow. One TripAdvisor reviewer documented an hour-long wait to reach the 2nd tee box and over three hours fifteen minutes to complete the front nine on a busy weekend. GPS-based pace monitoring is in place, but it doesn’t always keep up with high-demand weekend traffic. Weekday mornings avoid this entirely.
  • The tourist-to-local rate gap is jarring. A tourist may pay $150+ on a tee time that a local Clark County resident booked for $65 the same morning. The dynamic pricing system is transparent — you can see rates on aggregators — but the gap is real and worth comparing before you book.

Membership & Fees

Photo of tee boxes

 

Image: Revere Golf Club

Revere uses dynamic pricing across both courses. Tourist rates run $60–$199 depending on season and demand, with cart always included. Peak spring season (March–May) and peak fall (October) see rates from $120–$199. Summer weekdays drop to $60–$99 — some of the best value public golf rates in Nevada for a championship course. Weekend summer rates hover around $69–$99.

Clark County residents show photo ID at check-in for rates of $60–$75. The Clark County Annual Pass and Sun City Anthem Annual Pass are available directly through reveregolf.com for residents who want unlimited access to both courses.

Rental clubs run $99 per set and include two sleeves of golf balls and a glove — a useful package for travelers who didn’t bring their own. 36-hole packages (both courses, same day or split across two days) offer discounted combo rates — one of the better deals for tourists wanting a full Las Vegas golf day without paying double.

Third-party aggregators like GolfNow and GolfMoose regularly list discounts of 15–29% off standard tourist rates. If you’re flexible on tee time, checking these platforms two to three days out often yields the best price.

Facilities & Amenities

  • Courses: 36 holes — Lexington (Par 72, 7,143 yds, overseeded October–April) and Concord (Par 72, 7,034 yds, not overseeded)
  • Driving Range: All-grass tee range — best in the Las Vegas valley according to local golfer consensus
  • Practice Facilities: Two putting greens; separate short game area; chipping and sand bunker practice zone
  • Pro Shop: Named a Top 100 Golf Shop by World Golf Magazine; full equipment, apparel, accessories, and rental clubs
  • Clubhouse: 23,000 sq. ft. facility servicing both courses
  • Restaurant: Buckman’s Grille — floor-to-ceiling Strip views; breakfast until 11 AM, lunch 11 AM–5 PM, happy hour Monday–Thursday 2–8 PM, dinner daily 5–8 PM; recently renovated
  • Wildlife: Rabbits and coyotes regularly spotted on course — no concerns, just desert character
  • Distance from Strip: 20–25 minutes southeast (approximately 15–17 miles)

Best Time to Visit

No photo description available.

 

Image: Revere Golf Club

March through May is the best time for most visitors. The Lexington is fully overseeded and green, temperatures peak between 70–85°F, and the course conditions are strongest of the year. Rates run $120–$199 at peak, but the experience justifies it. Book early — spring is the busiest season and weekend tee sheets fill fast.

October through early November is the second-best window and often the better value. Shoulder rates kick in (typically 20–30% below spring peak), fall desert light is excellent, and the Lexington remains in strong condition. Weekdays in October often see rates under $120 for a championship round with cart.

Summer (June–August) means triple-digit heat by midday. The math is simple: tee off at 6 or 6:30 AM or don’t play. Early-morning summer rounds are available at some of the lowest rates of the year and come with the added benefit of a nearly empty course. Twilight rounds after 5 PM become viable as the sun drops, but finishing time is not guaranteed.

Winter (November–January) is lighter crowds, cooler temperatures (40–65°F), and off-peak rates. The Concord rough looks particularly sparse in winter without overseeding. Book Lexington in this window.

Dress Code & Etiquette

Collared shirts are required on both courses. Non-metal (soft) spikes are mandatory — the course enforces this at check-in. No denim, jeans, t-shirts, tank tops, gym shorts, or swimwear. The standard is solidly country club casual — stricter than a city muni, more relaxed than a private club.

The etiquette tip most tourists miss: if you’re choosing between the two courses on a first visit, always start with the Lexington. The elevation change on Lexington is the defining characteristic of Revere as a course — if you play Concord first, you risk being underwhelmed before you experience what makes the property worth visiting.

One more: stay for dinner at Buckman’s Grille after your round. The post-round meal watching the Strip lights come on as the sun sets behind the Spring Mountains is one of the best golf dinners in Las Vegas. Reviewers consistently name it as the highlight of the day — sometimes above the golf itself.

Who Is This Club For?

 

This club is a good fit if you’re visiting Las Vegas and want real golf challenge with genuine scenery instead of a novelty course. Revere’s Lexington Course is the most authentic desert golf experience accessible to tourists in the valley. If you’re comparing it to Bali Hai (which charges $200–$350 for a flat Strip-adjacent layout), the Lexington wins on every dimension except proximity to the casino.

This club is a good fit if you’re a Henderson or Las Vegas resident looking for a home course with 36 holes, a world-class practice facility, and a restaurant worth returning to. The Clark County rate structure makes Revere one of the best local-value propositions in Nevada public golf — and the grass driving range alone is worth the trip for serious players.

Skip this one if you’re comparing to ultra-premium Las Vegas resort courses like Shadow Creek ($500+) or expecting TPC Las Vegas-level conditioning on a budget. Revere is excellent public golf — not luxury resort golf. The distinction matters especially on the Concord, where bunker maintenance hasn’t kept pace with the price tier.

Skip the Concord Course if you’re visiting from June through November and conditions matter to you. The unoverseeded rough and deferred bunker maintenance make the Concord a genuinely weaker experience in the second half of the year. The Lexington is always the right choice for a first visit, and most veteran Revere players book it exclusively.

People Also Ask

Is Revere Golf Club public or private?

Revere Golf Club is a public/semi-private facility in Henderson, Nevada — no membership is required to play either the Lexington or Concord course. Clark County residents and Sun City Anthem residents qualify for discounted local rates verified by photo ID at check-in. Annual passes are available for Henderson residents who want unlimited access to both 36 holes.

Which Revere Golf Club course is better — Lexington or Concord?

The Lexington Course is clearly better. It has more dramatic elevation change, stronger conditions (overseeded with ryegrass October–April), better scenic views of the Las Vegas Strip, and consistently higher ratings from golfers and locals alike. The Concord is playable and more forgiving, but persistent bunker maintenance issues and the absence of overseeding make it the weaker of the two courses.

How far is Revere Golf Club from the Las Vegas Strip?

Revere Golf Club is approximately 15–17 miles southeast of the Las Vegas Strip in Henderson, Nevada. The drive takes 20–25 minutes depending on traffic and time of day. It sits in the Anthem master-planned community near the edge of Sloan Canyon National Conservation Area — close enough for a day trip from any Strip hotel without major traffic.

Does Revere Golf Club offer local resident rates?

Yes. Clark County residents pay $60–$75 per round on both courses with valid photo ID verified at check-in. Sun City Anthem residents have access to an annual pass for unlimited play on both courses. The Clark County Annual Pass is also available through reveregolf.com. Local rates can be 50–60% lower than tourist rates on the same tee time.

What is the dress code at Revere Golf Club?

Revere Golf Club requires collared shirts on both courses. Non-metal (soft) spikes are mandatory and enforced at check-in. Prohibited items include denim, jeans, t-shirts, tank tops, athletic/gym shorts, swimwear, and halter tops. The standard is traditional country club casual — more formal than a municipal course but accessible for any golfer with standard golf attire.

Verdict & Score

GCR Score: 4.0 / 5 — Recommended

The Lexington Course is a 4.3 out of 5 on its own. The Concord holds the average back to 4.0 overall. That gap tells you everything about how to approach Revere: it’s a facility where one course consistently delivers and the other requires lowered expectations or an off-season visit.

What Revere does exceptionally well: dramatic Lexington golf, a practice facility that beats anything in its price tier in the valley, and Buckman’s Grille for an evening that combines good food and one of the best views in Las Vegas hospitality. For a tourist round, book Lexington, play 18 holes, eat dinner as the Strip lights up, and you’ll have gotten more from a Las Vegas golf day than most visitors manage at twice the price.

Check our review methodology for how we weight conditions, value, design, and experience in every score. If you’re comparing desert golf options in Nevada, also consider Paiute Golf Resort’s Wolf Course — it ranks #1 on most Nevada public golf lists and offers a pure design experience without the Strip view appeal.

Last reviewed: June 28, 2026

About the Reviewer

I’ve played more Las Vegas golf rounds than I can count — at both ends of the price spectrum, from city munis to Shadow Creek on a particularly lucky day. What makes Revere worth returning to is the Lexington’s genuine terrain drama and the post-round ritual at Buckman’s Grille. Las Vegas golf is often transactional. This one actually has a sense of place.

Club Type
Public Golf Club (36 Holes — Lexington + Concord)
Membership Type
Public (no membership required); Clark County Annual Pass; Sun City Anthem Annual Pass
Membership Fee
Clark County Annual Pass available for residents; Sun City Anthem Annual Pass available
Initiation Fee
None
Best Time to Visit
March–May and October–November
Dress Code
Collared shirt; no denim; soft spikes only
Location
2600 Hampton Rd, Henderson, NV 89052
Phone
(702) 259-4653

What We Loved

  • Lexington Course — best scenic desert golf in Henderson with Strip views
  • Buckman's Grille dinner with panoramic Las Vegas Strip views at sunset
  • Best all-grass driving range in southern Nevada (local consensus)
  • 36-hole full golf day option — uncommon for public LV facilities
  • Clark County resident rate ($60–$75) — outstanding local value

What Could Be Better

  • Concord bunkers consistently described as hard-packed dirt with no sand
  • Concord rough not overseeded in winter — sparse while Lexington stays green
  • Weekend pace can reach 4.5–5 hours on busy days
  • Tourist vs. local rate gap: same tee time can cost 2x more for out-of-state visitors
David Luis

Club Reviewer & Founder — GreatClubReview.com

13 club reviews written

David Luis has spent more than a decade researching, visiting, and reviewing private and public clubs across the United States. A golfer and club culture enthusiast, he founded GreatClubReview.com to give prospective members and guests an honest, membership-fee-transparent view of what clubs are actually worth. Every review draws on firsthand research, member conversations, and publicly available pricing data — no press packages, no comped access. He has published reviews of more than a dozen golf, country, sports, and private members clubs across North America.