Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship
Aaron Rai’s Winning WITB at Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship
Explore 33,000+ golf courses in 180 countries.
Follow the latest news and trends in golf.
Connect with like-minded golfers.
Find everything you need for your golf equipment and gear needs.
Travel, golf resorts, lifestyle, gear, tour highlights and technology.
All Square
Suggestions
Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship
Aaron Rai’s Winning WITB at Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship
Course Reviews
The History Behind the Ryder Cup Courses
Clothes
How to Pack Smart for a Golf Holiday
Course Reviews
Weekend Golf Escapes by Car from Luxembourg
Course Reviews
Best Clubhouse Restaurants in Europe
Course Reviews
Your Top Destinations For a Last-Minute Christmas Golf Getaway in Europe
Clubs
Hideki Matsuyama WITB Behind His 2025 Hero World Challenge Victory
Amateur Golf
Europe’s Best Pro-Am Golf Events for Amateurs
Course Reviews
Top 10 Par‑3s You’ll Never Forget
Course Reviews
The Architects Behind Europe’s Most Iconic Courses
Destinations
Europe’s Best Resorts for Couples
Contests
The Skins Game: Results & Overview
Community
Rewilding the Rough: Nature-First Golf Design
Course Reviews
The Best Golf Courses Near Pinehurst That Aren’t Pinehurst No. 2
Course Reviews
The Els Club Vilamoura: Golfing Grandeur in the Algarve
Course Reviews
Elevating Your Golf Game Through Mental Strategies
Accessories
The Best Golf Watches in 2025
Course Reviews
Tazegzout Golf Course: A Coastal Gem in Taghazout Bay
Clubs
Joe Highsmith Gear: 2025 Win

When the Ryder Cup lands in Spain in 2031, it won’t be at Valderrama again — it will be played on the Stadium Course at Camiral Golf & Wellness Resort, the resort formerly known to many as PGA Catalunya. The announcement sent a clear signal that Europe wanted a modern, spectator-friendly layout with a genuine tournament pedigree: Camiral checks both boxes.

The Stadium Course was conceived as a championship layout from the start. Its architects — the European Tour’s in-house planning team with design input from names such as Neil Coles and Ángel Gallardo — created wide, framed fairways, dramatic elevation changes and natural amphitheatre-like mounding that make it suited to staging a major team contest. The routing deliberately includes areas where temporary grandstands and hospitality villages can be installed without ruining the line of play — a key reason the course is described as being “designed with the Ryder Cup in mind.”

Camiral sits in Catalonia’s rolling inland hills on the Costa Brava, roughly 50 minutes from Barcelona and a short drive from Girona. That location gives the Ryder Cup organisers both an attractive international gateway (Barcelona) and a golf-friendly region with world-class hospitality, roads and airports — all important for moving tens of thousands of fans, players and media. Hosting the 2031 matches also marks Spain’s return as a Ryder Cup host and makes the country the first on continental Europe to stage the Cup twice.

Over the years, the Stadium Course has been consistently ranked among Spain’s best and a top European layout. From the championship tees it plays at tournament length (commonly quoted in the 7,000–7,300-yard band depending on setup), is a par-72 and offers testy green complexes and a mix of long par 4s, risk/reward par 5s and punchy par 3s that reward both length and short-game precision. Those attributes — plus its conditioning and design quality — are why it’s regularly listed in Spain’s top courses.

Several practical features make Camiral attractive for a team match of the Ryder Cup’s scale:

In the years before the Ryder Cup announcement, Camiral invested in agronomy and sustainability upgrades — changes in turf species, irrigation efficiency and fairway composition — to improve playability during hot summers and to reduce environmental footprint. Those improvements ensure championship-grade conditioning and help organisers meet increasingly strict environmental and legacy expectations for mega sporting events.

While any hole can become iconic depending on how the match unfolds, the Stadium Course delivers visually arresting moments: islanded greens, risk-reward par 5s that can swing matches, and finishing stretches where elevation and pressure combine. Expect the tournament committee to create a dramatic finishing sequence that rewards strategy and nerve — and produces picture-perfect Ryder Cup memories.

The Costa Brava’s scenery, Catalan culture and Barcelona’s transport links give the 2031 Ryder Cup a wider cultural and travel narrative. Fans will have options: seaside escapes on the Mediterranean, city breaks in Barcelona, or short trips to Girona’s medieval centre. That regional depth is important for attracting global spectators who want more than just golf.

Bringing the Ryder Cup to Camiral recognises Spain’s deep contribution to European golf — from legends like Seve Ballesteros to modern stars — and it underlines the sport’s growth in venues that combine spectator experience with sustainable event hosting. For Camiral, it’s a chance to create a lasting legacy: upgraded facilities, a spike in tourism investment and a permanent place in Ryder Cup history.

Camiral’s Stadium Course is a textbook example of a modern championship venue: thoughtful routing, spectator-friendly topography, resort infrastructure and a proven ability to host high-level tournaments. As the Ryder Cup approaches, expect course tweaks, infrastructure building and a global spotlight on Girona — and an event that blends fierce match play with Catalonia’s unsurpassed hospitality. For fans and players alike, the 2031 Ryder Cup at Camiral promises to be a memorable chapter in the Cup’s storied history.