- Home
- Departments
- Township Attractions
- Golf Course
- Course Information
- Course Information
Course Information
Course Conditions & Hours
- Course - Closed
Thank you
for another great year.- See You in Spring 2026
Cranberry Highlands is a daily fee municipal golf course. It is open, weather permitting, throughout the year. Normally mid March through mid November.
Course description: Cranberry Highlands, voted Pennsylvania’s best municipal golf course in 2009 by Golf Digest, celebrates Western Pennsylvania’s rugged natural landscape with a stunning 186-acre, par 70 course created to provide a quality test of golf for players of every skill level.
Amenities: Full service pro shop, two practice greens, grill room, banquet and meeting facility, featuring indoor seating for150 and outdoor pavilion which seats 100.
Owned and operated by: Cranberry Township, Butler County, Pennsylvania
Course Landscape: Cranberry Highlands, the region's premier public golf course, celebrates the area's natural challenges with a stunning 186-acre course created to provide a quality test of golf for players of every skill level. Built on a landscape surrounded by wooded hills and punctuated with steep ravines, Cranberry Highlands is a generously proportioned, par 70 course following the contours of woodlands and fields. Featuring 90 deeply sculpted sand bunkers and water hazards with more than 70 separate tee areas, Cranberry Highlands offers a demanding course with fairways and roughs outlined in 14 varieties of grass. From its front tees at 4,769 yards, to its championship back tees at 6,590 yards, players will find a walkable course, discretely linked by cart paths and surrounded by timber-stock that defines the region.
Cranberry Highlands Golf Course is designated by Audubon International as a Certified Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary.
The designation affirms that the golf course has maintained a high degree of environmental quality in a variety of areas including planning, wildlife and habitat management, education, reduced chemical use, water quality management and more.
The late Dave Barber, the course's GCSAA Superintendent (2000-2022), was instrumental in leading the facility’s environmental stewardship efforts. The course was initially recognized as part of the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary program in 2009 and recertified two years later.