Profile
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club: Short-Game Test in a Private Parkland Setting
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club sits in Redmond with a compact nine that asks for precise wedges and calm pace. Brae Burn Golf & Country Club is private, built inside a residential community, and it rewards front-edge landings and tidy putting over raw speed.
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club Fast Facts
Feature |
Detail |
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Location |
Redmond, WA |
Address or parking directions |
2409 182nd Ave NE, community entrance just north of NE 24th St |
Holes and par |
9 holes, Par 28 |
Total yardage (back tees) |
1,283 yds |
Tee sets |
White and Red (2) |
Terrain |
Executive parkland routing inside a private neighborhood |
Greens and fairway turf |
Poa annua greens |
Practice facilities |
No driving range |
Dress/spike policy |
Metal spikes not allowed |
Walking |
Walking allowed |
Access |
Private, members and their guests |
Course Overview
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club is a true executive walk. The routing weaves through a quiet neighborhood with short carries, one par 4, and greens that put a premium on distance control. You see most targets from the tee, and the round moves quickly when you keep approach height down and pace steady.
The course tilts toward short-game skill. With many holes under 150 yds and a lone par 4, the separation comes from landing the correct tier and leaving uphill putts. Firm summer days add release, so front-third landings are the safer choice. The design favors center targets off the tee, then a flighted wedge that dies near the hole. Pick the tee that fits your carry numbers, keep the window low when breeze shows up, and accept stress-free pars when pins sit near edges.
Hole-by-Hole Highlights
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Hole 1, 85 yds, Par 3. Stock opener. Choose a window that lands front edge and runs.
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Hole 2, 219 yds, Par 3. Longest par 3 on the outward stretch. Commit to your line and keep flight down if wind is up.
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Hole 3, 98 yds, Par 3. Short approach number. Land below the hole to avoid fast comebacks.
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Hole 4, 144 yds, Par 3. Mid-iron or wedge depending on tee. Favor the wide side of the green.
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Hole 5, 99 yds, Par 3. Precision wedge. Take the tier that leaves an uphill read.
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Hole 6, 241 yds, Par 4. Only par 4. Controlled tee ball to your favorite yardage, then a simple chip or wedge.
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Hole 7, 137 yds, Par 3. Mid-length with room to land short and release.
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Hole 8, 86 yds, Par 3. Scoring chance. Choose a calm tempo and commit to front edge.
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Hole 9, 136 yds, Par 3. Finisher rewards center aim and tidy pace on the first putt.
Amenities & Practice
There is no driving range. Walking is allowed throughout the routing, which keeps the round efficient. Greens are Poa annua, so match speed on a short pre-round roll if you have time on a practice strip or before the first tee.
Food & Beverage
No on-site restaurant or concessions confirmed
Rates / Booking / Local Tips
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club operates as a private community course with member and guest play. Associate membership openings are posted by the club from time to time, and member tee times are managed in-house. Plan for quick pace, choose conservative lines around tucked pins, and let ground play work on firm days.
How to Score Here
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Use front-edge yardages on most par 3s, then allow a short release toward the hole at Brae Burn Golf & Country Club.
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On the lone par 4, pick a club that leaves your favorite wedge number rather than forcing driver.
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Favor the wide side of each green to leave uphill putts and simple pace control.
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When breeze shows, lower the flight and add a club instead of swinging harder.
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If you leak offline, pitch back to center early and protect par.
Final Word
Brae Burn Golf & Country Club is a private executive loop that rewards clean wedges, front-edge landings, and a steady tempo from first tee to last putt.
This course is part of the Washington Golf Directory’s collection of Washington State private golf courses and member-only clubs. Alongside public courses, disc golf spots, and driving ranges, we’re highlighting the places where golfers across the state play, practice, and build community—all year long.
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