Golf in Wyoming
Overview
Golf in Wyoming
What golf looks like for retirement in Wyoming: where to do it, what the state costs, and the towns that fit.
Golf in Wyoming
Casper Municipal Golf Course lists a season pass at $672 per year for players age 70 and older, and Cheyenne Recreation's Airport Golf Club offers a nine-hole public course with annual senior passes at $450. Three Crowns Golf Club in Casper is another highly regarded public layout with competitive annual membership rates.
Published local price
Airport Golf Course (City of Cheyenne municipal) 18-hole adult prime season rate (April-November); rates vary by season and tee time
Published range: $20 to $34.
Cheyenne Recreation Department - Golf Division · as of 2025Where to go
What Wyoming costs
Cost of living
93
BEA index, U.S. = 100
State income tax
None
Social Security
Not taxed
How people start
- 1
Map the public and municipal courses nearby
Most metros list city-run courses with published fee schedules. Those set the affordable floor before any private club enters the picture.
- 2
Ask about senior and resident rates
Many courses post a reduced weekday senior rate and a season pass. The difference between pay-per-round and a pass is the number that usually drives the yearly cost.
- 3
Price the season, not the round
In warm states the season runs most of the year; in cold ones it is a few months. The yearly cost is rounds-per-year times rate, plus cart and equipment.
Common questions
Is Wyoming a good place to retire for golf?
Casper Municipal Golf Course lists a season pass at $672 per year for players age 70 and older, and Cheyenne Recreation's Airport Golf Club offers a nine-hole public course with annual senior passes at $450. Three Crowns Golf Club in Casper is another highly regarded public layout with competitive annual membership rates.
What does it cost to retire in Wyoming?
Wyoming has a cost-of-living index near 93 (U.S. = 100), no state income tax, and does not tax Social Security. The full state guide breaks down property tax, sales tax, and long-term-care costs, each sourced.
Sources
The life your money is for