Journey’s End Golf Course

Journey’s End Golf Course in Shelley, Idaho

Address: 1407 N 630 E, Shelley, ID 83221

Course Overview

Journey’s End Golf Course is a public, family-friendly 9-hole golf course near Shelley, Idaho, positioned between Shelley and Idaho Falls near I-15. The official site describes it as a rural course that is registered with the IGA and USGA, while Visit Idaho highlights its mix of long and short holes and several water hazards. Third-party scorecard sources list it as a par-35 layout measuring about 3,025 yards from the back tees.

Journey's End Golf Course in Shelley, Idaho logo


Course Information

  • Type: Public

  • Number of Holes: 9

  • Par: 35

  • Price: Published pricing on the official site shows weekday 18-hole rates of $25 for adults, $24 for seniors age 60+, and $20 for juniors age 14 and under. The official online store also shows Friday-Sunday and holiday 18-hole pricing in a range of $20-$29, 9-hole pricing in ranges of $10-$15 on weekdays and $10-$19 on Friday-Sunday/holidays, and separate cart rental pricing ranging from $16-$32 for 18 holes and $10-$20 for 9 holes depending on selection.

  • Yardage: 3,025 yards from the longest tees for 9 holes. Some secondary sources show 3,036 yards for another tee/version, but 3,025 appears repeatedly in current scorecard data.


Gallery


Additional Course Information

Journey’s End is best described as a rural public course with a family-friendly, wide-open layout rather than a resort or tightly framed parkland design. The official site leans heavily into that identity, emphasizing scenery, family golf, tournaments, ladies night, kids camps, and a welcoming atmosphere. Regional tourism listings reinforce that positioning, describing the course as accessible for a broad range of players and convenient to both Shelley and Idaho Falls.

From a playability standpoint, Journey’s End looks like a mixed-difficulty 9-hole course. It is beginner-friendly in some respects, particularly because it is open, generally not too busy, and has several shorter holes. At the same time, the course is not completely soft. The official course page says it includes 7 sand traps and 4 water hazards, and Visit Idaho specifically mentions water hazards as part of the experience. A third-party on-course review found the opening stretch fairly forgiving but noted that later holes, especially 7 through 9, become much more interesting and demanding.

The course seems especially well suited to beginners, juniors, families, and casual golfers, while still offering enough trouble to keep better players engaged. The official site explicitly calls it family friendly, and it promotes kids golf camps and junior golf programming. An independent reviewer described it as an excellent course for beginning golfers because it is wide open and not too busy, while also pointing out that a pond carry on hole 8 and water on hole 9 can create real scoring pressure.

In terms of standout holes, the most notable sequence appears to be the closing stretch. One review highlights hole 7 as a welcome dogleg with bunkering that introduces more shot value, hole 8 as a 155-yard par 3 that requires carrying water, and hole 9 as the course’s No. 1 handicap hole, a par 5 with water influencing both the drive and approach. That gives Journey’s End a memorable finish after a more straightforward opening half.

The course also appears to be very walkable. A third-party reviewer specifically called it flat and easy to walk, though golf cart rental is clearly available through the official site. The shop pages also confirm pull cart rentals and club rentals, giving players flexible options whether they want to walk or ride.

Journey’s End offers a useful set of public-course amenities even though it is a smaller rural facility. Official pages confirm golf cart rental, season passes, tournaments, kids golf camps, ladies night, junior golf league, and course rentals. A third-party listing also notes a putting green, rental clubs, pull carts, and instruction/teaching availability, though some practice-area details are not clearly confirmed on the official site.

On the pricing and access side, Journey’s End looks positioned as a value-oriented local public course. The official store shows online purchase options for greens fees, cart rentals, punch passes, gift certificates, and several season-pass options, including adult, senior, junior, couple, and family passes. That suggests the course serves both one-time visitors and repeat local players. Tee times can be booked online through the reservation page, and the course also publishes a clubhouse phone number for reservations and questions.

What makes Journey’s End most distinctive is its combination of small-course accessibility and event-driven community feel. It is not presented as a high-end destination course. Instead, it stands out as a local public course where families, juniors, new golfers, and casual players can feel comfortable, while regular events like ladies night, night golf, junior league, and camps help keep the facility active and social. That community-centered identity is one of the clearest themes across the official and tourism sources.


Mark

Hey, I’m Mark! I am a dad, Boise-based photographer, content creator, SEO, and coffee aficionado. I enjoy traveling, reading, and making images of my constantly-changing surroundings.

Previous
Previous

Idaho Falls Country Club Golf Course

Next
Next

Sand Creek Golf Course