Wasatch Mountain State Park Golf in Midway, UT is a mountain course in the Wasatch Back area — par 72, about 6,942 yards from the tips. A classic state-park mountain course tucked into Midway — quiet, scenic, and a genuine bargain for the setting.
👋 Heads up: we haven't played Wasatch Mountain State Park Golf yet — so this isn't a review. It's our beginner's pre-round guide: the facts about the course and how two total beginners plan to play it. Our real scores and the course record will appear on this page once we tee it up.
The vibe
A classic state-park mountain course tucked into Midway — quiet, scenic, and a genuine bargain for the setting.
Holes we're watching
The holes we expect to make or break our round here:
- The Lake course front nine winding through the canyon mouth
- A blind tee shot the locals will gladly explain after you have already hit it
How hard is it (on paper)?
Tree-lined and tight in spots; keep it in play and the scoring is gentle.
We're beginners, so our plan is simple: play it forward a set of tees. Nobody has ever regretted a shorter, more makeable round — and the scorecard thanks you for it.
Our game plan
How we want to play Wasatch Mountain State Park Golf when we get there: Day-trippers from Salt Lake who want mountain golf without a resort bill. We'll keep it in play off the tee, aim for the fat part of every green, and treat bogey as a great score while we learn.
Price & tee-time tips
Expect green fees around $40–$60 depending on season and time of day. Combine with a Midway day trip; book mid-morning after the dawn rush clears.
Our scores & course record
🏌️ Nothing here yet — we haven't played Wasatch Mountain State Park Golf.
When we tee it up and film our round, this is exactly where our scorecards, our best round, and the running Par for the Chaos course record will show up. Check back, or follow along so you catch the first attempt.
Book it / gear up
Want to play Wasatch Mountain State Park Golf too? Use the links below to lock in a tee time and grab the beginner gear we use.
Some links are affiliate links — if you book or buy through them we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We link courses we want to play and gear we actually use. We have not been paid by any course, and we'll only call a course "good" or "bad" after we've actually played it.