A golfing holiday in the South of France is one of those ideas that sounds wonderful in theory and turns out to be even better in practice. Picture yourself stepping onto the first tee just after eight in the morning. The air is warm. The sky is already a deep, settled blue. Ahead of you, a fairway dips through sunflower fields towards a treeline that has been standing since long before anyone thought to build a course beside it. No wind. No queue. No one rushing you.
Once you have played golf here, the courses back home never quite look the same again.
The south-west of France, and Nouvelle-Aquitaine in particular, has become one of Europe’s most loved destinations for golfers, not because it competes with the great links of Scotland or Ireland, but because it offers something altogether different. The golf is part of a bigger, richer experience. Great food, ancient villages, long evenings on a terrace with a glass of something local. The kind of unhurried rhythm that reminds you why you took a holiday in the first place.
The Weather Changes Everything

Let’s be honest about the British summer. Even in August, you are never quite sure what you are going to get.
In the Charente and Dordogne, you are. The region enjoys a warm, semi-continental climate shaped by Atlantic influence, which means long, dry summers, gentle springs, and autumns mild enough to keep the season running comfortably from March through to November. Summers bring temperatures in the low to mid-thirties, with weeks passing between rain showers. The fairways are firm and fast underfoot. The greens hold their shape beautifully.
Early morning tee times here feel almost impossibly pleasant. It is, quite simply, the kind of weather that makes golf feel like the leisure it was always supposed to be, rather than the test of character it so often becomes at home.
The Rhythm of Life Here Is Different

Mornings belong to the course. By lunchtime, you are sitting somewhere lovely with a glass of Bergerac rosé and a plate of something made with ingredients bought from the market that morning. Afternoons disappear pleasantly, a pool, a village, a nap in a sun-warmed courtyard. By evening, you are at a table in a farmhouse restaurant and nobody is in any particular hurry.
That is just how it works here.
This is Nouvelle-Aquitaine: rolling hills, river valleys carved by the Dronne, the Charente, and the Dordogne, vineyards threading between oak forests and pale limestone cliffs. It is a landscape that makes even an average round feel like a small adventure. An exceptional round becomes something you will be talking about for years. The region draws golfers not just because the courses are good, it is everything around the courses that makes this place so hard to leave.
Courses at Every Turn

One of the things that surprises first-time visitors is just how much golf there is to be found in this corner of France.
The wider Poitou-Charentes region alone contains around 20 courses. Factor in the Dordogne and the Périgord to the east, and the options multiply considerably. A week based in the southern Charente can genuinely feel like a golf tour of an entire region, with a different landscape and a different challenge waiting each morning.
To the north and west, the Cognac country offers some of the most scenic parkland golf in France. Courses wind through vineyards and ancient woodland on the banks of the River Charente. Old farmhouse clubhouses, terraces overlooking the 18th, that particular quality of late-afternoon Charente light, the settings are as memorable as the golf itself. Full 18-hole layouts give serious golfers plenty to think about, while shorter courses on the same sites welcome beginners and those after a lighter session.
To the east, the Dordogne and Périgueux areas deliver courses set against extraordinary countryside. Château estates, medieval farmhouses, ancient forests. Rounds out here feel as much like sightseeing as sport, and that is not a complaint. Many courses offer both 18-hole and 9-hole options with good facilities and resident instructors, ideal for groups of mixed ability.
Further into the Dordogne Valley, nine-hole courses suit mixed groups down to the ground. Rolling fairways, well-placed water hazards, strategic bunkering. Fun without being punishing. And for those who want even more variety, the Atlantic coast near Royan and La Rochelle adds a completely different coastal dimension to an already impressive list of options.
There Is Plenty to Love Beyond the Fairways
A golfing holiday in the South of France works so well because the region gives everyone something to fall in love with, golfers and non-golfers alike.
Just minutes from Pillac, the medieval village of Aubeterre-sur-Dronne is one of the most beautiful villages in all of France. Its monolithic church, carved directly into the cliffside rock, is a place that genuinely stops people in their tracks. The old stone streets, the market square, the cafés overlooking the river. Partners who wave the golfers off in the morning will not be short of something wonderful to do.
Cognac is well within reach, distillery tours, riverside walks, excellent restaurants. Angoulême brings culture and energy, famous for its International Comics Festival and its commanding hilltop setting above the Charente valley. Périgueux and the wider Périgord open up prehistoric cave art, medieval châteaux, and some of the finest duck and truffle cooking you will find anywhere in France.
The food and drink across the whole region is, frankly, outstanding. Markets happen daily in towns and villages, stacked with local cheeses, charcuterie, walnuts, strawberries, and wine at prices that still feel like a very pleasant surprise. Evening meals in farmhouse restaurants offer long, generous menus with local wine. Nobody is rushing you out the door.
Getting Here From the UK Is Easier Than You Think
Bergerac Airport is just 45 minutes from Pillac, with direct flights from a wide range of UK airports throughout spring and summer. Bordeaux-Mérignac opens up further options, around 90 minutes away with a straightforward motorway route through the Dordogne. And for those happy to drive, the journey from the Channel ports is a genuinely enjoyable one. Good roads, beautiful country, and the freedom to bring clubs, supplies, and as much local wine as the boot will hold on the way home.
Summary

If you are going to base yourself somewhere for a golfing holiday in this part of France, we think there is nowhere quite like Manoir de Longeveau. We might be biased. But we would love the chance to show you why.
Set around a beautiful historic cognac manor house on the Charente-Dordogne border near Pillac, Longeveau is a little corner of paradise that has been welcoming golfers, families, and groups of friends for many years. Our collection of more than 30 lovingly converted gîtes ranges from cosy cottages for two right up to larger properties sleeping ten or more. Oak beams, stone walls, your own outdoor space, and that feeling of being instantly at home.
Heated swimming pools, tennis courts, a bar, a restaurant, children’s play areas. There is something here for everyone in the group, whatever their relationship with golf happens to be.
At the heart of the Longeveau experience for visiting golfers is our very own Golf d’Aubeterre, a nine-hole course set right here within the grounds of the estate. Nestled in the Dronne valley with the Charente countryside rolling out around you, it offers a genuinely rewarding challenge for players of all abilities. Our Aubeterre Golf Association runs regular competitions throughout the year, a weekly Wednesday Stableford, Friday evening nine-hole competitions in summer, and visiting guests are warmly welcome to join in. It is golf the way it ought to feel: friendly, unhurried, and played somewhere truly beautiful.
For those who want to explore further afield, our position in the southern Charente puts you within easy reach of the full range of courses across the Cognac country, the Dordogne, and the Périgord. Play a different course every day for a week. You will not have to drive for more than an hour to reach any of them.
What we hear most from our guests is simple: Longeveau works for the whole group. Those who want 36 holes a day, brilliant. Those who want nine holes before breakfast and the rest of the day by the pool, equally brilliant. Those who have never touched a club and have no intention of starting tend to fall just as hard for this place as everyone else.
The south of France does not ask you to choose between great golf and a great holiday. At Manoir de Longeveau, you really do get both, and we cannot wait to welcome you.





