Golf in the Beskydy Mountains and it’s closer than you think
Most UK golfers have never considered the Moravian-Silesian Region. That is about to change. A direct Ryanair flight from London to Ostrava puts you on the fairway of Central Europe’s largest golf destination in under two hours, no transfers, no connections, no crowds. Here is what awaits when you land.
Ostrava Airport (OVA) operates direct flights from London with Ryanair, making the Moravian-Silesian Region one of the most straightforwardly accessible golf destinations in Central Europe. From the airport, Ostrava city centre is 25 minutes away, and the region’s top golf resorts are reachable in under 30 minutes. No long transfers. No Prague layover. Just golf.
The 55 HOLES Golf Destination connects two world-class resorts, Prosper Golf Resort Čeladná and Golf & Ski Resort Ostravice across three championship 18-hole courses set in the scenic Beskydy Mountains. Together they form the largest golf destination in Central Europe, combining championship-standard facilities with mountain views that are genuinely difficult to find anywhere else on the continent.

Prosper Golf Resort Čeladná has a pedigree that speaks for itself. The resort has hosted PGA European Tour events, attracting world-renowned players and during one tournament, Argentine golfer Tano Goya played a record-breaking 65 on The Old Course, a record that still stands. Two 18-hole championship courses stretch across 100 hectares of Beskydy landscape, designed to challenge experienced players while remaining accessible to those at an earlier stage of the game.
Beyond golf, the resort offers a wellness centre with pool and sauna, tennis courts, cycling and hiking trails, and an elegant restaurant, everything needed to make a multi-day stay genuinely comfortable.
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Designed by renowned architect Chris Johnson, the 18-hole championship parkland course at Golf & Ski Resort Ostravice stretches over 6,500 metres with a par of 72 and spectacular views of Lysá hora, the highest peak in the Beskydy range. Modern practice facilities, wellness services and on-site accommodation at the Green Inn Hotel complete a resort that is as strong a base for a week as it is for a single round.
Ostrava is one of Czechia’s most underrated cities and well worth an evening or two. The Dolní Vítkovice district, a former industrial complex now reimagined as a cultural hub, is unlike anything else in Central Europe: it features blast furnaces, an interactive science centre, and the Bolt Tower offering panoramic views across the city. The Gallery of Fine Arts houses a Gustav Klimt and is worth the detour. The city also hosts the Colours of Ostrava festival (15–18 July), headlined this year by Twenty One Pilots, Lorde, and Moby, set against the Dolní Vítkovice industrial backdrop