Crystalline water, Blue Ridge framing, and four gated communities that look similar from the highway and live nothing alike. Here is which cove is which.
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Lake Keowee is a Duke Energy reservoir that happens to be one of the clearest large lakes in the Southeast, forty-five minutes from Greenville and twenty from Clemson. The water is the constant. What changes, cove to cove, is the life built around it.
Three of the four communities here fly the Cliffs flag, which means one membership opens all seven Cliffs clubs across the Carolinas. The fourth, The Reserve, is its own world. The right answer depends entirely on whether you came for the golf, the boat, the village, or the quiet.
The only address on the lake with a walkable village at its center, where you stroll from cottage to dock to dinner.
The Reserve is the lake's resort-residential play, roughly 3,900 acres with about thirty miles of shoreline in Sunset, organized around a true pedestrian Village. Residents genuinely walk from a cottage to the Orchard House for dinner or down to a 200-slip marina. A Jack Nicklaus Signature course anchors the golf, and under new ownership tied to the Old Edwards hospitality group, the operation now runs at concierge level. It is not a Cliffs community; its membership and culture stand alone.
The current range runs from roughly $1.2M into the high seven figures, with a new pocket called Laurel Village adding cottages from the high $400s, the most accessible entry the lake has seen in years. The trade is location. Pickens County is beautiful and quiet, and forty to sixty minutes from anything urban. Homes here have been sitting longer than the lake's hottest pockets, which is leverage for a buyer and patience for a seller.
The flagship Cliffs cove, where a Golf Digest top-ten private course plays eight holes along the water and horse trails run for miles.
Vineyards is the established statement of the Cliffs lake region, named for the muscadine vines woven through it. Eight of the eighteen Tom Fazio holes play directly along Lake Keowee, a course routinely ranked among the best private layouts in the country. The Lakehouse, with its wraparound porch and open-air pavilion, is the most photographed dining room on the water, and an on-site equestrian center connects to more than two hundred miles of trails through the Jocassee Gorges. Twenty-five years in, the landscaping is mature and the construction noise is gone.
Homes run from roughly the $800s into the high seven figures, with homesites from the low six figures. As a Cliffs club, one membership reaches all seven communities. The skew here is golf-serious and horse-friendly rather than family-loud, and time on market tightened sharply through 2026. It is the prestige pick of the three Cliffs coves.
The family cove, closest to Clemson, with a waterslide beach club and the newest clubhouse on the lake.
Springs is the most active and most multigenerational of the Cliffs coves, about twenty minutes from Clemson. The Beach Club, with two pools and a waterslide, is the social engine, and a new hilltop clubhouse from the Hart Howerton firm adds dining, a golf shop, and a wellness center over the eighteenth hole. The Tom Fazio golf here is a flexible three-loop design built for families, and a full watersports program runs kayaks, paddleboards, and wakeboarding off the lake.
Homes start around $1.3M and climb into the high seven figures, and Springs carries the richest price per foot of the three coves because the product is newest. Several developer release zones are adding inventory, which is friendly to entry buyers and something for an appreciation-focused buyer to weigh. If you have school-age kids or you bleed orange, this is the cove.
The wildest cove on the lake: 2,500 acres, twenty miles of private shoreline, waterfalls, and a Nicklaus course through the trees.
Falls, in Salem, is the most dramatic of the Cliffs coves, twenty-five hundred acres with twenty miles of shoreline entirely private to residents. Falls Creek winds through seven holes of a Jack Nicklaus Signature course named among Golf Magazine's best new private layouts, and rare Oconee Bells wildflowers grow in the fields. The clubhouse is a fireside, rocking-chair affair over the creek, more wilderness lodge than country club. There is no on-site beach club; you take the boat ten minutes to Springs or use the wellness center pool.
Homes run from roughly $1M into the high seven figures, and the $6.95M record sale across all Cliffs lake communities in 2025 closed here. Sale-to-list ratios are the strongest of the three coves. This is the pick for a buyer who wants acreage, privacy, and the most compelling natural setting on Keowee, and who does not mind being the furthest from a town.
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