Welcome to the ultimate British Open betting guide! Here you will find British Open betting sites, the latest odds and betting tips for the best golf betting sites.
We ranked our best betting sites by Open Championship betting features, ease of navigation, variety of betting markets, and betting promos available for the event.
The British Open means huge galleries, giant yellow scoreboards, tee times into the early evening, and most of all blustery conditions on windswept links golf courses. Nothing defines golf’s oldest major quite like its geography, with rolling, rough-hewn layouts sitting hard against the roiling sea.
That marriage creates a unique challenge for competitors and bettors alike.
In the three U.S. majors — the U.S. Open, PGA Championship and Masters — conditions are almost always consistent over the course of the week. But the British Open is a crapshoot.
One day can be placid and sunny, and scores can be low. The next can be windy and raw, and scoring can be impossible. That same divergence can be present from one morning to that same afternoon.
At the British Open, watching the weather is as important to bettors as watching the golf. Particularly when placing prop bets related to scoring, you'll need to be well aware of what’s rolling in from the sea.
Knowing when players tee off is almost as crucial as knowing the weather, given that tee times span over 10 hours the first two days, and weather can change quickly.
The golf courses look inviting, usually with generous greens and fairways as wide as runways. But they’re also often very wild compared to American layouts, with thickets of native flora, hidden swales, and pit-like bunkers.
Since most players don’t see British Open courses that often, it helps to back those who are solid scramblers and creative with a number of different clubs.
The oldest continually run championship in golf, the British Open (or officially, the Open Championship) has been held since 1860.
Since 1872 it’s been rotated around nine clubs throughout England and Scotland, with one of the few exceptions being 1951 at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland.
Dominated by English and Scottish players in its early years, Americans, led by Bobby Jones and Walter Hagen, enjoyed a run of success by winning 11 of 13 events between 1921-33. It was a precursor of what was to come between 1970-2006, when U.S. players won 23 times.
The Open has become a very international event since.
Year | Golfer | Course |
---|---|---|
2023 | Brian Harman (U.S.) | Royal Liverpool |
2022 | Cameron Smith (Australia) | St. Andrews |
2021 | Collin Morikawa (U.S.) | Royal St. George's |
2020 | N/A | Cancelled |
2019 | Shane Lowry (Ireland) | Royal Portrush |
2018 | Francesco Molinari (Italy) | Carnoustie |
2017 | Jordan Spieth (U.S.) | Royal Birkdale |
2016 | Henrik Stenson (Sweden) | Royal Troon |
2015 | Zach Johnson (U.S.) | St. Andrews |
2014 | Rory McIlroy (Northern Ireland) | Royal Liverpool |