Royal Lytham & St Annes

Tough, tight, and legendary. Royal Lytham is a no-frills, big-stage links that rewards accuracy and punishes ego. Pure Open pedigree.

Slope Rating

144

Par

70

Yardage

7,118

Royal Lytham & St Annes is one of the most testing Open Championship venues – a brutally honest course set in an unusual setting, just inland from the Lancashire coast. It doesn’t offer the scenic drama of other Open links, but it makes up for it with unrelenting challenge and world-class layout. There are 174 bunkers on the course, many of them steep-faced and punishing. Fairways are narrow, and the rough is heavy. The opening hole plays away from the clubhouse through a suburban housing boundary, which only adds to the unique character. Don’t be fooled by the flat appearance – the routing is clever, the winds are tricky, and every shot matters. The back nine features the famous par-4 17th, where Seve Ballesteros hit a now-iconic drive from the car park en route to victory. From Bobby Jones to Ernie Els, champions here have always been tacticians, not bombers. You’ll walk off Royal Lytham knowing exactly what your weaknesses are – and admiring every inch of the test.

Designer

George Lowe (1897); redesigned by Harry Colt (1919)

Opened

1897

Tee time availability

Difficult

Special information

Strict dress code and etiquette. Visitor tee times are available midweek with advance booking. Caddies strongly recommended for first-time guests.

Tiger’s best round

Rory’s best round

67 (2012 Open Championship)

Mens course record

65 – Tom Lehman (1996 Open), Scott Dunlap (2012 Open)

Ladies course record

66 – Hinako Shibuno (2019 Women’s British Open)

Round duration

4 hours 45 minutes

Caddy guide

Highly recommended – bunker strategy and green slopes are vital to understand

Buggies

Not permitted – walking only

Bring your full control game. Fairways are tight and bunkers deadly. Mid-irons and course management will make or break your round. Don’t miss short-sided.

Play conservative lines and avoid temptation. There’s no safe miss off the tee, so focus on hitting short clubs to fat parts of the fairway and keeping bunker shots to a minimum.

Use forward tees and don’t force hero shots. Stay in play, lay up smartly, and enjoy the precision of a world-class links. It will test you – but it’s worth it.

Green speed

10 – quick and true with subtle breaks

Wind

Often swirls unpredictably due to its inland setting, especially on the back nine

Pace of play

Well controlled – respected club with strong tradition of good pace

Nerves on the first tee

Moderate – quiet surroundings but narrow opening fairway with OB left demands immediate focus

Clubhouse

Classic and grand – packed with Open history and understated northern charm

The 17th is iconic – a long par-4 with OB looming left and deep bunkers waiting. The 9th is a superb long hole turning left toward the clubhouse. The par-3 9th, played into a tight green, is a standout short hole with teeth.

Northwest coast weather – cool, breezy, and often overcast. Summer can be glorious with firm turf. Autumn and spring are playable but bring layers.