Open Championship future sites through 2026

Take a scroll through the Open Championship host courses through 2026.

Royal Liverpool was a superb host of the 2023 Open Championship, the 13th time the venue hosted the oldest major in golf.

There are but three future golf courses scheduled to host, with the 152nd playing of the tournament coming in 2024.

The R&A, which runs the Open, calls the tournament “nature’s test of character”, stating on its website:

“Links golf is nature in all its unforgiving force – and The Open is where nature is pitted against the very best of the very best. It’s where champions must set aside what came before. Alone, skill and years of diligent preparation are not enough.”

Take a look at the next three Open Championship host venues.

Go to theopen.com for more information.

Royal Birkdale named host of 2026 British Open

“There are great clubs, there are great courses, and then there is Royal Birkdale — the combination of both.”

[anyclip pubname=”2122″ widgetname=”0016M00002U0B1kQAF_M8171″]

The 154th Open will be played at Royal Birkdale in 2026, the R&A announced Tuesday.

The Southport links previously hosted golf’s original championship on 10 occasions, the last of which was in 2017 when Jordan Spieth emerged victorious in a memorable final-round duel with Matt Kuchar to lift the Claret Jug for the first time.

The American joined a celebrated roll of champion golfers at Royal Birkdale, including Peter Thomson, Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino, Johnny Miller, Tom Watson, Ian Baker-Finch, Mark O’Meara and Padraig Harrington.

Scott MacPherson, author of Golf’s Royal Clubs, wrote of Royal Birkdale, “There are great clubs, there are great courses, and then there is Royal Birkdale — the combination of both.”

He’d get no argument from Martin Slumbers, CEO of The R&A.

“Royal Birkdale is a world class championship venue and its outstanding links will once again provide the world’s best men’s professional golfers with a tough but fair test of their talents and capabilities as they compete for the Claret Jug,” Slumbers said. “It has produced many memorable moments that are woven into the story of this historic Championship, including a dramatic final round in 2017 when Jordan Spieth won for the first time. We look forward to another special occasion in three years and it will be fascinating to see which player will emerge to join a list of renowned Champion Golfers to have won at Royal Birkdale.”

Royal Liverpool is set to host the 151st Open next week, with Scotland’s Royal Troon booked for 2024 and Northern Ireland’s Royal Portrush set to have the honor in 2025. The 2026 dates for the 11th playing of the Open at Royal Birkdale are scheduled for the week of July 12-19.

[afflinkbutton text=”Book your trip to Royal Birkdale today” link=”https://www.golfbreaks.com/en-us/vacations/liverpool-and-southport/royal-birkdale-golf-club/?cid=999739987&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=golfweek&utm_campaign=england_best_courses_q3_22_gw”]

[lawrence-related id=778284489,778365864]

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

British Open 2022: Golfweek’s Best ranking of the rota of host courses

How does St. Andrews, site of this week’s Open Championship, stack up against the rest of the course rota?

Each of the 10 layouts on the modern British Open course rota score highly in Golfweek’s Best ranking of top classic golf courses built before 1960 in Great Britain and Ireland, as would be expected. But that doesn’t mean they all are equals.

Check out the rankings of each course on the modern rota below. The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce these rankings, and they are included for each course below.

Dreaming of the British Open? Check out five incredible U.K. golf vacations

Want to play St. Andrews, Carnoustie, and Royal Troon all on the same trip? Yeah…we thought so.

The 2022 British Open is just weeks away and the entire golf world is gearing up to go back home to The Old Course at St. Andrews.

We will all be glued to the coverage of the 150th Open Championship later this month, and most golf fans will daydream about playing St. Andrews and that fantasy golf vacation they’ve been putting off for years.

It’s time to turn those daydreams into reality. Along with our friends from Golfbreaks, Golfweek has compiled five spectacular U.K. golf vacations including trips to England, Northern Ireland and Scotland to play some of the oldest and most famous courses in the world.

We occasionally recommend interesting products, services, and gaming opportunities. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Golfweek operates independently, though, and this doesn’t influence our coverage

Golfweek’s Best 2021: Top 50 Classic International Courses

From Royal County Down to Royal Melbourne, the top International Modern Courses built outside the U.S. before 1960.

Welcome to the initial Golfweek’s Best Classic International Courses list with the highest-rated courses outside the United States that were built before 1960. (Pictured atop this story: The Old Course at St. Andrews, with photo by Steve Flynn/USA TODAY Sports)

Each year we publish many lists, with the U.S.-based Top 200 Modern Courses and the accompanying Top 200 Classic Courses lists being the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

This is the first year for this International Classic list, and it is comprised of thousands of individual ratings of courses around the world. We also recently published the Modern Courses version, shining a spotlight on the best international courses built in or after 1960.

[listicle id=778165015]

The 800-plus members of our ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings on each course are averaged to produce a final rating for each course, which is then ranked against other courses to produce the final lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is.

Key

r: resort course
d: daily fee
p: private course
t: tour course
m: municipal
re: real estate
* Many international private courses allow limited outside play. Contact the courses indicated for more information on their guest policies.

Englishman Joe Long ‘chuffed’ after winning British Amateur at Royal Birkdale

Joe Long became the first Englishman to collect the R&A’s British Amateur trophy since 2017.

Joe Long became the first Englishman to collect the R&A’s British Amateur trophy since 2017. There were few there to see it Sunday at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England, thanks to pandemic protocols, but Long defeated good friend Joe Harvey in the scheduled 36-hole final to put his name in golf lore.

The day started out relatively slowly at Royal Birkdale, with both players matching pars for the first four holes. But when Long began to build his advantage with a birdie to win the fifth hole, he kept it going. In fact, Long never trailed throughout the day.

Long went into the afternoon 18 with a 2-up advantage, though he quickly lost it as Harvey won the first hole with par. Birdies at Nos. 6 and 7 were key for Long in the afternoon, and once he got Harvey 4 down on the 29th hole, he held him there.

Long had a 30-footer for birdie on the 32nd hole that would have sealed the match, but ultimately won when he and Harvey matched birdies on No. 15, the 33rd hole of the day.

“That sounds amazing, 125th Amateur Champion has quite a nice ring to it,” Long told the R&A. “I was feeling nervous, we both were. My game plan was just to try and stick in the present as much as I could, forget about all the rewards and benefits that come with winning.

“I hit a few ropey shots in the first round, but I started to tee my driver down and get it back in play. I felt like I was pretty solid overall. This afternoon again I was hitting driver well and holed a few nice putts as well which was cool. I just had it in play all the time and felt in control.”

Long, ranked No. 102 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings, started his year with a top-10 at the South American Amateur before playing a handful of early-spring events in South Africa. Most recently, he advanced to the quarterfinals at the English Amateur.

For his win, the 23-year-old Long gained exemptions into the British Open at Royal St George’s next year, and by tradition, an invitation to play in the Masters Tournament and an exemption into the U.S. Open.

“Wow, when you say all the exemptions. It still hasn’t hit me. It’s going to be incredible,” Long told the R&A. “This is what I have worked hard for since I started playing golf. I really stuck in there and battled, I am just so chuffed with it really.”

As for Harvey, it was a long week but a rewarding week, even if he wasn’t the last man standing.

“If you had said at the beginning of the week that I would be in the final I don’t think I would have believed you. I am really chuffed with the way I have played all week,” he said.

[lawrence-related id=778063837,778062645,778062091]