The Old Course Lottery: How St Andrews Is Getting Democracy Right (And Wrong)
I’ve been fortunate enough to walk the Old Course at St Andrews maybe thirty times in my career—sometimes as a correspondent, a few times as a guest, and once as a caddie’s shadow back when Tom Lehman was chasing majors. Each time, I’ve watched the same scene unfold: hopeful golfers clutching their lottery tickets like Willy Wonka golden passes, knowing their chances are slim but dreaming anyway.
After 35 years covering this game, I can tell you that St Andrews has cracked something that most of golf’s most exclusive venues haven’t figured out: how to balance reverence for tradition with genuine accessibility. But they haven’t quite nailed it completely, and that’s worth examining.
A Smart System with Real Flaws
Let me be clear about what St Andrews Links Trust has accomplished here. They’ve created a genuinely democratic pathway to the game’s most iconic venue. The ballot system, where
“golfers provide their names, home club and handicaps either online, by phone or at one of the clubhouses before 2pm, two days before the day they wish to play,”
is elegant in its simplicity. No connections needed. No five-figure package deals required (unless you want them). Just your name in a hat, drawn 48 hours out, and either you’re in or you’re not.
In my experience covering club politics and tour access issues, this egalitarian approach is genuinely rare. Most of the world’s top-ranked courses operate on a model that rewards wealth and membership—which has its place, don’t get me wrong. But St Andrews has recognized something crucial: golf’s soul lives in the idea that anyone with a 7-handicap and a dream can play where the legends played.
The math on the current pricing tells an interesting story. A green fee of £355 in 2026, while not cheap, sits in reasonable territory compared to what American clubs charge for similar experiences. Pebble Beach runs north of $500. Pinehurst’s courses hover around $300-400. So on that metric, St Andrews isn’t gouging.
But Here’s Where It Gets Interesting
What strikes me most about this article isn’t what’s being offered—it’s what it reveals about golf’s two-tiered economy. Look at these options:
- The Swilcan Package: £700 high season, £530 low season for two rounds over consecutive days
- The ballot: £355 for a single round, if you win the draw
- The Drive initiative: £42.50 for Scottish residents (44 lucky participants between May-October 2025)
- Authorized tour operators: Let’s just say “a small fortune”
That spread—from £42.50 to potentially £3,000+—tells you everything about modern golf. You’ve got genuine grassroots access sitting right next to premium luxury pricing, and both are somehow working simultaneously.
I’ll be honest: The Drive program is where my heart is.
“179 tees were made available between May and October and 44 golfers were lucky enough to play the Old Course for just £42.50!”
That’s not just golf access; that’s golf equity. During my years caddying and covering the tour, I’ve watched Scottish golf—the game’s birthplace—become increasingly distant from working-class kids who grew up loving the sport. Initiatives like this matter beyond the scorecard.
The Standby System: Romantic Becomes Practical
One small detail jumped out at me:
“Before 2024 golfers would queue up overnight which was a romantic way to get a tee time but that’s now been done away with.”
This is pragmatic evolution. Overnight queueing made for great stories—the kind of pilgrimage narrative that sells well in golf media—but it’s not sustainable or fair. Moving to a standby list drawn around 7pm with messaging is smarter. It’s still got that element of chance, but it doesn’t punish the dedicated in the way all-nighters do.
That said, losing the overnight queue removes something ineffable from the St Andrews experience. There’s something beautifully golf-like about the idea of passionate golfers willing to sacrifice sleep for a chance. But I get why they made the change, and I think most golfers will too once the romance of the idea wears off and the practicality sets in.
The Real Story Here
What the Links Trust has done is create a model where legitimate access exists alongside premium options, and neither cannibalizes the other. That’s genuinely difficult to manage, and they’re managing it reasonably well.
The 2027 Open Championship’s return to St Andrews will intensify all of this, of course. Expect more demand, potentially higher pricing, and—I’d wager—more creative access programs aimed at younger and more diverse players. The Links Trust understands something that Augusta National, for all its traditions, sometimes forgets: golf isn’t really exclusive until everyone believes it is.
After 35 years in this business, I’ve learned that the venues that thrive long-term aren’t the ones that lock doors—they’re the ones that open them strategically. St Andrews isn’t getting everything right, but they’re asking the right questions.
