Updated daily · June 17, 2026

Golf Tips for Beginners

A working shortlist of golf calls, grouped by the market each one sits in, with the basics explained as you go. Open any pick and the thinking behind it is right there — course fit, recent form and value, no name pulled from thin air. Written by Anders Lindqvist.

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golf tips for beginners by Anders Lindqvist
Every golf call here comes with its working shown — the course fit, the form and the read that led to it.

How to use these golf tips for beginners

Every pick folds out into the reasoning behind it: the bet type the selection is built on, the course and field that drive it, and the argument linking the two. That's what separates these golf tips for beginners from a bare list of names — the card spells out where the edge comes from, so you can learn the logic as you go.

1

Clock the bet type first

Whether it's an outright winner, each-way or a top-10 finish, the selection's wording tells you what's actually being backed before you read a word of the case.

2

Weigh the argument behind it

Open the pick and the write-up walks through course fit, recent form and the stats it leans on — enough for a beginner to decide whether it stacks up.

3

Favour the calls that converge

A selection is firmest when course fit, form and the logic all pull one way. Where they pull apart, treat it as a lean, not a lock.

Treat every call as a lean, never a sure thing. Golf fields are deep, so even the strongest pick is a small edge — back it at a sensible stake and let the value play out over time.

Which golf tips actually earn a stake

Confidence shouldn't be spread evenly across the field. The picks worth a second look are the ones where course fit, recent form and the underlying stats all agree. A player who suits the course, is striking it well and is priced fairly — with a write-up that says so — carries far more weight than one big finish out of nowhere.

A lean is more honest than a lock

Golf is the highest-variance sport to bet — a 120-player field means even the favourite usually wins less than one time in seven. That's exactly why naming a fair price beats promising a winner, and why each-way and top-finish markets often make more sense for beginners than backing an outright.

Use it to narrow down, not to pile on

The page works best as a filter. Run an eye over the firmest reads, check the course history and recent form, then back only the handful where it all lines up. Over a season, being selective and staking small beats spraying bets across the whole field.

Golf tips for beginners — your questions

For beginners, the best golf bets start with course fit and recent form, and lean on each-way or top-finish markets rather than backing an outright winner in a huge field. Every pick here shows that reasoning so you can learn the logic while you follow along.
An each-way golf bet is two bets in one: half your stake on the player to win, half on them to place inside the top positions the bookmaker offers. It means you can still collect if your player finishes high without winning the tournament.
Different courses reward different skills — driving distance, approach accuracy or putting. A player who suits the layout and has good history there is a far stronger bet than one in form but ill-suited to the venue.
Yes. Every selection and the full reasoning behind it is free to read and updated around the tour calendar, with nothing locked behind a paywall.
The card refreshes around the golf schedule and the latest pre-tournament information, so it reflects the events actually coming up rather than ones already finished.
Golf is high variance because fields are large and even favourites win less than one time in seven. Beginners should keep stakes small and consistent, and treat outright bets as a small edge rather than a likely winner.
Anders Lindqvist
Written by
Golf Betting Tips specialist

I'm Anders Lindqvist, based in Stockholm, and I write the golf tips at htftpredictions.com — reading course fit and form rather than just the world ranking.

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Everything here is for information only. No result is ever a sure thing — never risk more than you'd be fine losing.