Understanding Your Betting Options
Win Bets: Simple enough - your horse has to finish first. But at Cheltenham, even favourites get turned over regularly.
Each-Way Bets: This splits your stake into two - one bet to win, one to place. Standard place terms offer 1/4 or 1/5 odds for the first four places, but bookies often enhance these during Cheltenham. Many handicaps see 5, 6, or even 7 places available, which makes each-way betting on bigger-priced selections much more attractive.
Ante-Post Betting: Getting your bets on early can secure better odds, but there's risk involved. Traditional ante-post means your stake is lost if your selection doesn't run. Non-Runner No Bet (NRNB) returns your stake if your horse is a non-runner - much safer for nervous punters.
Lucky 15s: Four selections become 15 separate bets - four singles, six doubles, four trebles, and one four-fold accumulator. Plenty of bookies offer money back if only one wins, which takes some of the sting out of a bad day.
Forecasts and Tricasts: Picking the first two or three home in the correct order can pay handsomely, but you need skill and luck in equal measure.
Strategic Cheltenham Betting Principles
1. Course Form is King
Cheltenham's unique characteristics - that stiff uphill finish, the undulations, the white-hot atmosphere - suit some horses and expose others. Previous Festival form matters. All 12 Gold Cup winners since 2013 had previously run at Cheltenham, with eight having actually won there.
2. Respect the Statistics on Favourites
Only about 29% of favourites win at the Cheltenham Festival. Opening day is your best chance of backing short-priced winners. Gold Cup Day? Historically the toughest for favourites - five of the last 25 Festivals have seen no favourites win on Friday at all.
3. Target Extra Place Offers
Bookies go bonkers during Cheltenham, competing with enhanced place terms. Find handicaps offering 5, 6, or 7 places. Each-way betting gets much more profitable when those extra places are available, especially with selections priced between 8/1 and 20/1.
4. Shop Around for the Best Prices
Different bookmakers offer different odds, and the variation can be significant. Taking the best available price on every selection adds up over four days. On-course bookies can sometimes surprise you with decent prices too - always worth checking the boards.
5. Consider Ground Conditions
The going at Cheltenham changes everything. Some horses need quick ground, others love it soft or heavy. Check the latest going reports before you finalise your selections, and be ready to rip up your plans if the ground changes.