How Many Golfers Make the Cut at The Open? The 2026 Rules at Royal Birkdale

Seventy golfers and ties make the cut at The Open Championship. After 36 holes, the 156-player field is trimmed to the 70 lowest scores — plus anyone tied at that number — and everyone else goes home before the weekend. That rule is in effect right now at the 2026 Open at Royal Birkdale, where the cut falls at the end of Friday’s second round.

Two details trip people up. First, ties count: if a dozen players share 70th place, all of them advance, which is why the weekend field regularly runs to 75-80 players. In 2025 at Royal Portrush it landed on exactly 70, with one-over par the magic number. Second, there is no 10-shot rule — a player nine strokes off the lead but outside the top 70 is finished, full stop. The Open also uses no secondary cut, so however many survive Friday, they all play 72 holes.

Among the four men’s majors, The Open and the PGA Championship are tied for the most generous cut at top 70 and ties. The U.S. Open keeps 60 and ties, and the Masters — with its much smaller invitational field — keeps just 50 and ties. The full comparison is in the chart below.

NFL History

How the Cut Works at The Open

The 2026 rules at Royal Birkdale, and how every major compares

Top 70Make the Cut
+ TiesAll Advance
36Holes Played
156Field Size

Cut Rules Across the Majors

2026 rules. All cuts are made after 36 holes.

Tournament Cut Rule Field Notes
The Open Championship Top 70 and ties 156 No 10-shot rule; single cut after 36 holes
PGA Championship Top 70 and ties 156 Identical rule to The Open
U.S. Open Top 60 and ties 156
The Masters Top 50 and ties 91 (2026) Smallest field, tightest cut
Standard PGA Tour event Top 65 and ties Varies For full-field events

The Open Cut: Key Facts

Fact Answer Detail
2026 cut rule Top 70 and ties After 36 holes at Royal Birkdale; more than half the field goes home
2025 cut Exactly 70 players One-over par or better made the weekend at Royal Portrush
Last cut at Birkdale Five-over par In 2017, when Jordan Spieth won
10-shot rule Not used Being within 10 of the lead guarantees nothing
Secondary cut None No trimming if ties swell the weekend field
Before 1986 Two cuts The Open cut the field after both 36 and 54 holes
Playoff format 3-hole aggregate Lowest combined score over three holes wins the Claret Jug

The Two-Cut Era

Until 1985, The Open cut the field twice — once after 36 holes and again after 54. The modern single-cut format arrived in 1986 and has been untouched since.

Why No 10-Shot Rule Isn’t Cruel

Links golf produces massive comebacks anyway: Paul Lawrie won the 1999 Open after starting the final round ten shots back — the largest last-day rally in major history.

Who Gets In at All

The 156-man field blends exemptions and qualifying: every top-50 player in the world rankings, past champions, recent major winners, and spots earned through the R&A’s Open Qualifying Series.

The Cut in Practice at Birkdale

The 2026 edition — the 154th Open — opened Thursday, July 16 with 59 of the 156 players shooting par or better on a firm, fast Royal Birkdale, led by American debutant Jackson Suber at five-under 65. That bunching is exactly what makes cut Friday tense: with scores packed tight, more than 80 players can sit inside the provisional top-70 line while only 70-and-ties will survive it, and big names — Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose among them this year — can find themselves grinding just to reach Saturday. Defending champion Scottie Scheffler, chasing the year’s final major after the first three went to McIlroy, Aaron Rai and Wyndham Clark, opened well clear of the danger zone.

The Bottom Line

The cut at The Open is the top 70 players and ties after 36 holes — the same as the PGA Championship, looser than the U.S. Open’s 60 and the Masters’ 50 — with no 10-shot rule and no second trim. Roughly half the 156-man field survives to chase the Claret Jug on the weekend, and at Royal Birkdale in 2026, that line falls Friday evening.