How Chepstow Tips Work on The Tipster League
Every tipster on The Tipster League is ranked by all-time results across all UK and Irish racecourses in our league table. For each race on the Chepstow card, the tip shown comes from the highest-ranked tipster who has tipped in that race. Tips can update through the morning as more selections come in, but all selections are locked in at 12:00 BST.
What sets The Tipster League apart is that every selection is recorded on each tipster's public profile — wins, losses, and everything in between. The “Top Tipsters at Chepstow” section on this page breaks that down further, showing how each tipster has performed at this course specifically.
A strong ranking reflects past results, not future outcomes, so always do your own research before placing a bet.
Chepstow Racecourse
Chepstow is a left-handed oval circuit of approximately two miles, set in the grounds of the former Piercefield Park estate about two miles north of the town in Monmouthshire, Wales. The course is dual-purpose, staging flat racing from May to September and National Hunt from October to April, all on turf. It is widely regarded as one of the most testing tracks in Britain, and the combination of steep gradients, stiff fences, and ground that often rides heavy separates it from flatter, fairer courses.
The round course drops downhill before reaching the home straight, which then climbs steeply for over two furlongs before levelling out near the winning post. At five furlongs, it is one of the longest finishing straights in the country and puts a genuine premium on stamina. On the chase course there are eleven stiff fences per circuit — five of them in the home straight — with a run-in of around 250 yards after the last. Flat races up to a mile use the separate straight course, which runs mostly uphill.
The subsoil holds water and the going can turn heavy quickly, particularly through the winter months when the course stages its most important fixtures. Around thirty meetings a year are held here, with the jumps programme drawing the larger fields. Chepstow opened on 6 August 1926 — the inaugural meeting drew 20,000 spectators — and is owned by Arena Racing Company. For fixture dates and visitor information, see the official Chepstow Racecourse website.
Key Races at Chepstow
The headline event is the Welsh Grand National, a Premier Handicap staying chase over three miles six furlongs — one of the longest distances in the National Hunt calendar — run each December. It is the richest race in Welsh racing. The distance and often testing ground make it a natural trial for horses with Grand National ambitions at Aintree — Native River, Earth Summit, Corbiere, and Silver Birch all won the Welsh Grand National before going on to land either the Cheltenham Gold Cup or the Grand National. Bonanza Boy won the race in consecutive years. For form at the spring festivals, our Cheltenham tips page covers that course in detail.
Welsh Grand National day also features the Finale Juvenile Hurdle, a Grade 2 contest for four-year-olds that serves as one of the principal trials for the Triumph Hurdle at Cheltenham. Defi Du Seuil and Mysilv both won the Finale before going on to win the Triumph Hurdle at Cheltenham.
The jumps season opens in October with a two-day meeting anchored by the Persian War Novices’ Hurdle, a Grade 2 over about two miles three furlongs. The race is named after the triple Champion Hurdle winner trained near Chepstow by Colin Davies. Silviniaco Conti won the Persian War in 2010 before going on to win the King George VI Chase twice, and the October meeting has a strong record of producing form that holds up through the winter.
On the flat, racing from May to September tends to produce competitive summer handicaps on the straight course.
What to Look for When Betting at Chepstow
The undulations and long uphill finish put the emphasis squarely on stamina. Front-runners tend to do well, particularly over fences — eleven stiff obstacles per circuit leave little room for sloppy jumpers, and the 250-yard run-in after the last is too short to mount a sustained challenge from behind. Prominent racers who jump accurately and handle the turns at pace hold a clear advantage.
Over hurdles, the test is less about the flights and more about coping with the undulations at racing speed. A horse that handles the switches between uphill and downhill sections without losing momentum is hard to peg back in the home straight. Novice hurdlers in particular can struggle with the terrain — the sharp changes in gradient expose any lack of balance or experience.
On the flat, horses drawn high hold a distinct advantage over seven furlongs on faster ground, particularly in large fields. The draw bias data on this page, broken down by distance over the last five years, is worth studying before looking at the card. Over longer distances on the round course, the draw matters less but the uphill finish still catches out horses that fail to stay.
Ground conditions are always worth checking close to race time. The low-lying position and water-retaining subsoil mean the going can deteriorate quickly after prolonged rain. The Welsh Grand National has been postponed on more than one occasion due to waterlogging, and winter meetings regularly produce officially heavy ground. The Flat and National Hunt statistics on this page show the leading jockeys, trainers, and owners at Chepstow — the same names tend to dominate, so those numbers are worth a look.
For combination bets, our Lucky 15 horse racing tips page pulls together four-horse selections, while our horse racing accumulator tips page covers multi-leg bets — though adding more legs always reduces the probability.