The Hollywoodbets Durban July is South Africa's biggest and most bet horse race, dating back to 1897. The 2027 edition will be the 131st running, provisionally set for Saturday 3 July 2027 at Hollywoodbets Greyville Racecourse in Durban. The distance stays 2200 metres on turf, and the R10 million purse introduced in 2026 is expected to hold. Gold Circle usually confirms the exact date and card in Sep-Oct of the preceding year, and we update this page as details are announced.
What to expect: another 18-runner Grade 1 handicap with a mix of Cape and KZN trainers, three-year-olds carrying favoured weights, and a full Hollywoodbets marketing programme around the day. The 2026 winner, Note To Self, has shown that Justin Snaith's yard has the July template dialled in, and the Cape-based operation is a good early reference point for 2027 ante-post markets when they open. Full recap of the 2026 Durban July is on the archive page.
On this page
Key Facts at a Glance
The 131st Hollywoodbets Durban July is provisionally scheduled for Saturday 3 July 2027 at Greyville. Gold Circle typically confirms the exact date, race card position and prep-race calendar in September-October of the preceding year. The confirmed race conditions (distance, grade, weight-for-age rules) do not change year to year.
The R10 million purse introduced for the 2026 edition is expected to hold into 2027, keeping the Durban July among the highest-value handicap races in the Southern Hemisphere. Any adjustment would come with Gold Circle's Sep-Oct 2026 season calendar release. The winner's share of a R10 million purse sits in the region of R5.8 million based on the standard payout schedule.
Hollywoodbets has been the title sponsor since 2020 and the partnership is contracted well into 2027. The race is administered by Gold Circle, the racing authority responsible for KwaZulu-Natal and Western Cape meetings. Horses must be three years old or older to enter, and weights are allocated by the official handicapper based on each horse's SA Handicap rating. Three-year-olds carry a significant weight advantage and have won a majority of runnings since 1998.
What to Expect in the 2027 Durban July
The 2027 Durban July follows the same format that has defined the race for decades: an 18-runner Grade 1 handicap over 2200 metres on turf at Greyville, held on the first Saturday of July. The provisional date is Saturday 3 July 2027, subject to Gold Circle's final calendar confirmation. The R10 million purse from 2026 is expected to hold, and Hollywoodbets remains title sponsor.
The 2027 preview builds on three years of accumulated form and pattern data. Justin Snaith's win with Note To Self in 2026, his sixth July, confirmed that Cape Town-based yards continue to compete strongly against home-turf KZN operations, particularly with three-year-olds carrying handicap-friendly weights. Brett Crawford (Green With Envy 2023, Oriental Charm 2024) and Dean Kannemeyer (The Real Prince 2025) also have recent-era July form to defend against. Watch these three yards' March-May Grade 1 and Grade 2 entries when the 2027 prep calendar opens.
Key Prep Races to Track (Feb-Jun 2027)
The road to the Durban July winds through several Grade 1 and Grade 2 races in the four months before race day. Horses that perform well in these tend to dominate the July ante-post markets. Track these prep races when they run in 2027:
The strongest signals are usually the Daily News 2000 in May and the Champions Cup in June: both are run over similar distances and often on similar going. A horse winning either at a competitive rating carries strong 2200-metre credentials into the July.
Yards and Trainers to Watch
Justin Snaith Racing (Cape Town) enters 2027 as the reigning July winner and remains the yard with the most current-decade top-three finishes. Brett Crawford, working out of Cape Town, has back-to-back mid-decade wins from 2023 and 2024 and continues to target the race. Dean Kannemeyer, KZN-based at Summerveld, took the 2025 edition with The Real Prince and holds the local-track advantage. Alec Laird's Do It Again (2018, 2019) remains the last horse to win back-to-back Julys, so watch whether any 2026 top-three finisher steps back up in 2027.
Jockey-wise, Richard Fourie now holds a fresh July win with Note To Self and joins Piere Strydom, S'Manga Khumalo and Craig Zackey as active riders with July SP-favourite winning records. Gavin Lerena and Warren Kennedy also have wins in the recent past and remain regular Grade 1 pilots. Watch for the leading jockey book coming into declarations.
Three-Year-Olds vs Older Horses
Three-year-olds have won approximately 60% of Durban Julys since 1998, largely because their weight allocations under handicap conditions tend to be several kilograms lighter than older rivals. Note To Self in 2026 continued that trend, carrying handicap-friendly weights against seven-year-olds like King Pelles. For 2027, look at the leading 2027 three-year-old crop (foaled 2024) that show themselves in the SA Derby, Cape Derby and Daily News 2000. A three-year-old winning at 2000m in April-May is a genuine July threat.
Older horses are far from ruled out. A four-year-old that missed a start on the 2026 July trail but shows classy 2200m form in the January-June 2027 season is worth backing against short-priced three-year-old rivals. The 2020 Belgarion (Justin Snaith) and 2022 Sparkling Water (Mike de Kock) were both four-year-old winners.
Weight-for-Age and the Handicapper
The 2200-metre Durban July is a handicap race, so the official handicapper allocates weights based on each horse's SA Handicap rating. Higher ratings mean heavier weights. For 2027, when the entries are announced in late May or early June, look for horses rated between the 110s and 120s carrying weights in the 52-56kg range. That's the sweet spot: enough class to compete at Grade 1 level, light enough to keep the stamina strong over the final 400 metres.
A top-rated horse (125+) carrying 60kg or more faces a tough test at this distance. Even the strongest recent form is compromised when the weight goes above 58kg over 2200m against 17 rivals. The 2026 SP for Note To Self at 4/1 favourite reflected that weight-value balance.
The full 2027 field of 18 runners is typically confirmed in late June, with weights and barrier draw following in the days before the race. This page will be updated as those details are confirmed by Gold Circle. For the historic 2026 result and Tote dividends, see our Durban July 2026 recap.
How to Bet on the Durban July
SA bookmakers and the tote (Phumelela/Gold Circle pool system) offer lots of markets on the Durban July. The distinction between fixed-odds and pool bets matters before you place: fixed-odds lock in your return at placement time, while pool bets pay out based on the total money wagered, so the dividend only becomes clear after the race. Below is a full breakdown of the bet types available.
Need to work out your potential returns before betting? The each-way calculator handles Win, Place, and each-way returns in one step.
Best Bookmakers for Durban July Betting
Not every SA bookmaker covers horse racing in the same depth. The five below offer the strongest Durban July coverage among licensed operators and are the ones to watch when 2027 ante-post markets open in March-April. All accept both fixed-odds and pool bets on the main race. Rankings reflect horse racing depth, ante-post market availability, and platform reliability on race day.
Some operators pay for featured placement, which is always disclosed.
For a broader comparison, see the best horse racing betting sites in South Africa guide, or browse the full ranking of all 44 SA bookmakers.
Form Guide: How to Pick a Winner
The Durban July is run under handicap conditions over 2200 metres on a turf track that can change significantly with Durban's weather. Picking a winner requires working through several factors simultaneously. The following breakdown covers what matters most and why.
Weight Allocation
This is the single most important factor in any handicap race. The official handicapper assigns weights based on each horse's SA Handicap rating: higher-rated horses carry more kilograms. Over 2200 metres, a difference of even 2 to 3 kilograms can be the margin between winning and fading in the final straight. When assessing the field, look for horses carrying light weights relative to their form. These are the horses the handicapper has identified as having the most upside relative to their current rating.
Horses allocated 54kg or less often represent value because their rating is low enough to suggest they haven't been fully tested at Grade 1 level, yet their recent form shows they can mix it with higher-rated rivals. A top-rated horse carrying 60kg or more faces a genuine test of stamina at this distance.
Distance Suitability
2200 metres is a middle-distance test that exposes horses not suited to staying. A horse that has won convincingly at 1600 metres may not see out the final 400 metres of the July, particularly under weight. The clearest indicator of distance suitability is documented form at 2000 metres or beyond. Horses that have won at 2000m or 2400m in graded company are demonstrably suited to the trip.
Three-year-olds have won approximately 60% of runnings since 1998. The reason is partly the weight advantage: younger horses are typically allocated lighter weights under handicap conditions, and they also tend to be less fatigued than older rivals who have raced through a full season. Entering the 2026 edition, the three-year-old generation's form from February through June is worth tracking closely.
Track Conditions at Greyville
Greyville is a turf course in Durban, which means track conditions are directly affected by KwaZulu-Natal's rainfall patterns. July in Durban can be dry or wet depending on the year. The official going is announced on race morning and changes how you should assess the field. Horses with a preference for firm ground may be disadvantaged if the track softens after overnight rain.
When checking form, look for the going description in each horse's recent race results. A horse consistently performing better on "Good" going than "Soft" going is worth downgrading if rain is forecast in the days before the race. Conversely, some horses relish cut in the ground and become significantly harder to beat on a wet track.
Trainer and Jockey Combinations
Durban-based trainers operating out of Summerveld have a measurable home advantage. They know Greyville's surface, the quirks of each training track, and how to peak horses specifically for a July target. Historically, trainers like Dean Kannemeyer, Justin Snaith, and Brett Crawford have the strongest records in the race. When one of these stables enters a horse showing strong recent form, it carries extra weight.
Jockey choice matters too. The July field is large (18 runners), which creates a crowded early pace. Riders who know when to hold a horse back, conserve energy through the first 1000 metres, and then produce a late run are consistently more successful here than riders who try to lead from the front on horses that prefer to race prominently. KZN-based jockeys with strong Greyville records tend to have an edge in reading the pace.
Prep Race Performance
The primary lead-up races to the Durban July include the Gold Challenge, the Daily News 2000, and the Pinnacle Stakes. A horse that performed well in a competitive Grade 2 or Grade 3 race in May or June is more likely to arrive race-fit on July 4 than a horse that hasn't raced since April. Trainers who target the July specifically will have their horses doing timed gallops in the weeks before the race. Watch for reports from Summerveld in June.
Be cautious of horses coming into the race off a long break, even if their form before that break was strong. Conversely, a horse that ran a close third in the Daily News 2000 over a shorter trip and is stepping up to 2200m for the July may be better than that third placing suggests if they have stamina in their pedigree.
The Three-Year-Old Factor
Three-year-olds have dominated the July over the past three decades for two reasons: weight advantage and freshness. Older horses (four, five, or six-year-olds) have accumulated more racing miles and tend to carry higher handicap ratings, which means heavier weights. A well-bred three-year-old with a rapidly improving form profile can enter the July with an allocated weight of 52 to 54kg and have enough raw talent to beat classier rivals conceding significant kilograms.
When the final field is declared in June, identify the three-year-olds in the lineup first. If any of them show strong recent form at distances of 1800 metres or more, they're worth placing high in your ratings regardless of their win price.
Past Winners (2016-2026)
Looking at the last ten winners shows patterns in what the July tends to reward: horses with proven distance form, weight advantages, and trainers who know Greyville. Note the frequency of KZN-based trainers and the prevalence of horses that stepped up from a Grade 2 win in the prep races.
| Year | Winner | Jockey | Trainer |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Note To Self | Richard Fourie | Justin Snaith |
| 2025 | The Real Prince | Craig Zackey | Dean Kannemeyer |
| 2024 | Oriental Charm | JP van der Merwe | Brett Crawford |
| 2023 | Green With Envy | Kabelo Matsunyane | Brett Crawford |
| 2022 | Sparkling Water | S'Manga Khumalo | Mike de Kock |
| 2021 | Kommetdiansen | Gavin Lerena | Weiho Marwing |
| 2020 | Belgarion | Warren Kennedy | Justin Snaith |
| 2019 | Do It Again (back-to-back) | Piere Strydom | Alec Laird |
| 2018 | Do It Again | Piere Strydom | Alec Laird |
| 2017 | Marinaresco | Anton Marcus | Sean Tarry |
| 2016 | The Conglomerate | Piere Strydom | Alec Laird |