Skip to main content

Golf Scramble Format Guide: Rules, Variations, and How to Run One

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

A scramble has all players hit from the best shot each time. Best ball has each player play their own ball and count only the lowest score per hole. Captain's choice is another name for scramble. Scrambles are beginner-friendly and the standard format for charity and corporate golf events.

DEFINITION

Scramble
A team format where all players hit their tee shot, the best shot is selected, all players hit from that spot, and the process repeats until the ball is holed. Also called captain's choice or ambrose.

DEFINITION

Best Ball
A format where each player plays their own ball throughout the hole and the team's score for that hole is the lowest individual score recorded. Also called four-ball in match play context. Unlike scramble, each player must complete each hole.

DEFINITION

Captain's Choice
Another name for scramble. All players hit from the best shot each time. The 'captain' selects which shot to use, though in practice most foursomes vote informally.

The scramble is the format that makes golf accessible to everyone at a corporate outing or charity event. No one hits into a water hazard and then has to hole out for a triple bogey while four colleagues watch. The team simply picks the best shot and moves on.

Understanding how it works — and how it differs from other formats — makes you a better organizer and a more useful team member.

How a Scramble Round Works

  1. All four players tee off on each hole.
  2. The team chooses the best tee shot (typically the longest in the fairway, or on par-3s, the closest to the pin).
  3. All four players pick up their balls and place them within a club length of the selected spot.
  4. All four players hit again from the chosen spot.
  5. Repeat until the ball is holed.
  6. Record the total number of strokes taken as the team’s score for the hole.

The process produces significantly lower scores than individual stroke play. Teams routinely birdie holes that would be bogey holes for every player individually — because on any given shot, at least one of four players makes something work.

Scramble vs. Best Ball vs. Captain’s Choice

These terms are used interchangeably at many events, but they are not identical:

Scramble / Captain’s Choice / Ambrose: One ball in play at a time. All players hit from the best shot. Team score per hole.

Best Ball / Four-Ball: Each player plays their own ball all the way to the hole. The team records only the lowest individual score per hole. More demanding — every player must complete every hole.

Best ball produces more competitive scoring and is common in match play formats. Scramble is universally used for charity and corporate events because it keeps slow/beginners involved and prevents 20-stroke holes from occurring.

Running a Fair Scramble Event

The minimum-contribution rule prevents dominant players from effectively playing 18 holes solo. Requiring each player’s tee shot to be used at least twice across the round forces teams to work together.

For handicap-adjusted scoring, a common formula is 10% of the lowest handicapper + 15% of the second + 20% of the third + 25% of the highest. This creates a team handicap that makes diverse groups competitive with more uniformly skilled teams.

Apps like TheGrint and Golf GameBook support scramble scoring directly and can run live leaderboards for groups, eliminating the paper-and-calculator approach that slows down post-round results.

What is the difference between scramble and best ball?

In a scramble, all players hit from the same spot each time (the best shot chosen from the group). One ball is in play at any given moment. In best ball, each player plays their own ball all the way through the hole and the team records the lowest score. Scramble is faster and more forgiving for beginners. Best ball requires every player to complete each hole and is more demanding.

How do handicaps work in a scramble?

Scramble handicaps vary by event format. A common approach: each player's handicap is used at a percentage (e.g., the low handicapper contributes 20%, others contribute 25% each). Some events use a team handicap calculated as a percentage of all four players' handicaps combined. There is no single universal formula — the event organizer sets the method.

How many shots does a scramble typically require from the least skilled player?

Many scramble events include a minimum contribution rule — typically 2–4 drives or tee shots must be used from each player over the round. This prevents a team from using only the best player's shots for all 18 tee shots and ensures casual players contribute meaningfully to the team's effort.

Like what you're reading?

Get early access to Birvix and play golf on your terms.

Want to learn more?

  • P2P tee-time exchange
  • Peer-reviewed playing partners
  • Handicap integrity protection
What is an ambrose scramble?
Ambrose is the Australian name for scramble, sometimes used interchangeably. Some event organizers use 'ambrose' to refer specifically to a two-person scramble (as opposed to a foursome scramble). The rules are the same: hit from the best shot each time.
Can you use a mulligan in a scramble?
Mulligans are an optional add-on in many charity scrambles — typically sold as a fundraising mechanism. A mulligan allows a team to re-hit any shot once during the round. Mulligans are not part of formal rules but are standard in casual charity events.
What score do most scramble teams shoot?
In a typical charity scramble with mixed handicaps, teams often finish 10–20 under par depending on field skill level, the generous nature of scramble format, and whether mulligans are in play. In more competitive scrambles, teams shoot 6–12 under par. Par or better is unusual.
How do you run a scramble tournament for a group of 20 people?
Divide into foursomes (5 teams of 4). Set a shotgun start time so all teams begin simultaneously on different holes. Designate a scoring person per team. Collect scorecards at the end or use a scoring app like TheGrint, Golf GameBook, or 18Birdies. Calculate net scores if using handicaps, gross scores if not. Award prizes at a post-round gathering.

Ready to play golf on your own terms?

Get Started — Free

Keep reading