GoralBet

Best Betting Sites in New Zealand 2026

I've covered Aussie and Kiwi betting since 2014, and New Zealand is the strangest market I work in. It is the only OECD country where one operator, TAB NZ, holds a statutory monopoly on local sports betting, yet roughly NZ$1.5 billion still flows out to offshore books every year. That paradox is the entire story of online betting here, and it is about to crack open. The Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 27 April and will license up to 15 offshore operators for the first time, with the application window closing 1 December 2026. This guide is built around that change. The comparison table is first, then the full operator data, the 25 books I have actually deposited at, and the practical Kiwi rules you need before you fund an account.

Search "best betting sites NZ" and you get a wall of affiliate pages that all forget to mention one fact: it is illegal under the Gambling Act 2003 to operate an online casino inside New Zealand, but it is not illegal for a Kiwi to bet at an offshore .com from a couch in Wellington. That grey area is why this list looks the way it does. I rank what I would actually use, with the regulator caveats up front. This is my professional read at publication. Operator availability changes weekly, and the new licensed market opens in 2027, so always confirm an operator on the Department of Internal Affairs gambling pages before depositing.

Compliance note (please read): Online sports betting into New Zealand is reserved to TAB NZ under the Racing Industry Act 2020. Offshore operators are unlicensed in NZ and sit outside Department of Internal Affairs consumer protections. The Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 (Royal Assent 27 April 2026) will license up to 15 online casino operators from 2027, with applications closing 1 December 2026. Until those licences are issued, every casino site on this page operates from offshore. If gambling is no longer fun, free confidential help is available through the Problem Gambling Foundation of New Zealand on 0800 664 262.

Best betting sites in New Zealand 2026: comparison table

My ranking of the best Kiwi-friendly sportsbooks and casino sites, regulator status checked at publication. TAB NZ is the only domestically licensed sportsbook. Everything else is offshore.
#BookmakerI rate it best forRegulated statusPayments I used
122betBiggest market spread for KiwisOffshore (Curaçao)POLi, cards, e-wallets, crypto
2BetLabelCrypto + POLi all-rounderOffshore (Curaçao)POLi, cards, Skrill, crypto
3IvibetCasino-led with rugby and esportsOffshore (Curaçao)POLi, e-wallets, crypto
4BetRepublicNewer all-round sportsbookOffshorePOLi, cards, crypto
5KingMakerCasino + sportsbook comboOffshore (Anjouan)POLi, cards, crypto
6TAB NZOnly domestically licensed sportsbookDIA / Racing ActPOLi, cards, NZ bank
7bet365In-play and live streamingOffshore (UKGC parent)POLi, Visa, Mastercard, Skrill
8SportsbetAussie/Kiwi sports depthOffshore (NT Australia)POLi, Visa/Mastercard, PayID
9LadbrokesNRL and racing marketsOffshore (Entain AU)POLi, cards, bank transfer
10PointsBetSpread betting and NBAOffshore (NT Australia)POLi, cards, BPAY
11NedsSame-game multisOffshore (Entain AU)POLi, cards
12TopSportTote-style racing + NZ focusOffshore (NT Australia)POLi, bank transfer
13PalmerBetFamily-owned Aussie bookieOffshore (NT Australia)POLi, Visa/Mastercard
14UnibetEuropean football and cricketOffshore (MGA/Kindred)POLi, Skrill, Neteller
15BetVictorPremier League pricingOffshore (UKGC parent)Cards, Skrill, bank
16William HillBet buildersOffshore (evoke / 888)Cards, PayPal
17BetwayMulti-sport accumulatorsOffshore (Super Group)POLi, cards, Skrill
18PlayOJONo-wagering casino, NZ-friendlyOffshore (SkillOnNet / MGA)POLi, cards, e-wallets
19JackpotCityNZ$1 deposit pioneer (casino)Offshore (Kahnawake/MGA)POLi, Visa/Mastercard, Neteller
20Casino DaysNZ$1 deposit, huge slot libraryOffshore (Curaçao)POLi, cards, crypto
21Spin CasinoNZ$1 free spins entry pointOffshore (MGA)POLi, cards, Neteller
22LeoVegasMobile app experienceOffshore (MGM/MGA)POLi, cards, Apple Pay
23BetchaDomestic peer-to-peer altDIA-permittedPOLi, NZ bank, card
24PinnacleSharpest odds, high limitsOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, e-wallets, crypto
25Stake.comCrypto sportsbook + esportsOffshore (Curaçao)Crypto only
Honest note on what's above. 22bet, BetLabel, Ivibet, BetRepublic and KingMaker are Goralbet partners, that is why they sit at positions 1 to 5. None of them holds a TAB NZ licence, because that is impossible: TAB has a statutory monopoly on local online sports betting under the Racing Industry Act 2020, and no private operator can be granted one. They serve Kiwis from offshore Curaçao and Anjouan licences. TAB NZ is the only book on this page with domestic NZ regulatory cover. Sportsbet, Ladbrokes, Neds, PointsBet, TopSport and PalmerBet are licensed in Australia's Northern Territory (and supervised by the NT Racing Commission) but they accept NZ residents from offshore, they are not regulated by the Department of Internal Affairs. PlayOJO, JackpotCity, Casino Days and Spin Casino are casino-led brands popular for the NZ$1 minimum deposit recreational market. HellSpin (Goralbet rank 4) is intentionally excluded from this page because it is casino-only with no sportsbook, putting a slots brand on a "best NZ betting sites" page would mislead readers researching sports betting. I'd rather tell you that up front than dress an offshore book in a costume it doesn't own.

Operator data at a glance: regulated NZ sportsbooks (TAB monopoly)

The honest answer here is "two and a half operators". TAB NZ runs the monopoly. Betcha is a smaller DIA-permitted peer-to-peer product that has been live since 2019 under a separate carve-out and works more like a bet-versus-friend exchange than a fixed-odds book. NZ Lotteries handles Lotto, Strike, Powerball and Keno, a separate statutory monopoly run by the Lotteries Commission. All figures are in NZD and current at publication.

The locally permitted options. Payout speeds are for POLi or NZ bank transfer once your TAB or Betcha account is fully verified.
OperatorOwner & statusMin dep / withdrawalPOLi / bank payoutKey payment methods
TAB NZTAB New Zealand (TAB NZ Limited); statutory monopoly under Racing Industry Act 2020. Wagering services contracted to Entain from 2024 under a 25-year strategic partnership.NZ$1 / NZ$11 to 3 business days for bank withdrawalPOLi, Visa, Mastercard, NZ bank transfer
BetchaIndependent NZ-owned peer-to-peer wagering platform; DIA-permitted; launched 2019NZ$5 / NZ$51 to 2 business daysPOLi, NZ bank transfer, Visa/Mastercard
NZ LotteriesNZ Lotteries Commission (Crown entity); separate statutory monopoly for lotteriesLottery products only, not a sportsbookLottery payout rulesPOLi, cards, MyLotto wallet

Operator data: offshore international books (use with caution)

These are the books that take the bulk of Kiwi wagering dollars in 2026. None hold an NZ DIA permit. Some have applied or signalled intent to apply for one of the 15 forthcoming online casino licences. Until that licensing round closes in December 2026 and operators are awarded around mid-2027, every name in this table operates from offshore and sits outside the DIA's consumer-protection regime. Limits, currencies and crypto coverage often look better than TAB. Recourse if something goes wrong is harder. I include them for completeness, with the caveat up front.

Offshore and grey-market operators serving NZ. Figures change often, so confirm them on-site before depositing.
BookmakerOwner / baseMin depositFastest payoutKey payment methods
22betMarikit Holdings (Cyprus); Curaçao licenceNZ$1.5015 min to 3h (crypto/e-wallet)POLi, cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
BetLabelTechSolutions Group N.V.; Curaçao; live since 2023NZ$15Within 24 hoursPOLi, cards, Skrill, Neteller, Paysafecard, crypto
IvibetTechOptions Group; Curaçao + Kahnawake (No. 00996); since 2022NZ$10 to $15Crypto ~90 min; POLi/bank ~24hPOLi, ecoPayz, MuchBetter, Neosurf, 15+ cryptos
BetRepublicOffshore; newer; licence detail thinNZ$10POLi under 72h; crypto fasterPOLi, cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
KingMakerNovaForge Ltd; Anjouan (ALSI-152406028-F12); since 2024NZ$20 to $30Crypto under 1h; POLi ~24hPOLi, cards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto
SportsbetFlutter Entertainment (AU); NT licenceNZ$11 to 5 hours weekdaysPOLi, Visa/Mastercard, PayID, BPAY
LadbrokesEntain (AU); NT licenceNZ$102 to 24 hoursPOLi, cards, bank transfer
NedsEntain (AU); NT licenceNZ$102 to 24 hoursPOLi, cards, BPAY
PointsBetPointsBet Holdings (AU); NT licenceNZ$1024 to 48 hoursPOLi, cards, BPAY
TopSportTopSport (AU); NT licenceNZ$5Same business day for verified accountsPOLi, NZ bank transfer
PalmerBetPalmer family (AU); NT licenceNZ$51 to 2 business daysPOLi, Visa/Mastercard
bet365bet365 Group (UK)NZ$101 to 4 hours via POLi/SkrillPOLi, Visa, Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller
UnibetKindred Group (MGA Malta)NZ$101 to 3 daysPOLi, Skrill, Neteller, cards
BetVictorBV Group Holdings (UK)NZ$101 to 3 daysCards, Skrill, bank transfer
William Hillevoke / 888 (UK brand)NZ$101 to 5 daysCards, PayPal, Skrill
BetwaySuper Group (Malta, JSE-listed)NZ$1024 to 72 hoursPOLi, cards, Skrill
PlayOJOSkillOnNet; MGA MaltaNZ$10~24 hours, no minimumPOLi, cards, MuchBetter
JackpotCityBayton Ltd / Baytree Ltd; MGA + Kahnawake; since 1998NZ$1 (promo) / NZ$5 (standard)24 to 48 hoursPOLi, Visa, Mastercard, Neteller, Skrill
Casino DaysHero Gaming / CuraçaoNZ$1Crypto under 1h; POLi 24hPOLi, cards, MiFinity, 10+ cryptos
Spin CasinoBayton / Baytree (MGA); Bayton GroupNZ$1 (promo) / NZ$10 (standard)24 to 72 hoursPOLi, Visa, Mastercard, Neteller, Skrill
LeoVegasMGM Resorts / LeoVegas Group (MGA)NZ$10Fast (24h target)POLi, cards, Apple Pay
PinnaclePinnacle Sports (Curaçao)NZ$10Crypto fast; cards 1 to 5 daysCards, e-wallets, crypto
Stake.comMedium Rare N.V. (Curaçao); since 2017Crypto onlyCrypto near-instant, under 24hBitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, 15+ others; no POLi

How welcome offers and T&Cs actually work in New Zealand

TAB NZ runs its own promotional framework under Racing Industry Act constraints, and it is far quieter than the offshore market. Outside TAB, every promotion you see on a Kiwi-facing site comes from an offshore book. Across the books I tested, the structure is usually one of these:

  • Bonus bets vs deposit match. Most welcome offers at offshore sportsbooks are bonus bets (sometimes called free bets), not cash. With a bonus bet you keep the winnings but not the stake. A NZ$50 bonus bet that wins at even odds returns NZ$50, not NZ$100.
  • Minimum odds to qualify. Qualifying bets usually need odds around 1.50 or higher. Bets below that threshold often do not trigger or release the offer.
  • Rollover or wagering. Bonus bets are commonly 1x play-through. Deposit-match offers can carry heavier rollover, often 5x to 10x the bonus. That is where value quietly disappears.
  • Expiry. Offers typically expire in 7 to 30 days. Unused bonus bets are forfeited.
  • Eligible payment methods. Several books exclude POLi, Skrill or Neteller from a welcome offer. The method you deposit with can matter.
  • NZ$1 minimum deposit culture. JackpotCity, Casino Days, Spin Casino and a handful of others built a casino subgenre around the NZ$1 minimum deposit. Free spins are usually attached. Read the wagering: a "$1 deposit for 70 free spins" promotion at JackpotCity historically carries 200x wagering inside a 90-day window. That is steep.
  • TAB NZ promotions. Smaller in scale, more conservative on advertising, and constrained by the Racing Industry Act's harm-minimisation principles. No "bet $10 get $100" headline you might see in Australia.

My rule of thumb: judge a promotion by its real terms, minimum odds, rollover, expiry, payment exclusions, not by a headline number. A NZ$50 bonus bet at 1x is worth more in practice than NZ$200 of bonus credit locked behind 10x rollover.

How I tested these New Zealand betting sites

I opened, deposited and withdrew at every operator in the top 25. No theory. Just the five things that decide whether a book is worth your NZD.

Market depth (rugby union, Super Rugby Pacific, NRL, cricket, racing)

Mainstream coverage is the baseline. What separates the best Kiwi-facing books is depth on the sports you actually care about: All Blacks Tests, Bledisloe Cup, Super Rugby Pacific, NRL with the Warriors, Black Caps Tests and T20s, the IPL and Big Bash, Premier League and the A-League, and NZ thoroughbred plus harness racing. bet365 typically runs 1,000-plus markets across 30-plus sports, the offshore benchmark. TAB NZ and TopSport have the deepest local racing fields. 22bet and BetLabel add an enormous esports and lower-league football spread.

Odds and pricing

Bonuses get the headlines. Price is what compounds. I compare the vig on standard markets. Pinnacle routinely prices tighter than promo-heavy books, typical 2.5 to 3% margin on rugby and NRL versus 6 to 8% at retail-style books. BetVictor and bet365 tend to lead the Premier League market early in the week. TAB NZ is competitive on NZ-specific markets (Super Rugby Pacific player props, Trotting Cup), softer on global football.

Payments and withdrawal speed (POLi, NZ bank transfer, crypto)

POLi is the Kiwi default for instant bank-to-bookmaker deposits. It is the metric I care about most for offshore books because cards routinely get declined by ANZ, ASB, BNZ and Westpac when the merchant code reads "gaming". I time real withdrawals. bet365 returned POLi cash-outs in roughly 1 to 4 hours, the fastest I logged for an offshore book. Sportsbet and TopSport usually landed in under 24 hours via NZ bank transfer. TAB NZ ran 1 to 3 business days. Crypto payouts at 22bet, Stake.com and Casino Days cleared in under an hour in testing.

App and live betting

I do most of my in-play betting on a phone. LeoVegas still has the slickest casino-led app I used this year. bet365 pairs reliable in-play with live streaming and early cash-out, its Super Rugby and NRL streams are the reason I keep an account funded. TAB NZ's app has improved markedly since the Entain partnership took effect in 2024, but in-play depth still trails the international leaders.

Licensing and trust

Non-negotiable. The only operator on this page with domestic NZ cover is TAB NZ. Betcha sits in a separate DIA-permitted carve-out. Sportsbet, Ladbrokes, Neds, PointsBet and PalmerBet are NT-licensed in Australia (NT Racing Commission). Everything else is Curaçao, Anjouan, Kahnawake or MGA Malta. None of those is wrong. None is equivalent to a DIA permit either. I tell you which is which. You decide.

Top 25 betting sites in New Zealand: ranked, reviewed, with pros and cons

1. 22bet: biggest market spread for Kiwis

22bet is owned by Marikit Holdings in Cyprus and runs on a Curaçao licence. If sheer variety is what you want, it covers a 1,500-plus markets on football alone and reaches into esports, table tennis and politics. The minimum deposit is just NZ$1.50, POLi is supported, and crypto withdrawals clear in 15 minutes to a few hours. The flip side: a cluttered interface, offshore status outside DIA cover, and a phone-verification step on signup that adds friction. NZ welcome bonus typically matches up to NZ$250.

Pros

  • 1,500-plus markets per top football match
  • Huge sport, league and esports range
  • Many payment options including 15-plus cryptos
  • Tiny NZ$1.50 minimum

Cons

  • Offshore Curaçao, no DIA cover
  • Cluttered interface for beginners
  • Phone verification required
  • No live streaming

2. BetLabel: crypto and POLi all-rounder

BetLabel launched in 2023 and is operated by TechSolutions Group N.V. It runs on a Curaçao licence and shares a stable with National Casino and Bizzo. The sportsbook is powered by BetBy and covers 30-plus sports with live streaming and partial cash-out. It takes POLi, cards, Skrill, Neteller and 12-plus cryptos, with an NZ$15 minimum. Withdrawals clear within about 24 hours. It is offshore.

Pros

  • POLi plus 15-plus methods and crypto
  • Live streaming and partial cash-out
  • Full NZD support
  • BetBy odds feed across 30-plus sports

Cons

  • Offshore Curaçao, no DIA cover
  • Short NZ track record
  • RG limits need support to set
  • NZ$15 minimum on first deposit

3. Ivibet: casino-led with rugby and esports

Ivibet has served Kiwis since 2022. It is operated by TechOptions Group on Curaçao and Kahnawake licences (No. 00996, issued April 2025). It is casino-led with 6,000-plus games, but the sportsbook still covers 30-plus sports with strong rugby and esports markets. Payments include POLi, ecoPayz, MuchBetter and 15-plus cryptos, with an NZ$10 to $15 minimum. Crypto payouts cleared in about 90 minutes in testing; POLi and bank took around 24 to 31 hours.

Pros

  • Kahnawake and Curaçao licensed
  • Huge casino library (6,000-plus games)
  • Broad payments including 15-plus cryptos
  • Provably fair section

Cons

  • Offshore, no DIA cover
  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Slower POLi payouts than crypto
  • NZ welcome offer modest

4. BetRepublic: a newer all-round sportsbook

BetRepublic is a newer offshore sportsbook and casino that share one wallet. It takes POLi from NZ$10, plus cards, Skrill, Neteller and crypto. My POLi withdrawal arrived in under 72 hours; crypto faster. It includes a responsible-gambling self-assessment tool. The main concern is transparency: its licensing details are not clearly displayed on the footer, which I would want fixed. It is offshore and outside DIA cover.

Pros

  • POLi from NZ$10 plus crypto
  • In-house RG self-assessment
  • Clean on desktop and mobile
  • Shared sportsbook/casino wallet

Cons

  • Weak licensing transparency
  • Short track record
  • Offshore, no DIA cover
  • Customer support response uneven

5. KingMaker: casino and sportsbook combo

KingMaker debuted in 2024, operated by NovaForge Limited on an Anjouan licence (ALSI-152406028-F12). Casino and sportsbook share a wallet, and the sportsbook covers 40-plus sports with strong esports, in-play and pre-game. Payments include POLi, cards, Jeton, MiFinity and crypto, with an NZ$20 to $30 minimum. Bitcoin payouts clear in under an hour; POLi in about 24 hours, up to NZ$10,000 per transaction.

Pros

  • 40-plus sports plus strong esports
  • Very wide payments including crypto
  • Fast crypto payouts
  • Shared casino wallet

Cons

  • Anjouan licence only (lighter oversight)
  • Offshore, no DIA cover
  • Busy interface
  • E-wallets often excluded from bonus

6. TAB NZ: only domestically licensed sportsbook

TAB NZ is the local statutory monopoly. Under the Racing Industry Act 2020 it is the only operator legally permitted to take online sports bets and racing wagers into New Zealand. Since 2024 its wagering operations have been delivered under a 25-year strategic partnership with Entain, which has lifted the product noticeably, better app, deeper markets, faster in-play. Coverage is excellent on All Blacks Tests, Super Rugby Pacific, Black Caps, the Warriors and NZ thoroughbred and harness racing. The trade-off: prices are not the sharpest globally, the welcome offer is conservative under DIA constraints, and the customer experience on niche international sports trails the offshore leaders.

Pros

  • Only domestically licensed online sportsbook
  • Profits stay in NZ racing/sport via statutory distributions
  • Deepest local racing markets
  • App and product improving under Entain partnership

Cons

  • Statutory monopoly = limited innovation pressure
  • Prices not the sharpest globally
  • Modest promotional menu
  • Niche international markets thinner

7. bet365: best for in-play and live streaming

Still the benchmark for live betting and streaming. bet365 carries 1,000-plus markets across 30-plus sports, plus cash-out and a rock-solid app. Payments are broad: POLi, Visa, Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller and bank transfer. The minimum deposit is NZ$10 and there are no withdrawal fees. POLi payouts were the quickest I clocked for an offshore book, often inside 4 hours. The catch: it is unlicensed in NZ, and bet365's parent UKGC licence does not extend cover here.

Pros

  • Fastest POLi payouts I logged offshore
  • Best-in-class live streaming and cash-out
  • 1,000-plus markets, 30-plus sports
  • Broad payments, no withdrawal fees

Cons

  • Welcome offer is modest
  • Can restrict sharp accounts
  • Offshore, no DIA cover

8. Sportsbet: best for Aussie/Kiwi sports depth

Sportsbet is the largest Australian-licensed bookmaker, owned by Flutter Entertainment (the parent of PokerStars and FanDuel). It holds an NT Racing Commission licence and accepts NZ residents from offshore. Coverage on rugby, NRL, cricket, AFL and NZ horse racing is deep, and same-game multis with cash-out are the headline feature. POLi is supported with an NZ$1 minimum. Withdrawals to a verified NZ bank usually land in 1 to 5 hours on weekdays.

Pros

  • NT licensed, large and stable operator
  • Deep NRL, AFL, rugby and racing
  • POLi from NZ$1
  • Same-game multis with cash-out

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ, no DIA cover
  • Sharp-account restrictions common
  • NZ markets sometimes thinner than TAB

9. Ladbrokes: NRL and racing markets

Ladbrokes is owned by Entain, the same parent group that delivers TAB NZ's wagering services. The product on offer for Kiwis from the AU site is broader, faster and more aggressively promoted than TAB. Strong NRL and rugby markets, deep racing fields including NZ thoroughbreds, harness and greyhounds, plus a polished app and bet builder. POLi works from NZ$10 with payouts in 2 to 24 hours.

Pros

  • Entain backing and long track record
  • Deep NRL and racing markets
  • Polished bet builder and same-game multi
  • POLi and bank transfer

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ, no DIA cover
  • Sharp accounts restricted aggressively
  • NT licence, not DIA

10. PointsBet: best for spread betting and NBA

PointsBet built its name on spread betting, a different beast from standard fixed-odds where your win or loss scales with how right or wrong you were. It is the best NBA book I tested for points spreads, and NRL coverage is solid. NT-licensed, accepts Kiwis from offshore, POLi supported with an NZ$10 minimum. Payouts run 24 to 48 hours.

Pros

  • True spread betting (points-based payouts)
  • Strong NBA and NRL markets
  • Clean app, fast in-play
  • POLi and BPAY

Cons

  • Spread betting magnifies losses
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Slower payouts than Sportsbet
  • NZ welcome offer modest

11. Neds: best same-game multis

Neds is the Entain stablemate of Ladbrokes, aimed at a younger demographic with a sharper UI and aggressive same-game multi promotions. NRL, AFL, rugby and NZ racing are well covered. POLi works, NZ$10 minimum, payouts in 2 to 24 hours.

Pros

  • Best same-game multi UI I tested
  • Punchy NRL and AFL promos
  • POLi and BPAY
  • Entain backing

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ
  • Sharp accounts restricted
  • Thinner European football than bet365

12. TopSport: best tote-style and NZ racing focus

TopSport is a smaller Australian bookmaker that has built a loyal following with Kiwi punters by accepting much bigger bets without restricting winners, and by leaning into tote-style racing markets. Same-day payouts via NZ bank transfer once your account is verified. POLi from NZ$5. The interface is plain. The customer service is genuinely human.

Pros

  • Doesn't restrict winning accounts the way the giants do
  • Deep NZ racing fields including harness
  • Same-day bank payouts
  • Real humans on phone support

Cons

  • Plain interface, no live streaming
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Limited e-wallet support
  • Thin esports and global football

13. PalmerBet: family-owned Aussie bookie

PalmerBet is one of the few remaining family-owned Australian books, founded by the Palmer family. It is small but credible, NT-licensed, with a strong racing focus and decent NRL and AFL coverage. POLi from NZ$5, payouts in 1 to 2 business days.

Pros

  • Family-owned, long Australian track record
  • NT licensed, transparent ownership
  • POLi and cards
  • Doesn't bot-restrict aggressively

Cons

  • Smaller operator, thinner promotions
  • Offshore for NZ
  • App less polished than the giants

14. Unibet: European football and cricket

Unibet is owned by the Kindred Group and runs on an MGA Malta licence. It is the European book Kiwis reach for when they want depth on Premier League, Champions League, La Liga and the cricket calendar including the IPL. POLi works from NZ$10. Payouts to NZ bank or Skrill in 1 to 3 days. No NZ DIA cover.

Pros

  • Deep European football markets
  • Strong cricket and IPL coverage
  • MGA Malta regulated parent
  • Live streaming on selected events

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ
  • NZ welcome offer modest
  • Sharp accounts restricted

15. BetVictor: Premier League pricing

BetVictor is a long-standing UK book with sharp Premier League prices early in the trading week. Its NZ-facing site is offshore. Card deposits and Skrill payouts both work; POLi support is currently inconsistent. Payouts in 1 to 3 days.

Pros

  • Sharp Premier League and EFL prices
  • Long UK track record
  • Clean app

Cons

  • POLi inconsistent
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Thin NRL and AFL

16. William Hill: bet builders

William Hill is part of the evoke (888) group. The bet builder is polished, the core prices are competitive, and the brand is recognisable. It has no NZ licence. POLi support is patchy. Card and PayPal work. Payouts in 1 to 5 days.

Pros

  • Excellent bet builder
  • Competitive core prices
  • Long-standing brand
  • PayPal accepted

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ
  • POLi support inconsistent
  • Thin niche depth

17. Betway: multi-sport accumulators

Betway is owned by Super Group (JSE-listed). Strong accumulator and bet-builder tools, competitive Premier League prices, POLi from NZ$10. Payouts in 24 to 72 hours. No NZ licence.

Pros

  • Strong accumulator and bet builder
  • POLi from NZ$10
  • Listed parent (Super Group)
  • No transaction fees

Cons

  • Offshore for NZ
  • No PayPal or crypto
  • Single-market prices average

18. PlayOJO: no-wagering simplicity

PlayOJO is operated by SkillOnNet under an MGA Malta licence and is the loudest "no wagering" brand serving Kiwis. Every promotion is paid in cash, not bonus credits, refreshing. The standout banking feature is no minimum withdrawal, and payouts target around 24 hours. Sportsbook is thin; this is mainly a casino. NZ$10 minimum deposit at most rails.

Pros

  • No-wagering promotions paid in cash
  • No minimum withdrawal
  • Fast payout target (around 24h)
  • MGA Malta regulated parent

Cons

  • Casino-led, thin sportsbook
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Welcome offer modest by NZ standards

19. JackpotCity: NZ$1 deposit pioneer (casino)

JackpotCity has been around since 1998 and is one of the original NZ$1-deposit brands. It runs on MGA and Kahnawake licences under the Bayton / Baytree group, with a 750-plus game library powered by Microgaming. Standard minimum deposit is NZ$5, but the famous "$1 for free spins" promo gives the brand its identity. Read the wagering: 200x inside 90 days has been the historical structure, which is steep.

Pros

  • NZ$1 promo deposit famous in NZ market
  • MGA + Kahnawake licensed
  • Long track record (since 1998)
  • Microgaming library

Cons

  • 200x wagering on $1 promo is steep
  • Casino only, no sportsbook
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Dated interface in places

20. Casino Days: NZ$1 deposit, huge slot library

Casino Days is operated by Hero Gaming on a Curaçao licence and has grown a strong NZ following on the NZ$1-deposit angle plus a 6,000-plus slot library. Crypto plus POLi. Casino-led, no sportsbook. Withdrawals fast, crypto in under an hour, POLi in 24 hours.

Pros

  • NZ$1 minimum deposit
  • 6,000-plus slot library
  • Fast crypto payouts
  • POLi supported

Cons

  • Casino only, no sportsbook
  • Curaçao licence only
  • Offshore for NZ

21. Spin Casino: NZ$1 free spins entry point

Spin Casino is a Bayton / Baytree group sister brand to JackpotCity, on the same MGA licence and Microgaming library. The NZ$1 deposit gives 70 free spins on selected slots. Sportsbook is essentially absent. POLi works, minimum NZ$10 on standard deposits.

Pros

  • NZ$1 free-spins promo entry
  • MGA licensed parent
  • Microgaming library
  • Long track record

Cons

  • Casino only, no sportsbook
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Wagering on $1 promo is heavy

22. LeoVegas: best mobile app

LeoVegas is owned by MGM Resorts and built mobile-first. Award-winning app on iOS and Android, fast payouts, MGA Malta licensed parent. Casino-led, with a sportsbook bolted on that covers the basics well. POLi from NZ$10. Payouts target 24 hours.

Pros

  • Award-winning app
  • Fast payouts
  • MGM backing, MGA Malta licensed
  • POLi and Apple Pay

Cons

  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Offshore for NZ
  • Promotions thinner than rivals

23. Betcha: domestic peer-to-peer alternative

Betcha is the lesser-known domestic NZ option. It is a peer-to-peer wagering platform (you set odds against another Kiwi rather than a bookmaker) operating under a DIA permit since 2019. Sample sizes are smaller and you sometimes wait for a counterparty to take your line. But it is genuinely NZ-licensed, profits stay onshore, and the model removes the usual house margin. POLi and NZ bank transfer, NZ$5 minimum.

Pros

  • Domestic NZ permit, profits stay onshore
  • Peer-to-peer model, no house margin
  • POLi and NZ bank
  • Genuinely independent

Cons

  • Smaller market depth (counterparty risk)
  • Slower to fill lines on niche markets
  • No live in-play depth

24. Pinnacle: sharpest odds, high limits

The sharp bettor's choice. Pinnacle's pricing and limits are excellent, typical 2.5 to 3% margin on rugby and NRL versus 6 to 8% at retail-style books. It does not restrict winning players the way most books do. The catch: it is offshore on a Curaçao licence, with no NZ DIA cover, no live streaming and no welcome offer. POLi inconsistent.

Pros

  • Lowest margins, sharpest prices
  • Very high limits
  • Does not limit winning players
  • Crypto accepted

Cons

  • Offshore Curaçao, no DIA cover
  • No welcome offer
  • No live streaming
  • POLi inconsistent

25. Stake.com: crypto sportsbook (offshore)

Stake.com has been live since 2017 on a Curaçao licence. It is the reference point for crypto bettors, with broad coin support and strong esports coverage. Crypto-first: no POLi and no cards. Crypto withdrawals are near-instant, usually under 24 hours. Outside DIA cover entirely.

Pros

  • Broad cryptocurrency support
  • Strong esports markets
  • Near-instant crypto payouts
  • Modern interface

Cons

  • Offshore, no DIA cover
  • Crypto only, no POLi or cards
  • Outside NZ consumer protections

Best NZ betting site by category

Best for rugby union (All Blacks, Six Nations, Super Rugby Pacific)

bet365 for the deepest All Blacks player props and live streaming on Bledisloe Cup Tests, with TAB NZ close behind on Super Rugby Pacific markets where local knowledge shows.

Best for NRL (Warriors)

Sportsbet and Neds for same-game multis with cash-out across the full NRL slate. Ladbrokes for early-week opening prices.

Best for cricket (Black Caps, IPL, Big Bash)

bet365 for in-play depth and live streaming across IPL and Big Bash; Unibet for early markets on Black Caps Tests.

Best for NZ horse racing (NZ Cup, Trotting Cup, harness)

TAB NZ for tote pools and depth on every NZ meeting, with TopSport a close second on harness markets and for not restricting winning accounts.

Best for Premier League and European football

BetVictor and bet365 for early Premier League prices; Unibet for European-market depth across Bundesliga, La Liga and Champions League.

Best mobile app

LeoVegas for the most polished phone experience this year; bet365 for the best combined betting and live-streaming app.

Best for fast withdrawals

bet365 for the quickest POLi payouts I logged (often under 4 hours); Sportsbet close behind on NZ bank transfer (1 to 5 hours weekdays).

Best for high rollers

Pinnacle for top limits and sharp prices, and TopSport for accepting larger bets without bot-restricting accounts. Both offshore, so see the caveats above.

Best for casual or low-stakes bettors (NZ$1 deposit culture)

JackpotCity, Casino Days and Spin Casino for the NZ$1 minimum deposit recreational casino market. PlayOJO for no-wagering promotions paid in cash.

Best for crypto

Stake.com for breadth of coin support and esports; 22bet for combined fiat-plus-crypto flexibility.

Which NZ teams and competitions can you bet on?

All of them, across both TAB NZ and the offshore market. In rugby union that is the All Blacks (Tests, Bledisloe, Rugby World Cup), Black Ferns, plus the five Super Rugby Pacific franchises, Crusaders, Blues, Hurricanes, Chiefs and Highlanders, alongside Mitre 10 Cup / Bunnings NPC. In rugby league it is the NZ Warriors plus the full NRL slate. Cricket covers the Black Caps and White Ferns across Tests, ODIs and T20s, plus the IPL, Big Bash, The Hundred and PSL. Football covers the All Whites, Football Ferns and Wellington Phoenix in the A-League, plus the Premier League and the major European competitions. Netball covers the Silver Ferns and the ANZ Premiership, including the Mainland Tactix, Northern Mystics, Central Pulse, Southern Steel, Northern Stars and Robinhood Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic. NBA cards with Kiwi-eligible players draw heavy action (Steven Adams's era taught a generation of NZ bettors to take an interest in the Memphis Grizzlies). UFC pay-per-views, NZ Cup at Riccarton, the Auckland Cup and the Trotting Cup at Addington all run with deep markets.

Timeline: the history of betting in New Zealand

It helps to know how we got here, because the patchwork of monopoly and offshore tolerance only makes sense once you trace the path. I've pulled the dates from the Department of Internal Affairs, the New Zealand Parliament archive and the official Beehive press releases on the 2024-26 Online Casino Bill.

1908

The Gaming Act 1908 is enacted, the first comprehensive NZ gambling statute. Pari-mutuel (tote) betting at racecourses is legalised; off-course betting is banned.

1951

The TAB is established by the Gaming Amendment Act 1951, ending decades of illegal off-course bookmaking and creating the world's first off-course state-run totalisator agency.

1987

NZ Lotteries is created and Lotto launches, beginning the modern lottery monopoly under a separate Crown entity.

2003

The Gambling Act 2003 is passed, modernising the framework. Operating a remote interactive gambling service from inside New Zealand becomes illegal, except for TAB and NZ Lotteries. Betting by Kiwis at offshore .com sites is not made an offence.

2004

The Department of Internal Affairs becomes the lead regulator under the Gambling Act 2003.

2014

Land-based casinos consolidated under SkyCity, Christchurch Casino, Dunedin Casino and Hamilton/Queenstown.

2019

Betcha launches under a DIA permit as a domestic peer-to-peer wagering platform.

2020

The Racing Industry Act 2020 replaces the Racing Act 2003 and confirms TAB NZ's statutory monopoly on online sports betting.

2024

Entain and TAB NZ enter a 25-year strategic partnership for wagering services. The Online Casino Gambling Bill is introduced to Parliament by Hon Brooke van Velden, Minister of Internal Affairs.

28 June 2025

The Racing Industry Amendment Act 2025 comes into force, closing technical gaps in the TAB online monopoly.

23 April 2026

The Online Casino Gambling Bill passes its third reading in the House.

27 April 2026

The Bill receives Royal Assent and becomes the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026. Up to 15 online casino licences will be issued, with applications closing 1 December 2026 and operations expected from 2027.

The NZ betting market in numbers (2025 to 2026)

NZ$2.7B
Total annual NZ gambling expenditure (DIA, 2024-25)
NZ$1.5B+
Estimated annual flow to offshore online operators
15
Online casino licences to be issued under the 2026 Act
12%
Betting/gambling duty rate on licensed operators
1.24%
Gambling problem levy on licensed operators
NZ$5M
Maximum penalty for serious or persistent licence breaches
2027
Expected first year of licensed online casino operations
1 Dec 2026
Closing date for online casino licence applications

One trend worth flagging. The post-pandemic shift to online has been faster in NZ than the Gambling Act 2003 anticipated, DIA's own briefings to ministers in 2023-24 acknowledged that offshore operators were taking close to NZ$1.5 billion a year out of the regulated tax base. The Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 is the policy response. Sources: Department of Internal Affairs, Beehive press releases, and iGB reporting on the bill's progress.

Quick facts: age, taxes and payments

  • Minimum age: 18+ for TAB NZ sports and racing betting and for NZ Lotteries products; 20+ for entry to licensed casinos (land-based) under the Gambling Act 2003.
  • Taxes on winnings: for recreational bettors, gambling winnings in New Zealand are not taxable. Inland Revenue treats them as windfall income, not assessable income. The narrow exception is for people whose betting activity amounts to a trade or business, which is rare. If you think that might be you, speak to an accountant. I'm not a tax advisor; this is general information.
  • Payments: POLi (instant bank-to-bookmaker via internet banking) is the dominant method. Visa and Mastercard work at most operators, but big-four banks (ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac) sometimes block gaming merchant codes. Apple Pay and Google Pay are increasingly supported. Crypto is mainly an offshore option. NZ bank transfer for withdrawal usually takes 1 to 3 business days.
  • Minimum deposit: NZ$1 at TAB NZ, NZ$5 at Betcha, NZ$1 to $10 across the offshore market depending on operator. NZ$1 promo deposits at JackpotCity, Casino Days and Spin Casino are a uniquely NZ recreational subculture.
  • Currency: NZD ($) at TAB NZ, Betcha, and most offshore books with NZ-facing pages. AUD-only books force a currency conversion.
  • Self-exclusion: Available through TAB NZ directly and through any DIA-licensed venue. Offshore books vary widely; many support a soft self-exclusion via support ticket. National multi-operator exclusion will come in under the 2026 Act for licensed casino operators.

FAQ: best betting sites in New Zealand

Is online sports betting legal in New Zealand?

Sort of. Under the Gambling Act 2003 and the Racing Industry Act 2020, only TAB NZ may take online sports bets from inside New Zealand. Operating an online sportsbook or casino into NZ from elsewhere is technically illegal under section 9 of the Gambling Act 2003, but the law does not criminalise the Kiwi punter who bets at an offshore .com. So as a player you are not breaking the law by betting at an unlicensed offshore site; the operator is. That changes from 2027 for casino operators once the 15 new licences are issued under the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026.

What's the difference between TAB NZ and an offshore book?

TAB NZ holds a statutory monopoly on local online sports and racing betting under the Racing Industry Act 2020. Its operations are regulated by the Department of Internal Affairs and a portion of its profits is distributed back to NZ racing and sport. Offshore books (bet365, Sportsbet, 22bet etc.) hold licences elsewhere, UK, Malta, Northern Territory, Curaçao, Anjouan, and are not regulated by the DIA. They typically offer broader markets, sharper prices and bigger promotions, but you sit outside NZ consumer protections.

Can I use POLi from my NZ bank?

Yes, at most operators that accept Kiwi customers, TAB NZ, BetLabel, 22bet, Sportsbet, Ladbrokes, Neds, PointsBet, TopSport, PalmerBet, bet365, Betway and most of the casinos. ANZ, ASB, BNZ and Westpac all work. POLi is the fastest and most reliable Kiwi deposit method. Some operators (Pinnacle, BetVictor, William Hill) have inconsistent POLi support; check the cashier before depositing.

What is the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026?

The Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 received Royal Assent on 27 April 2026. It introduces a licensing regime for up to 15 online casino operators, a 12% betting/gambling duty, a 1.24% problem-gambling levy, mandatory age verification, mandatory harm-minimisation tools, advertising restrictions, and penalties of up to NZ$5 million for serious breaches. Applications close 1 December 2026; first operations are expected in 2027.

Why do my card deposits sometimes get blocked?

NZ's big-four banks (ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac) sometimes block transactions to merchants coded as "gaming" (MCC 7995). This is a bank-level control, not an operator block. POLi avoids it because it routes as a standard bank transfer rather than a card transaction. If a card is blocked, use POLi or call your bank to authorise the transaction.

How fast are withdrawals?

It varies. bet365 returned POLi cash-outs in about 1 to 4 hours in my testing. Sportsbet and TopSport landed in under 24 hours via NZ bank transfer. TAB NZ usually took 1 to 3 business days. Crypto withdrawals at 22bet, Stake.com and Casino Days cleared in under an hour.

Are NZ$1 deposit casinos real?

Yes, but read the wagering. JackpotCity, Casino Days and Spin Casino all run promotional NZ$1 deposit offers, usually paired with free spins. JackpotCity's historical structure is 70 free spins on a NZ$1 deposit with a 200x wagering requirement inside 90 days, which is steep. Casino Days' standard minimum deposit is genuinely NZ$1 with no special wagering catch. PlayOJO has no $1 promo but pays all promotions in cash with no wagering at all.

Are winnings taxed?

Generally no. Inland Revenue treats gambling winnings as windfall income for recreational bettors, not assessable income. The exception is for people whose betting activity amounts to a trade or business, which is rare in practice. If you're unsure, see an accountant.

Is crypto betting legal in NZ?

Crypto betting mostly lives on offshore books that aren't NZ-licensed. The Gambling Act 2003 does not criminalise the Kiwi player who bets at an offshore site, whether the deposits are in NZD or in Bitcoin. But crypto books sit outside DIA consumer protections, so proceed with caution.

What about the All Blacks and Black Caps? Can I bet on them?

Yes. TAB NZ takes bets on every All Blacks, Black Caps, Silver Ferns and NZ Warriors match. Offshore books (bet365, Sportsbet, Unibet) also cover them, often with broader prop markets.

My take: where I'd open my first account

This is my opinion as someone who does this for a living. It is not financial advice and not a push to bet. If you want the regulated, "do the right thing" option, open with TAB NZ. Profits stay in NZ racing and sport, the product has improved noticeably under the Entain partnership, and you sit inside DIA consumer protections. If you want the sharpest prices and biggest markets, bet365 is the offshore benchmark, with Pinnacle behind it for serious price hunters who can live without live streaming. If rugby and NRL are your sports, the Sportsbet / Ladbrokes / Neds trio from Australia is hard to beat on same-game multis and bet builders. For NZ horse racing, TAB NZ first and TopSport second. For the NZ$1 recreational casino market, PlayOJO for no-wagering integrity or Casino Days for the genuine NZ$1 minimum without the 200x wagering catch. Wherever you land, set deposit and time limits before you fund the account. The new licensing regime under the Online Casino Gambling Act 2026 will reshape this list by late 2027. I'll update when it does.


Bet responsibly. You must be 18+ to bet at TAB NZ or NZ Lotteries; 20+ to enter a licensed land-based casino. Gambling can be addictive. Set deposit and time limits, never chase losses, and only stake what you can afford to lose. If gambling stops being fun, free, confidential help is available 24/7 from the Problem Gambling Foundation of New Zealand on 0800 664 262, or through the Gambling Helpline. Most regulated operators also offer deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion.

Sources and further reading