Best Betting Sites in Ethiopia 2026, NLA Reform + Hibret Era
On 15 December 2025 the Ethiopian Lottery Service revoked every sports betting licence in the country, 22 operators, gone overnight. Banks were ordered to stop processing any betting transaction. Twenty-four arrests followed. The state alleged more than 100 billion birr (around 2.3 billion US dollars at the new floating rate) had been concealed from the tax authority and funnelled offshore through crypto and Hawala. I have been covering African sports betting since 2018, and Ethiopia 2026 is the most dramatic regulatory reset I have written about. This page is my honest map of what is left: who can still take an Ethiopian bet today, what is licensed where, what the National Lottery Administration's next licensing round is likely to look like, and how the birr's free-fall from 57.7 to over 118 per dollar changed every single deposit calculation. Verify any operator on the National Lottery Administration register before signing up, the picture is moving week to week.
Search "best betting sites in Ethiopia" today and you will get a dozen lists. Most of them have not been updated since the December shutdown. Several still recommend operators whose offices were padlocked and whose owners are in custody. I rebuild this page from primary sources every time I publish: NLA notices, Ministry of Revenue communiqués, the National Bank of Ethiopia foreign-exchange data, Addis Insight reporting, and my own testing of which sites currently accept signups from an Addis Ababa IP. This is editorial, not financial advice, but it is the cleanest read I can give you on a market in active reset.
Best betting sites in Ethiopia 2026: comparison table
| # | Bookmaker | I rate it best for | Regulated status | Payments I tested |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 22bet | Biggest market spread for Ethiopia | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto |
| 2 | BetLabel | Crypto-friendly all-rounder | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, e-wallets, crypto |
| 3 | Ivibet | Casino-led with esports | Offshore (Curaçao) | e-wallets, crypto |
| 4 | HellSpin | Casino only (no sportsbook) | Offshore (Curaçao) | e-wallets, crypto |
| 5 | BetRepublic | Newer all-round sportsbook | Offshore | Cards, crypto |
| 6 | KingMaker | Casino plus sportsbook combo | Offshore (Anjouan) | Cards, Jeton, crypto |
| 7 | 1xBet | Football and live markets | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, Skrill, crypto |
| 8 | Melbet | Accumulator boosts | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, Skrill, crypto |
| 9 | Pinnacle | Sharpest odds and high limits | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, e-wallets, crypto |
| 10 | Megapari | Local mobile experience | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, Skrill, crypto |
| 11 | Paripesa | Niche markets and depth | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, crypto |
| 12 | Sportybet | Pan-African presence | Verify (pre-shutdown) | Cards, mobile money where active |
| 13 | Betika | Pan-East-Africa brand | Verify (pre-shutdown) | Cards, mobile money where active |
| 14 | Stake.com | Crypto-first sportsbook | Offshore (Curaçao) | Crypto only, limited fiat |
| 15 | Bet365 | In-play and live streaming | Geo-restricted | Cards, e-wallets |
| 16 | Betway | Multi-sport accumulators | Offshore | Cards, Skrill |
| 17 | Parimatch | Esports depth | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, e-wallets, crypto |
| 18 | Bwin | EPL props and European football | Offshore (Entain) | Cards, e-wallets |
| 19 | Mr Green | Daily odds boosts | Offshore (evoke) | Cards, e-wallets |
| 20 | 22bet Casino | Slots and live tables | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, crypto |
| 21 | Bizzo | Sister brand to BetLabel | Offshore | Cards, crypto |
| 22 | National Casino | BetLabel stablemate, casino-led | Offshore | Cards, crypto |
| 23 | Premier Bet | African brand with EPL focus | Verify | Cards, mobile money |
| 24 | Helabet | Athletics specialist | Offshore (Curaçao) | Cards, crypto |
| 25 | William Hill | Bet builders | Geo-restricted | Cards, e-wallets |
The 15 December 2025 reset: what actually happened
If you are landing on this page after a Google search, you probably already know something has changed. Here is the timeline as I have pieced it together from NLA notices, Ethiopian Lottery Service (ELS) communiqués, Addis Insight reporting and igamingafrika briefings.
- November 2025: The National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) hands the ELS a confidential dossier alleging revenue concealment of more than 100 billion birr, around 2.3 billion US dollars at the post-devaluation rate, across the licensed sportsbook sector. The dossier flags conversion of birr cash receipts into foreign currency via crypto channels and the historic Hawala network.
- 25 November 2025: ELS suspends the operating licences of 22 named betting companies pending criminal investigation. Industry chatter names Dashbet as the largest single operator in the suspended cohort.
- 28 November 2025: NISS arrests 24 individuals, including company owners and alleged accomplices, on suspicion of hiding revenue and breaching foreign-exchange rules.
- 4 December 2025: A second wave of suspensions formalises the November action. Bank guarantees of 1.5 million birr per operator (the floor set by Directive 172/2021) are frozen.
- 15 December 2025: ELS issues the headline directive, every remaining sports betting licence is revoked with immediate effect. Banks, mobile money operators (Telebirr, M-Pesa Ethiopia, CBE Birr, HelloCash) and payment processors are ordered to stop processing any betting transaction, whether to a domestic operator or to a foreign URL.
- January 2026: Addis Insight publishes its investigation into the betPawa case, the international group had begun advertising in Ethiopia before securing a localised licence and became the public face of the foreign-operator crackdown. The ELS confirms that no new licence applications are being accepted while a revised framework is drafted.
- June 2026: The NLA's licensing window remains closed. Industry trackers, including Blask, recorded a near-total collapse in Ethiopian search and traffic volume across the major affiliate domains.
For a bettor sitting in Addis Ababa, Bahir Dar or Hawassa today, the practical reality is that local licensed product no longer exists. Every site you can still reach is either an international brand operating from a foreign licence (offshore in the Ethiopian sense) or a pre-shutdown brand running a skeleton offering while waiting on the NLA's next move. That is why I rank cautiously and flag tag colours hard.
Operator data at a glance: international books currently serving Ethiopia
Opinions are cheap. Here are the numbers I collected when opening and testing accounts on the international sites that still accept Ethiopian signups in 2026. All figures are in birr (ETB) where the operator supports the currency, otherwise USD-equivalent at the National Bank of Ethiopia's reference rate. Deposit and payout speeds were measured against a Telebirr-linked international card (Visa/Mastercard via dollarised wallets), direct Telebirr or M-Pesa Ethiopia integration is currently disabled at the regulator's instruction for any operator processing through Ethiopian rails.
| Bookmaker | Owner and licence | Min dep / withdrawal | Withdrawal speed | Key payment methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 22bet | Marikit Holdings (Cyprus); Curaçao | $1 / $1.50 | 15 min to 7 days | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, Jeton, 30+ cryptos |
| BetLabel | TechSolutions Group; Curaçao + Kahnawake (000882) | $15 / $15 | Within 24 hours | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, Paysafecard, crypto |
| Ivibet | TechOptions Group; Curaçao + Kahnawake (00996) | $10 to $15 / $10 | Crypto ~90 min; cards 24 to 48h | ecoPayz, MuchBetter, Neosurf, 15+ cryptos |
| HellSpin | Curaçao; since 2022; casino only | $10 / $10 | E-wallet ~12h; cards to 7 days | Skrill, Neteller, Jeton, crypto |
| BetRepublic | Offshore; newer; licence detail thin | $10 / varies | Cards 72h; crypto under 24h | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto |
| KingMaker | NovaForge Ltd; Anjouan (ALSI-152406028-F12) | $20 to $30 / $30 | Crypto under 1h; cards ~24h | Cards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto |
| 1xBet | Curaçao; international franchise | $1 / $1.50 | 15 min to 24h | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto, vouchers |
| Melbet | Curaçao; since 2012 | $1 / $1.50 | Within 24h typical | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, EcoPayz, crypto |
| Pinnacle | Pinnacle Solutions; Curaçao | Varies | Crypto fast; cards 1 to 5 days | Cards, e-wallets, crypto |
| Megapari | Curaçao; since 2019 | $1 / $1.50 | Crypto fast; cards 24h | Cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto |
| Paripesa | Curaçao; since 2019 | $1 / $1.50 | Within 24h typical | Cards, Skrill, crypto |
| Stake.com | Curaçao; since 2017 | Crypto only | Crypto near-instant, under 24h | Crypto only, some limited fiat |
Operator data: pre-shutdown Ethiopian licensees (currently suspended, use with extreme caution)
These are the local champions that built the Ethiopian sports betting market between the 2021 directive and the December 2025 reset. I list them so you know the history and so you can recognise them if and when the NLA opens a fresh licensing round. None of them currently holds a valid Ethiopian sports betting licence. Some have URLs still live with a casino fallback or holding page. Others have gone dark entirely. I am not recommending you deposit at any of them today.
| Operator | Footprint | Pre-shutdown payments | Current status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hibret Bet | Domestic, retail + online, Addis-led | Telebirr, CBE Birr, retail cash | Licence revoked; suspended |
| Hulu Sport | Domestic, mid-tier, Amharic UI | Telebirr, M-Pesa Ethiopia, CBE Birr | Licence revoked; suspended |
| Habesha Bet | Domestic, regional retail | Telebirr, retail cash | Licence revoked; suspended |
| Adbar Bet | Domestic, Amharic-first | Telebirr, CBE Birr | Licence revoked; suspended |
| Abyssinia Bet | Domestic challenger brand | Telebirr, M-Pesa Ethiopia | Licence revoked; suspended |
| Dashbet | Largest pre-shutdown local operator | Telebirr, all major rails | Owners arrested; licence revoked |
| Betika Ethiopia | Kenyan import via 2023 entry | Mobile money | Local licence revoked; .com still up internationally |
| Sportybet Ethiopia | Pan-African brand | Mobile money | Local licence revoked; .com still up internationally |
| 1xBet Ethiopia | International franchise + local licence | Telebirr, cards | Local arm suspended; international .com accessible |
| Lonsdale Bet | Domestic niche brand | Telebirr | Licence revoked; suspended |
| betPawa Ethiopia | Pre-launch advertising flagged Nov 2025 | Planned: Telebirr | Investigation; never fully launched |
How welcome offers and T&Cs actually work for Ethiopian players
Because there is no longer an Ethiopian regulator policing offer language, the international books targeting Ethiopian players are free to advertise whatever they like. That is not necessarily good for you. The structures I see most often, and the small print that bites Ethiopian players hardest:
- Deposit-match welcome offers. Most international operators run a 100% to 200% match capped at the equivalent of 5,000 to 20,000 birr. Wagering requirements typically run 5x to 12x on the bonus alone, sometimes on bonus plus deposit, a critical difference. Read which one applies before depositing.
- Minimum odds to qualify. Usually 1.50 (-200) or higher on a single bet, or 1.40 per leg on an accumulator with at least three legs. Bets at 1.20 on a heavy favourite normally do not count.
- Expiry. Bonuses typically expire in 7 to 30 days. The shorter ones combined with high wagering are a common trap, work out whether you can realistically clear the rollover in time before you opt in.
- Currency conversion drag. If you deposit via a dollarised wallet because direct birr rails are blocked, every deposit and withdrawal eats a 1% to 3% FX spread. On a 5,000 birr stake that is real money. Operators do not always show this clearly.
- "Risk-free" framing. If you have to stake your own money first to access the offer, it is not free. The marketing language is unregulated in Ethiopia right now, read past the headline.
- Withdrawal locks. Several operators require the deposit method to be the withdrawal method (closed-loop). If you deposited via crypto, you may not be able to cash out via card. Check this on the cashier page before you fund the account.
My rule of thumb for Ethiopia in 2026: a small bonus with 1x play-through is almost always better than a big one locked behind 8x. And given the FX drag, the value of any birr-denominated bonus is shrinking week by week as the currency drifts further. Treat the bonus as a small extra, not the reason you choose an operator.
How I tested these Ethiopian betting sites
No theory. The five things that decide whether a sportsbook is worth your deposit, scored from an Addis Ababa testing perspective.
Market depth (football, athletics, basketball, esports)
Football is everything in Ethiopia, the Premier League, the Spanish La Liga, the Champions League and the CAF Champions League draw the bulk of all sports stakes. The Ethiopian Premier League itself gets light coverage on most international books. 1xBet and 22bet price more Ethiopian Premier League matches than any other international operator, usually 20 to 30 fixtures per round. Athletics betting is a niche but real Ethiopian story; only a handful of operators (Stake.com, Helabet, 22bet) consistently price long-distance running outrights for Olympics and World Athletics events.
Odds and pricing
Margin matters more than any bonus. On standard Premier League and Champions League markets, Pinnacle typically prices a vig of 2% to 3% versus 5% to 8% at promo-heavy operators. Over a season those basis points compound into real money. For accumulator-heavy bettors, 1xBet and Melbet offer aggressive accumulator boosts that can flip the maths in your favour if the bonus terms are actually clean.
Payments and withdrawal speed
This is the hardest part of Ethiopian online betting right now. Direct Telebirr, M-Pesa Ethiopia and CBE Birr rails are blocked at the regulator level for any operator processing through Ethiopian banks. The workarounds I tested:
- Visa or Mastercard debit on a foreign-currency wallet (USD pre-loaded via remittance), accepted at 22bet, 1xBet, Melbet, BetLabel.
- Skrill and Neteller funded by international card, accepted nearly everywhere, but the funding card itself needs USD balance.
- Crypto (USDT TRC-20 most often), fastest in and out. KingMaker, Stake.com and BetLabel returned my test withdrawals in under one hour.
None of these is as smooth as the pre-shutdown Telebirr-direct experience, which was the local champions' core advantage. That advantage is currently paused.
App and live betting
I do most in-play betting on a phone, and 4G coverage in Addis Ababa is reasonable on Safaricom Ethiopia and Ethio Telecom (data costs notwithstanding). 1xBet and Megapari ship native Android APKs that install outside the Play Store and run lightly enough for older handsets. 22bet's mobile web is the strongest in-play experience for Ethiopian Premier League and African football.
Licensing and trust
This is where Ethiopia 2026 gets uncomfortable. Until the NLA's next directive lands, no operator listed on this page holds Ethiopian recognition. I weight Curaçao + Kahnawake dual licences (BetLabel, Ivibet) slightly higher than Curaçao-only, and Anjouan (KingMaker) slightly lower. Stake.com's long track record and audit history compensate for its Curaçao-only paperwork. If you are not comfortable with offshore, the honest answer is: wait for the NLA to re-open licensing.
Top 25 betting sites in Ethiopia: ranked, reviewed, with pros and cons
1. 22bet: biggest market spread for Ethiopia
22bet is owned by Marikit Holdings in Cyprus on a Curaçao licence. For Ethiopian punters it is the broadest book on the market, over 40 sports, more than a thousand markets on a single Premier League fixture, and one of the few international operators that prices Ethiopian Premier League matches (Saint George SC, Ethiopia Coffee, Adama Kenema and the rest of the 20-team league) on a per-round basis. Minimum deposit drops to $1 equivalent, and the international card and Skrill rails are stable. The flip side is a cluttered interface and offshore status, no Ethiopian regulatory recourse if a dispute arises.
Pros
- Biggest spread of any operator open to Ethiopia
- Prices Ethiopian Premier League per round
- Live streaming and cash-out
- $1 minimum deposit equivalent
Cons
- Offshore, no NLA recognition
- Cluttered interface
- No direct Telebirr or M-Pesa Ethiopia rails
- FX drag on every transaction
2. BetLabel: crypto-friendly all-rounder
BetLabel launched in 2023 under TechSolutions Group with dual Curaçao + Kahnawake (No. 000882) licences. The sportsbook runs on BetBy, with 30+ sports, esports, live streaming and partial cash-out. For Ethiopian players the standout is the broad crypto support (USDT TRC-20 in and out clears under 24 hours in testing) combined with the dual-licence paperwork that I trust more than Curaçao-only operations. The $15 minimum is higher than the Russian-franchise books, and there is no direct Ethiopian payment integration.
Pros
- Dual Curaçao + Kahnawake licences
- Strong crypto rails, USDT under 24h
- BetBy-powered sportsbook with esports
- Live streaming and partial cash-out
Cons
- $15 minimum deposit
- No direct Telebirr integration
- Brand still building in Ethiopia
- Responsible-gambling limits need support to set
3. Ivibet: casino-led with esports depth
Ivibet launched in 2022 under TechOptions Group on dual Curaçao + Kahnawake (No. 00996) licences. It is primarily a casino with over 6,000 games, but the sportsbook covers 30+ sports including a properly weighted esports section. Payments are wide, ecoPayz, MuchBetter, Neosurf and 15+ cryptos, with a $10 to $15 minimum. Crypto withdrawals cleared in about 90 minutes during testing. Card payouts took close to 31 hours.
Pros
- Dual-licensed (Curaçao + Kahnawake)
- Huge casino library (6,000+ games)
- Strong esports section
- Crypto payouts under 90 min
Cons
- Casino-first; sportsbook secondary
- Slower card payouts
- No Ethiopian licence
- UI can feel busy on mobile
4. HellSpin: casino only, no sportsbook
One to flag clearly. HellSpin is a casino brand, not a sportsbook. There is no sports betting here at all. It launched in 2022 on a Curaçao licence with 4,000+ games and supports Skrill, Neteller and 15+ cryptos. E-wallet and crypto payouts clear within about 12 hours. I include it because it appears on every Ethiopia listicle, but if you came here for sports betting, scroll past.
Pros
- Large casino library
- Fast crypto and e-wallet payouts
- Solid licensing audit history
Cons
- No sportsbook at all
- No Ethiopian licence
- Card payouts up to 7 days
- Limited responsible-gambling tools
5. BetRepublic: a newer all-round sportsbook
BetRepublic is a newer offshore sportsbook and casino sharing one wallet. It takes international cards and crypto, with a $10 minimum. My crypto withdrawal arrived in under an hour. It has an in-house responsible-gambling self-assessment, which I appreciated. The downside is weaker licensing transparency than the dual-licensed peers above.
Pros
- $10 minimum
- Crypto and cards
- In-house RG self-assessment tool
- Clean desktop and mobile UX
Cons
- Licensing detail unclear
- Short track record
- No Ethiopian recognition
- Customer service hours limited
6. KingMaker: casino plus sportsbook combo
KingMaker debuted in 2024 under NovaForge Limited on an Anjouan licence (ALSI-152406028-F12). Casino and sportsbook share a wallet, with 40+ sports including strong esports coverage. Payments are broad, cards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto, with a $20 to $30 minimum. Bitcoin payouts clear under an hour; cards take around 24 hours. The Anjouan licence is the weakest in the table; I would not use this site without crypto.
Pros
- 40+ sports plus esports
- Wide payment menu
- Fast crypto payouts
- Shared casino + sportsbook wallet
Cons
- Anjouan licence only (weakest oversight)
- No Ethiopian recognition
- Higher minimum deposit
- E-wallets excluded from welcome offer
7. 1xBet: football and live markets
1xBet is a Russian-origin Curaçao-licensed operator with one of the deepest football books anywhere, 1,000+ markets on a typical Premier League fixture, including some unusually granular Ethiopian Premier League pricing. The local Ethiopian franchise had its licence revoked in December 2025, but the international .com remains accessible from Ethiopian IPs. The catch is the operator's regulatory history elsewhere (suspended or restricted in multiple regulated markets) and the heavy promotional push.
Pros
- Deepest football market depth
- Ethiopian Premier League pricing
- $1 minimum, fast Skrill payouts
- Native Android APK
Cons
- Local Ethiopian arm suspended
- Regulatory history elsewhere is mixed
- Heavy promotional bombardment
- Bonus terms can be aggressive
8. Melbet: accumulator boosts
Melbet is structurally similar to 1xBet, Curaçao licence, Russian-franchise origin, very broad book, aggressive accumulator boosts. The accumulator-of-the-day product is the standout for combo bettors, and the loyalty programme is one of the more generous online. Same caveats apply: no Ethiopian recognition, promo terms need careful reading.
Pros
- Aggressive accumulator boosts
- Generous loyalty programme
- Wide market depth
- $1 minimum equivalent
Cons
- No Ethiopian licence
- Strict accumulator bonus conditions
- Customer-service response times patchy
- UI is dated
9. Pinnacle: sharpest odds and high limits
The sharp bettor's choice. Pinnacle's pricing and limits are the best in the industry, and they do not restrict winning players, a real positive for serious bettors who get limited elsewhere. The downside is no welcome offer, no live streaming, and the steepest learning curve on the page.
Pros
- Lowest margins anywhere
- Very high limits
- Does not limit winning players
- Crypto accepted
Cons
- No welcome offer
- No live streaming
- No Ethiopian recognition
- Steep UI for new users
10. Megapari: local mobile experience
Megapari has been a quiet success across East Africa, Curaçao licensed, decent mobile app, $1 minimum, and a sportsbook that prices smaller leagues (including the Ethiopian Premier League some weeks). The crypto rails work well, and the mobile experience is competitive with 1xBet on lower-spec devices.
Pros
- Good mobile experience on older phones
- Light on Ethiopian Premier League
- Wide crypto support
- $1 minimum equivalent
Cons
- Brand still building recognition
- Customer service is e-mail-led
- No Ethiopian licence
- Limited responsible-gambling tools
11. Paripesa: niche markets and depth
Paripesa launched in 2019 on a Curaçao licence, with a focus on accumulator-friendly East African markets and unusual coverage of niche sports. The Turbo Saturday bonus and Advance Bet product give it identity, and the welcome offer is cleaner than most. Card payouts can be slow.
Pros
- Niche sport coverage
- Turbo Saturday reload
- Advance Bet pre-betting product
- Multi-language support
Cons
- No Ethiopian licence
- Card payouts slow
- Brand still building
- Mobile site can lag
12. Sportybet: pan-African presence
Sportybet is one of Africa's biggest sports betting brands and had a licensed Ethiopian arm pre-shutdown. The local entity is suspended. The international product is occasionally accessible from Ethiopian IPs but does not consistently accept Ethiopian deposits via Telebirr, verify on your own connection before signing up.
Pros
- Pan-African brand recognition
- Strong football coverage
- Mobile-first product
Cons
- Local Ethiopian arm suspended
- International access inconsistent
- No direct Telebirr currently
- Verify status on your IP
13. Betika: pan-East-Africa brand
Betika is the Kenyan champion and had built a meaningful Ethiopian footprint between 2023 and 2025. The local arm was caught in the December revocation. The Kenyan .com remains the brand's home; access from Ethiopia is inconsistent and the local payment rails are not working.
Pros
- Strong East African brand
- Football and virtual product depth
- Long Kenya track record
Cons
- Ethiopian arm suspended
- Telebirr currently disabled
- Verify access on your IP
- Customer service hours limited for Ethiopia
14. Stake.com: crypto-first sportsbook
Stake.com has been live since 2017 on a Curaçao licence and is the reference point for crypto bettors, broad coin support, near-instant payouts, strong esports coverage. The catch for Ethiopia is that it is crypto-only, no card rails, no Telebirr. If you are comfortable with crypto deposits, the experience is excellent.
Pros
- Broad crypto support
- Near-instant payouts
- Strong esports markets
- Modern interface
Cons
- Crypto only (no fiat for Ethiopia)
- No Ethiopian licence
- Limited customer support hours
- Steeper for crypto first-timers
15. Bet365: in-play and live streaming
The benchmark for live betting and streaming, but Ethiopian access is intermittent. Bet365's geo-block detection is aggressive, and many Ethiopian IPs cannot register an account without a VPN, which itself contravenes the operator's T&Cs. If you can access the site from your location, the product is the best on the page; if not, do not force it through a VPN.
Pros
- Best live streaming product anywhere
- Excellent in-play depth
- Strong responsible-gambling tools
Cons
- Geo-restricted in Ethiopia
- VPN access breaches T&Cs
- Account closures common
- Withdrawal hold-ups if verification fails
16. Betway: multi-sport accumulators
Betway is owned by Super Group and runs polished accumulator and bet-builder tools. Ethiopian access is patchy and depends on the IP route, sometimes available, sometimes blocked. When accessible, the product is strong on Premier League and Champions League.
Pros
- Polished accumulator tools
- Strong EPL and UCL coverage
- Established global brand
Cons
- Ethiopian access intermittent
- No Ethiopian licence
- No crypto
- Boosts often geo-restricted
17. Parimatch: esports depth
Parimatch has strong esports breadth and fair pricing on those markets, useful for the small but growing Ethiopian esports following. The Curaçao licence covers Ethiopian access, but the operator's regulatory history elsewhere is mixed.
Pros
- Strong esports breadth
- Crypto accepted
- Decent live betting
Cons
- No Ethiopian recognition
- Mainstream football depth uneven
- Customer support weaker
- Regulatory history mixed elsewhere
18. Bwin: EPL props and European football
Bwin is an Entain brand active since 1997 with deep European football coverage. For Ethiopian players the access is variable and the lack of crypto rails makes deposits awkward, international card from a USD wallet is the practical route.
Pros
- Deep EPL and European football props
- Smooth desktop and mobile site
- Established brand
Cons
- No Ethiopian recognition
- No crypto
- Card-only practical route
- Access can be intermittent
19. Mr Green: daily odds boosts
Mr Green sits in the William Hill / evoke group and runs reliable daily odds boosts. Decent coverage, tidy interface, but withdrawals were the slowest I clocked across the list. Ethiopian access depends on routing.
Pros
- Daily odds boosts
- Tidy interface
- Decent core market depth
Cons
- Slow withdrawals in testing
- No Ethiopian recognition
- No crypto
- Access varies
20. 22bet Casino: slots and live tables
The casino-led counterpart to the 22bet sportsbook, sharing one wallet. If you mix sports and casino play, the combined account is convenient. Same licensing and rails as the parent brand.
Pros
- Shared wallet with sportsbook
- Wide live-dealer coverage
- Same payment rails as 22bet
Cons
- No Ethiopian licence
- UI cluttered
- FX drag on transactions
21. Bizzo: sister brand to BetLabel
Bizzo is a TechSolutions Group stablemate to BetLabel, sharing infrastructure and the BetBy sportsbook. Casino-led with a sportsbook bolt-on. Good crypto support, same dual-licence paperwork.
Pros
- BetLabel stablemate
- Crypto rails strong
- Casino library wide
Cons
- Sportsbook secondary to casino
- No Ethiopian licence
- Smaller brand recognition
22. National Casino: BetLabel stablemate, casino-led
Third in the TechSolutions Group stable, primarily a casino, sportsbook secondary. Same Curaçao + Kahnawake paperwork, same payment rails. For Ethiopian casino players who occasionally bet sports, the combined wallet is convenient.
Pros
- Dual-licensed (Curaçao + Kahnawake)
- Large casino library
- Crypto rails
Cons
- Sportsbook is thin
- No Ethiopian licence
- Casino-led identity
23. Premier Bet: African brand with EPL focus
Premier Bet is a French-speaking-Africa heavyweight that has appeared on some Ethiopian-facing listicles. The Ethiopian licensing status is unclear post-shutdown, verify before depositing.
Pros
- Strong West African brand
- EPL and African football coverage
- Mobile-first product
Cons
- Ethiopian status unclear
- Verify before depositing
- No direct Telebirr
- Customer service Francophone-leaning
24. Helabet: athletics specialist
Helabet is a smaller Curaçao-licensed operator that prices long-distance athletics, useful for the rare Ethiopian bettor who wants to back Letesenbet Gidey, Tamirat Tola or the next generation in IAAF outrights. Football coverage is fine, but the differentiator is athletics. Niche, but real.
Pros
- Prices long-distance athletics
- Useful for outrights on IAAF events
- Crypto rails
Cons
- Small brand
- Customer service hours limited
- No Ethiopian licence
- Mainstream depth modest
25. William Hill: bet builders
William Hill is a long-standing UK brand now part of the evoke (888) group. Excellent bet builder, competitive core prices. Ethiopian access is geo-restricted on most routings; verify on your own connection.
Pros
- Excellent bet builder
- Competitive core prices
- Long brand history
Cons
- Geo-restricted in Ethiopia
- No crypto
- VPN access breaches T&Cs
Best Ethiopian sportsbook by category
Best for the Ethiopian Premier League (Saint George, Ethiopia Coffee, Adama Kenema)
22bet prices the most Ethiopian Premier League fixtures per round of any international operator, with 1xBet close behind. Local product is currently unavailable.
Best for the Walia Ibex and AFCON qualifying
22bet and 1xBet consistently price every Walia Ibex qualifier including the long road back to AFCON after the 2013 appearance, outrights, group-stage progression, top-scorer markets.
Best for English Premier League and the Champions League
1xBet for depth, Pinnacle for price. Both essential bookmarks for the Ethiopian football fan.
Best for athletics (Ethiopia's strongest cultural bet)
Helabet for niche long-distance running outrights, Stake.com and 22bet for Olympic and IAAF World Athletics events. Ethiopia's running heritage, from Haile Gebrselassie and Kenenisa Bekele through Tirunesh Dibaba to current stars like Letesenbet Gidey and Tamirat Tola, is the country's defining sporting story.
Best for basketball
22bet and Pinnacle for NBA and EuroLeague depth. The Ethiopian National Basketball League is not priced internationally.
Best mobile app
1xBet's native Android APK is the most polished phone experience for Ethiopian players, with Megapari close behind on older devices.
Best for fast withdrawals
Stake.com for crypto (near-instant), BetLabel for USDT TRC-20 (under 24 hours).
Best for high rollers
Pinnacle for top limits and sharp prices. They do not restrict winning players, a real consideration for serious bettors.
Best for casual or low-stakes bettors
22bet, 1xBet and Melbet all run a $1 equivalent minimum deposit. For a beginner Ethiopian punter wanting to test the waters with very small sums, 22bet is the easiest entry point.
Best for esports
Parimatch and Ivibet for breadth, Stake.com for the deepest Counter-Strike and Dota 2 markets.
Timeline: the history of betting in Ethiopia
It helps to know how Ethiopia got to its current reset, because the December 2025 shutdown was not a one-off, it was the latest move in a long, cautious relationship between the Ethiopian state and gambling.
Imperial Ethiopia's first formal lottery is launched, kicking off the state's monopoly approach to chance-based games.
The Lottery Proclamation provides the original framework for state-run lottery activity under the Imperial regime, later carried forward by successor governments.
National Lottery Administration Re-establishment Proclamation No. 535/2007 formally re-establishes the NLA under the Ministry of Finance with central authority over all legal gambling activity in Ethiopia.
Council of Ministers Regulation No. 160/2009 fleshes out the operational framework for the NLA.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed takes office and initiates broad economic liberalisation, the first signal that previously closed sectors, including telecoms and eventually betting, would open to private capital.
The Ministry of Revenue issues Sports Betting Lottery Directive No. 172/2021 (effective 1 September 2021), the first detailed national framework for licensed sports betting. Operators must hold a physical office, post a bank guarantee of 1.5 million birr, pay winnings within 15 days, and deduct 15% income tax on winnings monthly.
Safaricom Ethiopia launches commercial operations, the country's first private telecoms operator. Its M-Pesa mobile-money arm secures its licence in August 2023, but by then Ethio Telecom's Telebirr already has roughly 36 million users.
Pan-African brands including Betika and Sportybet enter the licensed Ethiopian market, and the licensed sportsbook population grows to roughly 20+ operators.
The National Bank of Ethiopia announces a floating exchange-rate regime. The birr depreciates from around 57.7 per US dollar to 118.99 within months, a more than 100% devaluation that fundamentally reshapes the economics of every betting deposit.
The Ethiopian Lottery Service suspends the operating licences of 22 betting companies on receipt of an NISS dossier alleging revenue concealment exceeding 100 billion birr.
NISS arrests 24 individuals including company owners. Allegations include hiding revenue, converting birr cash receipts into foreign currency via crypto and Hawala networks.
The Ethiopian Lottery Service revokes every sports betting licence with immediate effect. Banks, mobile money operators and payment processors are ordered to stop processing betting transactions. The licensed Ethiopian sports betting market ceases to exist overnight.
Addis Insight publishes its investigation into the betPawa case, the international group accused of pre-launch advertising without a localised licence. The ELS confirms no new licence applications are being accepted while a revised framework is drafted.
The NLA's licensing window remains closed. International operators on foreign licences continue to accept Ethiopian players from offshore.
Ethiopia regulation: what bettors need to know
The Ethiopian gambling framework rests on three documents that you can verify at the National Lottery Administration and the Ministry of Revenue:
- National Lottery Administration Re-establishment Proclamation No. 535/2007, establishes the NLA as the central gambling regulator under the Ministry of Finance.
- Council of Ministers Regulation No. 160/2009, operational rules for the NLA.
- Sports Betting Lottery Directive No. 172/2021 (Ministry of Revenue, effective 1 September 2021), the detailed rules for sports betting operators: physical office, 1.5 million birr bank guarantee, 15-day winnings payout requirement, 15% income tax on winnings deducted at source and remitted monthly.
The 15 December 2025 revocation directive does not repeal any of the above, it suspends every existing licence pending review and bars new applications until a revised framework is in place. The legal infrastructure for licensed sports betting therefore still exists; the operating market does not. Watch the NLA and Ministry of Revenue notices for the licensing window to re-open.
For foreign-exchange policy and the birr's reference rate, the National Bank of Ethiopia publishes daily reference rates. For the legislative record on the underlying proclamations, the House of Peoples' Representatives hosts the official text.
The Ethiopian betting market in numbers (2025 to 2026)
The headline number, 100 billion birr of allegedly concealed revenue, is roughly five times the total annual government health budget. That is the scale of the financial-integrity problem the NLA and NISS describe, and it explains why the response was a full shutdown rather than a targeted enforcement. Sources cited above: NLA notices, Ethiopian Lottery Service communiqués, Addis Insight, Addis Standard, igamingafrika, the National Bank of Ethiopia FX series, and Kenyan Wall Street analysis of Safaricom Ethiopia data.
Quick facts: age, taxes and payments
- Minimum age: 18+ for any form of legal gambling in Ethiopia under Directive 172/2021.
- Taxes on winnings: 15% income tax on winnings is deducted at source by licensed operators and remitted monthly to the Ministry of Revenue. International operators outside Ethiopian recognition do not deduct this, the legal status of those winnings under Ethiopian tax law is contested and a real risk for the bettor.
- Currency: Ethiopian birr (ETB). The National Bank of Ethiopia moved to a floating rate in July 2024; the birr has depreciated from roughly 57.7 to 118+ per US dollar since.
- Payment methods (pre-shutdown): Telebirr was dominant, followed by CBE Birr, HelloCash, M-Pesa Ethiopia and Awash Bank rails. Cash at retail also significant.
- Payment methods (June 2026): Direct Telebirr / M-Pesa Ethiopia rails are blocked at the regulator's instruction for any operator processing through Ethiopian banks. Practical workarounds at international operators are USD-funded international cards, Skrill / Neteller funded from a foreign source, and crypto (most commonly USDT TRC-20).
- Operator requirements (Directive 172/2021): physical office in Ethiopia, 1.5 million birr bank guarantee, payment of winnings within 15 days, monthly tax remittance, responsible-gambling and anti-money-laundering policies.
FAQ: best betting sites in Ethiopia
Is online sports betting legal in Ethiopia in 2026?
The legal framework still exists, Lottery Proclamation 535/2007 and Sports Betting Lottery Directive 172/2021, but every operator licence was revoked on 15 December 2025, and the National Lottery Administration is not currently accepting new applications. Practically, the licensed sports betting market is paused. International operators on foreign licences continue to accept Ethiopian players from offshore.
What happened to Hibret Bet, Hulu Sport, Habesha Bet and the other local champions?
Their NLA licences were revoked on 15 December 2025 as part of the nationwide directive. Some retail outlets remain closed; others are operating limited offerings while awaiting a revised licensing framework. Dashbet's owners were among the 24 arrested in November-December 2025 on revenue-concealment allegations.
Can I still use Telebirr for online betting?
Not directly with any operator processing through Ethiopian banks, the Ethiopian Lottery Service ordered banks, mobile money operators and payment processors to stop processing betting transactions in December 2025. International operators that take payment outside Ethiopian rails (USD cards, Skrill, crypto) remain accessible.
What is the safest international option for Ethiopian players?
I weight dual-licensed operators (Curaçao + Kahnawake) above Curaçao-only, and Curaçao above Anjouan. BetLabel, Ivibet and Pinnacle score best on licensing transparency. None is Ethiopian-recognised, that protection does not currently exist.
How does the birr devaluation affect my bets?
If you deposit through a USD-denominated wallet, every transaction now eats roughly twice as many birr as it did in early 2024. Bonus values in birr have also been eroded. Crypto deposits insulate you from the birr's day-to-day volatility but expose you to crypto volatility instead. There is no clean answer right now.
Are winnings taxable?
Under Directive 172/2021, licensed operators must deduct 15% income tax at source and remit monthly. International operators do not deduct Ethiopian tax. The legal status of winnings from foreign-licensed operators under Ethiopian tax law is contested, consult an Ethiopian tax adviser if the sums are material.
What is the minimum legal betting age?
18+ under Directive 172/2021.
Will the NLA re-open licensing?
Industry signals point to a revised framework in 2026, but no firm timeline has been published. The Ethiopian Lottery Service and the Ministry of Revenue are the bodies to watch for an announcement.
What sports do Ethiopian bettors actually back?
Football overwhelmingly, Ethiopian Premier League, EPL, Champions League, CAF Champions League and Walia Ibex internationals. Athletics is a smaller but culturally significant niche, especially around the Olympics and IAAF World Athletics. Basketball and esports are growing.
Is it safe to bet at offshore sites?
Offshore books sit outside Ethiopian protections. If a dispute arises with an international operator, your only recourse is the foreign licensing body (Curaçao, Anjouan, Kahnawake). I weight licensing transparency hard for that reason. Where a clean licensed Ethiopian option re-emerges, I would prefer it.
What about responsible gambling support in Ethiopia?
There is no dedicated Ethiopian gambling-harm helpline at the moment. The Ministry of Health's mental health services are the primary local route. International operators with strong responsible-gambling tools (Pinnacle, BetLabel, Ivibet) offer deposit limits and self-exclusion that you can use proactively. Set limits before you deposit, not after a losing streak.
My take: where I'd open my first account
This is my opinion as someone who covers African sports betting for a living. It is not financial advice and not a push to bet. Ethiopia in mid-2026 is the most unusual market on the continent, the legal infrastructure for licensed sports betting exists, but the licensed operating market does not. If you must bet, my honest read is to lean towards the dual-licensed international operators (22bet, BetLabel, Ivibet) for the cleanest paperwork, 1xBet for the deepest football coverage including the Ethiopian Premier League, Pinnacle for the sharpest prices and Stake.com if you are comfortable with crypto-only deposits. Treat every option as offshore, set deposit limits at signup, and keep stakes small until the NLA's next directive lands. If your only motive is to back Saint George SC or the Walia Ibex with friends, the licensed Ethiopian market should be your preferred home when it returns. Wait if you can.
Bet responsibly. You must be 18+ to gamble legally in Ethiopia. Gambling can be addictive. Set deposit and time limits at signup, never chase losses, and only stake what you can afford to lose. There is currently no dedicated Ethiopian gambling-harm helpline; the Ministry of Health's mental health services are the primary local route, and most international operators offer self-exclusion, deposit limits and time-outs that you can activate proactively from your account settings.
Sources and further reading
- National Lottery Administration, regulator notices and licence directives
- Ministry of Revenue, Sports Betting Lottery Directive No. 172/2021
- National Bank of Ethiopia, daily FX reference rates and floating-rate regime
- House of Peoples' Representatives, legislative record on Proclamation 535/2007
- Addis Insight, investigation into the betPawa case (January 2026)
- Addis Standard, coverage of the 15 December 2025 revocation directive
- Ethiopian Lottery Service (ELS), November and December 2025 licence-suspension and revocation notices
- igamingafrika, Ethiopia gaming regulatory framework interviews and industry briefings
- Kenyan Wall Street, analysis of Safaricom Ethiopia, Telebirr and M-Pesa Ethiopia
- The Reporter Magazine, Ethiopia revokes all sports betting licences (December 2025)
