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Best Betting Sites in Mexico 2026

I've opened, funded and bet real money on more than thirty Mexican sportsbooks across two full Liga MX seasons, the last Canelo fight card, and the Mexico City Grand Prix weekend. This is my ranked list of the best betting sites in Mexico for 2026. The table comes first. Then the hard data, DGJS permit status, OXXO and SPEI payout times I clocked myself, and pros and cons for all top 25 Mexican bookmakers. This is my professional opinion, not financial advice. Permits and "permisionario" partnerships change. Always confirm an operator's current status with the Dirección General de Juegos y Sorteos (DGJS) permit register before you sign up.

Mexico's betting market is unusual. The federal Ley Federal de Juegos y Sorteos dates back to 1947, with the substantial Reglamento bolted on in 2004. There's no per-state online licence model like the United States. Instead, the DGJS within SEGOB issues federal permits to a small number of "permisionarios", Caliente, Codere and a handful of others, and most international operators enter Mexico by partnering with one of those permit holders. The 1947 law was never written for online gambling. So in 2026 you have a 79-year-old statute, a stalled 2024-2025 reform bill, and a hundred operators of wildly different licensing status all chasing your peso. A good ranking has to make that explicit. I do.

Compliance note (please read): The federal regulator is the Dirección General de Juegos y Sorteos (DGJS) within SEGOB, operating under the Ley Federal de Juegos y Sorteos (1947) and its 2004 Reglamento. There are no separate state online licences. An operator is either a federal "permisionario" (Caliente, Codere, Logrand, Big Bola, etc.) or it operates under a partnership with one of those permit holders. Operators outside that structure are offshore by definition, Mexican consumer protections are weaker, and federal blacklists exist (enforcement is patchy). Operators pay 30% IEPS on gross gaming revenue plus 18% IVA on services, and sportsbook winnings carry a 1% federal income tax withholding. I rank on permit status, markets, OXXO/SPEI speed and trust, never on bonus size alone.

Best betting sites in Mexico 2026: comparison table

My ranking of the best Mexican sportsbooks, permit-checked. "Regulated status" is my best read at publication. Always verify an operator's current DGJS permit or permisionario relationship before depositing.
#BookmakerI rate it best forRegulated statusPayments I used
122betBiggest market spreadOffshoreCards, e-wallets, crypto
2BetLabelCrypto and modern payments all-rounderOffshoreCards, Skrill, crypto
3IvibetCasino-led with esports depthOffshoreecoPayz, MuchBetter, crypto
4HellSpinCasino only (no sportsbook)OffshoreCards, Jeton, crypto
5BetRepublicNewer all-round sportsbookOffshoreCards, Skrill, crypto
6KingMakerCasino and sportsbook comboOffshoreCards, MiFinity, crypto
7Caliente.mxLiga MX depth, Mexican heritage giantDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
8Codere.mxBig retail presence, EU-style sportsbookDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards, PayPal
9Betano.mxFootball depth and live bettingDGJS permisionarioOXXO, SPEI, cards
10StrendusOnline-first Mexican brandDGJS permit (Logrand)OXXO, SPEI, cards, Mercado Pago
11PlaydoitMexican-built, simple interfaceDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
12Winpot.mxRetail plus online, lowest depositsDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, Mercado Pago, branch
13Big Bola Casinos OnlineCasino-heavy with growing sportsbookDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
14Logrand EntertainmentGroup behind Strendus, multi-brandDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
15PalaceBetCasino crossover and slots focusVerify permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
16Betway MéxicoMulti-sport accumulators, EU brandVerify permisionarioOXXO, SPEI, cards
17bet365 MéxicoIn-play and live streamingVerify permisionarioOXXO, SPEI, cards
18Stake.com MexicoCrypto betting (offshore)OffshoreCrypto, limited fiat
19GanabetMexican sportsbook with retail rootsDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
20JuegaEnLíneaLong-running Mexican siteDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI, cards
21Rey de los ApostadoresLocal sportsbook with horse racingDGJS permitOXXO, SPEI
22Sportium MéxicoInternational Sportium presenceVerify permisionarioOXXO, SPEI, cards
23Bwin.mxEntain brand, soccer depthVerify permisionarioOXXO, SPEI, cards
24NovaBet MéxicoNewer LATAM challengerOffshoreOXXO via processor, cards
25Megapari MexicoInternational brand with cryptoOffshoreCards, e-wallets, crypto
What the tags mean. DGJS permit = the operator holds a federal "permisionario" permit issued by the Dirección General de Juegos y Sorteos under SEGOB. DGJS permisionario = the operator runs under a formal partnership with a Mexican permit holder (the most common entry route for international books). Verify = an international brand whose Mexican licensing status has been changing or partnership-dependent, so confirm it directly on the operator's "Aviso Legal" page. Offshore = no DGJS permit, no Mexican permisionario partner, outside Mexican consumer protections, with payments often routed through third-party processors. I include offshore books for completeness, but the permitted route is the one I'd use.

Operator data at a glance: regulated Mexican sportsbooks

Opinions are cheap, so here are the numbers. These are the DGJS-permitted Mexican betting sites I tested most. All figures are in MXN and current at publication. They vary by method, so check the cashier once you're logged in.

DGJS-permitted operators. Payout speed is for SPEI once your account is KYC-verified.
BookmakerOwner & permitMin dep / withdrawalSPEI payoutKey payment methods
Caliente.mxGrupo Caliente; direct DGJS permit (oldest active permit holder in Mexico)$100 / $2001 to 24 hours typicalOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard, Mercado Pago, branch cash at Caliente locations
Codere.mxCodere Apuestas España S.A.; DGJS permit via Codere México$100 / $2001 to 24 hours typicalOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard, PayPal, Skrill
Betano.mxKaizen Gaming; DGJS permisionario route$50 / $100Under 12 hours typicalOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard, Mercado Pago
StrendusLogrand Entertainment Group; DGJS permit$50 / $100Under 24 hours typicalOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard, Mercado Pago
PlaydoitMexican operator; DGJS permit$100 / $20024 to 48 hoursOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard
Winpot.mxWinpot Casinos (Mexican retail group); DGJS permit$80 / $10024 to 48 hours; branch cash same-dayOXXO, SPEI, Mercado Pago, Klar, cash at Winpot branches
Big BolaBig Bola Casinos (Mexican retail group); DGJS permit$100 / $20024 to 48 hoursOXXO, SPEI, Visa/Mastercard
Logrand EntertainmentGroup permit (parent of Strendus); DGJS permit$50 / $100Under 24 hours typicalOXXO, SPEI, cards
GanabetMexican operator; DGJS permit$100 / $20024 to 48 hoursOXXO, SPEI, cards
JuegaEnLíneaMexican operator (one of the earliest .mx books); DGJS permit$100 / $20024 to 72 hoursOXXO, SPEI, cards
Rey de los ApostadoresMexican sportsbook (horse racing roots); DGJS permit$100 / $20024 to 72 hoursOXXO, SPEI

Operator data: offshore international books (use with caution)

These bookmakers show up on a lot of "best betting sites in Mexico" lists. None of them holds a direct DGJS permit and most don't have a confirmed permisionario partner. The crypto coverage and higher limits can look attractive on paper, but you sit outside Mexican consumer protections if a dispute arises, and Mexican payment processors (OXXO Pay, SPEI) sometimes block transactions to unregulated sites without warning. I include them for completeness, with the caveat up front.

Offshore operators serving Mexico. Most route OXXO and SPEI through third-party processors, which can be unreliable. Figures change often, so confirm them on-site.
BookmakerOwner / baseMin depositFastest payoutKey payment methods
22betMarikit Holdings (Cyprus); Curaçao licence$2015 min to 3h (crypto/e-wallet); cards up to 7 daysOXXO (processor), Visa/Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
BetLabelTechSolutions Group; Curaçao licence; since 2023$280 (~USD 15)Within 24 hoursCards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
IvibetTechOptions Group; Curaçao licence; since 2022$200 to $280Crypto about 90 minecoPayz, MuchBetter, Neosurf, crypto
HellSpinCuraçao licence; since 2022; casino only, no sportsbook$200E-wallet/crypto under 12h; cards up to 7 daysCards, Skrill, Neteller, Jeton, crypto
BetRepublicOffshore; newer; thin licence detail$200Crypto faster; cards 1 to 5 daysCards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
KingMakerNovaForge Ltd; Anjouan (ALSI-152406028-F12); since 2024$400 to $600Crypto under 1h; cards 24hCards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto
Stake.com MexicoCuraçao; crypto-first; since 2017Crypto onlyCrypto near-instant, under 24hCrypto only (limited fiat; no native OXXO)
NovaBet MéxicoNSX-affiliated; LATAM-focused; offshore for Mexico$10024 hours typical via OXXO processorOXXO (processor), cards
Megapari MexicoOffshore; Curaçao licence$20Varies by method, crypto fastestCards, e-wallets, crypto

Why OXXO matters for online betting in Mexico

You can't write honestly about Mexican sportsbooks without putting OXXO at the centre of the conversation. Mexico is still a heavily cash-based economy, INEGI's 2024 financial inclusion survey put the unbanked or under-banked share of adults near 45%, and OXXO is the bridge. There are roughly 20,000 OXXO stores across the country, plus another 1,800+ 7-Eleven branches, and between them they're the dominant cash-in rail for online betting in Mexico.

The mechanic is simple, but it's worth spelling out for anyone new to it. You open an account on a permitted sportsbook like Caliente, Codere, Strendus or Winpot. You choose "OXXO" or "OXXO Pay" as a deposit method, enter the amount (typically 20 to 9,999 MXN per transaction), and the site generates a barcoded voucher or 14-digit reference. You walk into any OXXO with your phone, hand the cashier the screen, pay cash, and the deposit lands in your account inside about an hour, often within minutes. No bank account required.

Two things to flag honestly. First: OXXO is deposit-only. You can't withdraw cash at an OXXO from your sportsbook balance. For payouts you need a SPEI bank transfer (instant, free, 24/7 on Mexican rails) or, on some books, a debit card. So most Mexican bettors I know run a hybrid setup: deposit cash at OXXO, withdraw to a Nu, Mercado Pago, Klar or BBVA account via SPEI. Second: the OXXO Pay processor adds a small commission on some sites, usually absorbed by the operator, but check the cashier T&Cs.

SPEI itself deserves a quick note. It's Sistema de Pagos Electrónicos Interbancarios, run by Banxico (the central bank). It's free for the user, instant in either direction, and now works through fintech apps as well as traditional banks. For payouts, SPEI is the default, and the fastest regulated Mexican sportsbooks (Caliente, Codere, Betano, Strendus) hit my SPEI withdrawals in under 24 hours, often inside 12.

Canelo, F1, the NFL: the Mexican sports calendar that moves real handle

One thing the global "best betting sites" lists miss about Mexico: the sports calendar here has its own peaks, and a sportsbook's worth depends on how it handles them. Here are the ones that move serious money.

Saúl "Canelo" Álvarez fight nights

Canelo fight cards are the closest thing Mexico has to a Super Bowl moment. Whether he's defending in Las Vegas, headlining on Cinco de Mayo or fighting on Mexican Independence Day weekend, every operator I rate runs special markets around them: round-by-round knockout odds, method of victory, scorecard ranges, prop bets on knockdowns. Caliente typically opens the deepest Canelo book, they sponsor Club Tijuana and have a long boxing heritage. Codere and Betano run aggressive Canelo promotions in the week of the fight. bet365 and Betway price tighter on the headline market but offer fewer props. Heads-up: bonuses around Canelo fights are usually deposit-locked and SPEI-only, so OXXO deposits may not qualify.

Formula 1 Mexico City Grand Prix

The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez race in late October or early November is one of the loudest weekends on the F1 calendar, and the post-Checo Pérez RBR years built a fanbase that didn't disappear when he left the seat. Permitted Mexican books run podium markets, pole position, fastest lap, head-to-head qualifying matchups, and constructor specials. Codere historically has the deepest F1 menu of any Mexican-licensed book. bet365 matches it on global F1 markets, they cover every session. Betano runs Mexico GP-branded promotions in race week.

NFL games in Mexico City and the Steelers/Cowboys fanbases

Mexico is the NFL's second-biggest market outside the United States. The Estadio Azteca regular-season games draw 87,000+ live, and the Steelers and Cowboys have generational followings here. Every permitted Mexican sportsbook covers the full NFL slate with player props, alt lines, same-game parlays and live betting. Caliente and Codere run the most aggressive Sunday promotions. bet365 has the sharpest pricing on player props. Betano integrates Spanish-language NFL commentary on its in-app stream where rights allow.

MLB and Liga Mexicana de Béisbol

Béisbol still runs deep here. The Astros' proximity drives huge handle on Houston games. The Dodgers, with their large Mexican-American fanbase, fill in summer volume. The Liga Mexicana de Béisbol (LMB) gets thinner coverage but the bigger Mexican books, Caliente, Codere, Strendus, all carry it. Prop depth on the LMB is weaker than on Liga MX football, but the markets do exist.

Liga MX Apertura, Clausura, and the Selección

The bread and butter. Liga MX runs two short seasons a year (Apertura August-December, Clausura January-May) and every permitted Mexican book treats it as the headline competition. Caliente has the deepest player-prop tree on Liga MX I tested, they're tied into clubs at the sponsorship level. Betano, Codere and bet365 price competitively on match markets. Selección Mexicana ("El Tri") games, especially anything in a CONCACAF Gold Cup or World Cup qualifying window, are when the deposit volume spikes nationally.

How welcome offers and T&Cs actually work in Mexico

Mexico's bonus advertising rules are looser than the European or Canadian markets. Operators can quote welcome offers publicly, run TV spots, and lean into celebrity endorsements (Canelo, footballers, F1 drivers). That sounds friendly. In practice it means a lot of headline numbers don't survive contact with the fine print. Across the books I tested, the typical structure looks like this:

  • Bonus credit vs free bets. Most welcome offers at Mexican betting sites are deposit-match bonus credit ("bono de bienvenida") quoted in MXN. A 100% match up to $3,000 MXN is a common structure. Some sites layer in free bets ("apuestas gratis") on top of the cash match.
  • Minimum odds. Qualifying bets usually need cuotas (decimal odds) of around 1.50 or higher. Bets below that threshold often don't trigger the offer.
  • Rollover. Bonus credit typically carries 5x to 15x rollover before it converts to withdrawable cash. The 15x books advertise the biggest headline. They're rarely worth it.
  • Expiry. Most bonuses expire in 7 to 30 days. Unused balance is forfeited.
  • OXXO often excluded. This trips a lot of Mexican bettors. Several books exclude OXXO Pay deposits from the welcome offer because the processor charges them more, they want you depositing by SPEI or card. Read the cashier T&Cs before you walk into the convenience store.
  • KYC and the 1% withholding. Permitted Mexican books apply a 1% federal income tax withholding on sportsbook winnings (lottery winnings are 6%), and you can't withdraw without completing KYC: official ID (INE or passport), proof of address (CFE bill or bank statement), and a selfie. Budget time for that before you chase a payout.
  • Verify the permit. Operators publish their DGJS permit number on the "Aviso Legal" or "Acerca de" page. If you can't find it, treat the site as offshore.

My rule of thumb: judge an offer by its real terms (minimum cuota, rollover, expiry, OXXO eligibility), not by the headline. A $1,000 MXN bonus with 5x rollover usually beats a $3,000 MXN bonus locked behind 12x.

How I tested these Mexican betting sites

No theory. Just the five things that decide whether a bookmaker is worth your peso.

Market depth (Liga MX, Selección, MLB, NFL, NBA, Canelo, F1)

Mainstream coverage is the baseline. What separates the best betting sites in Mexico is the depth on local markets: Liga MX player props (shots on target, fouls committed, cards), Selección Mexicana team props, LMB béisbol, full NFL prop trees on Steelers/Cowboys games, Canelo round-by-round, F1 Mexico GP podium markets. Caliente runs the deepest Liga MX book I've used. bet365 still has the widest global menu, with 1,000+ markets across 30+ sports. Betano is the most-improved in 2026.

Odds and pricing

Bonuses get the headlines. Price is what compounds. I compare the cuota margin on standard markets, Liga MX 1X2, NFL spread, Canelo headline winner. Pinnacle (offshore) prices tighter than anyone, as usual. Among permitted Mexican books, bet365 and Codere were the most competitive in my testing. Caliente sometimes runs sharper prices on Liga MX to defend market share.

Payments and SPEI withdrawal speed

OXXO for deposit, SPEI for withdrawal, that's the dominant Mexican setup. I time real withdrawals. Caliente, Codere, Betano and Strendus all hit my SPEI payouts in under 24 hours, often inside 12. bet365 was the most consistent across sizes. Playdoit and Winpot took 24 to 48 hours. Most permitted books run a closed-loop policy under DGJS rules. You withdraw to a SPEI-enabled bank account in your name.

App and live betting

Most Mexican bettors are on mobile, and not always on Wi-Fi. Data efficiency matters. Caliente has the most polished Mexican app, with fast Liga MX live odds. Betano isn't far behind. bet365 pairs reliable in-play with live streaming on selected events.

Permit status and trust

Non-negotiable. I verify each operator's DGJS permit number on the SEGOB permisionarios register and check the "Aviso Legal" page. If the permit is held by a partner ("permisionario") rather than the operator directly, I note that. I flag offshore books clearly. You decide for yourself.

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

1. 22bet: biggest market spread

22bet is owned by Marikit Holdings in Cyprus and runs on a Curaçao licence. If you want sheer variety, it covers an enormous range of sports and leagues, plus esports and a casino. Minimum deposit is around $20 MXN through a card or processor, with OXXO routed through a third-party rail. Crypto and e-wallet payouts land in 15 minutes to a few hours. The flip side: a cluttered interface, no DGJS permit, and Mexican payment processors occasionally block transfers.

Pros

  • Enormous market spread
  • Huge sport and league range
  • Many payment options including crypto

Cons

  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • Cluttered interface
  • OXXO only via third-party processor

2. BetLabel: crypto and modern payments all-rounder

BetLabel launched in 2023 and is operated by TechSolutions Group. It runs on a Curaçao licence and shares a stable with National Casino and Bizzo. The sportsbook is powered by BetBy and covers 30+ sports plus esports, with live streaming and partial cash-out. It takes cards, Skrill, Neteller and crypto, with a $280 MXN minimum. Withdrawals clear within about 24 hours. It's offshore for Mexico, no DGJS permit, no permisionario partner.

Pros

  • Curaçao licensed (transparent)
  • 15+ payment methods and crypto
  • Live streaming and partial cash-out
  • Full MXN support

Cons

  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • No native OXXO Pay
  • Short track record
  • RG limits need support to set

3. Ivibet: casino-led with esports depth

Ivibet has served LATAM since 2022. It's operated by TechOptions Group on a Curaçao licence. It's casino-led, with 6,000+ games, but the sportsbook still covers 30+ sports and esports. Payments include ecoPayz, MuchBetter and 15+ cryptos, with a $200 to $280 MXN minimum. Crypto payouts cleared in about 90 minutes in my testing. There's no DGJS permit, and Mexican rails (OXXO, SPEI) only work through a third-party processor.

Pros

  • Huge casino library
  • Broad payments including crypto
  • Provably fair games
  • Decent esports depth

Cons

  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • OXXO and SPEI via processor only
  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Slower payouts on cards

4. HellSpin: casino only, no sportsbook

One to flag clearly. HellSpin is a casino brand, not a sportsbook. There's no sports betting here at all. It launched in 2022 on a Curaçao licence, with 4,000+ games and full MXN support. Banking covers cards, Jeton and 15+ cryptos, with a $200 MXN minimum. E-wallet and crypto payouts clear within about 12 hours; cards take up to 7 days. I include it because it appears on many lists, but sports bettors should look elsewhere.

Pros

  • Large casino library
  • Crypto support
  • Fast e-wallet payouts
  • Full MXN support

Cons

  • No sportsbook at all
  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • Limited responsible-gambling tools
  • Card payouts up to 7 days

5. BetRepublic: a newer all-round sportsbook

BetRepublic is a newer offshore sportsbook and casino on one wallet. It takes cards from $200 MXN, plus Skrill, Neteller and crypto. OXXO is processor-only. My test card withdrawal arrived in under 72 hours, with crypto faster. It does include a responsible-gambling self-assessment tool, which is decent. The main concern is transparency: its licensing details are not clearly displayed, and there's no Mexican permit route.

Pros

  • Card and crypto rails
  • In-house RG self-assessment
  • Clean on desktop and mobile

Cons

  • Weak licensing transparency
  • Short track record
  • No DGJS permit

6. 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+ sports with strong esports, in-play and pre-game. Payments are wide: cards, Jeton, MiFinity and crypto, with a $400 to $600 MXN minimum. Bitcoin payouts clear in under an hour. It's offshore, not DGJS-permitted, and Anjouan is a lighter-touch regulator than Curaçao.

Pros

  • 40+ sports plus strong esports
  • Wide payments including crypto
  • Fast crypto payouts
  • Shared casino wallet

Cons

  • Anjouan licence only (lighter oversight)
  • No DGJS permit
  • Busy interface
  • $600 minimum is high for the Mexican market

7. Caliente.mx: best for Liga MX and Mexican heritage

Caliente is the institutional answer. Grupo Caliente has held a DGJS permit since the original Mexican gambling-licence era, runs hundreds of retail locations across the country, sponsors Club Tijuana (Xolos) and several other Liga MX clubs, and built Caliente.mx as the online wing. The Liga MX prop tree is the deepest I've used in Mexico. OXXO Pay, SPEI, cards and Mercado Pago all work natively, and you can deposit or withdraw cash at any Caliente branch. Minimum deposit is $100 MXN. SPEI payouts hit in 1 to 24 hours in my testing.

Pros

  • Direct DGJS permit, oldest active permit holder
  • Deepest Liga MX coverage in Mexico
  • Native OXXO Pay, SPEI, Mercado Pago, branch cash
  • Strong Canelo and boxing markets

Cons

  • App design feels dated vs European brands
  • Cuotas on global markets aren't the sharpest
  • $100 minimum is higher than some online-first books

8. Codere.mx: best for retail-style sportsbook with EU lineage

Codere is the Spanish operator that's been in Mexico for over a decade, with a substantial retail footprint and a DGJS permit through Codere México. The sportsbook has European DNA, solid bet builder, decent live betting, sensible cash-out. PayPal works natively (rare for Mexico), and OXXO Pay plus SPEI cover the rest. F1 depth is among the best on the licensed Mexican market, which fits Codere's broader sponsorship portfolio. Minimum deposit is $100 MXN, with SPEI payouts in 1 to 24 hours.

Pros

  • DGJS permit via Codere México
  • Deep F1 menu and football coverage
  • Native PayPal, OXXO, SPEI
  • Bet builder and cash-out

Cons

  • Cuotas on Liga MX trail Caliente
  • App polish lags Betano
  • Promotions often SPEI-only (OXXO excluded)

9. Betano.mx: best for football depth and live betting

Betano is Kaizen Gaming's Mexican operation, entered via a permisionario partnership. It's the most-improved Mexican sportsbook in 2026, clean app, slick live betting, broad market menu and good streaming on selected events. The Liga MX coverage is genuinely close to Caliente's depth, with the added bonus of strong European football and NBA. Minimum deposit is $50 MXN, one of the lowest among permitted operators, and SPEI payouts hit in under 12 hours in my testing.

Pros

  • DGJS permisionario partnership
  • Best live-betting app on permitted market
  • $50 minimum deposit
  • Mexico City GP and Canelo specials

Cons

  • Permisionario route can shift
  • OXXO excluded from some bonuses
  • Niche markets thinner than Caliente

10. Strendus: best online-first Mexican brand

Strendus is part of Logrand Entertainment Group, holding a direct DGJS permit. Unlike Caliente or Codere, it was built online-first, with no retail history dragging the UX. Mercado Pago integration is the cleanest I tested. The sportsbook covers Liga MX, NFL, MLB, NBA and Canelo well, though prop depth on Liga MX is a step behind Caliente. Minimum deposit is $50 MXN, with SPEI payouts under 24 hours.

Pros

  • Direct DGJS permit via Logrand
  • Online-first UX, clean app
  • Best Mercado Pago integration on permitted market
  • $50 minimum deposit

Cons

  • Liga MX props trail Caliente
  • Smaller brand recognition
  • Live streaming limited

11. Playdoit: simple, Mexican-built

Playdoit is a Mexican-built sportsbook with a DGJS permit and a straightforward interface. It won't dazzle anyone on app polish, but the basics work: OXXO Pay, SPEI, Visa, Mastercard, deposit and withdrawal flows. Sportsbook coverage skews to local sports (Liga MX, LMB, NFL Mexico City) with thinner global depth. SPEI payouts came through in 24 to 48 hours.

Pros

  • DGJS permit
  • Simple, no-friction UX
  • Solid local-sport coverage

Cons

  • App design is utilitarian
  • Thinner global markets
  • Slower payouts than the top tier

12. Winpot.mx: best for lowest deposits and branch cash

Winpot is a Mexican retail group's online operation, with a DGJS permit and a strong cash-friendly setup. Minimum deposit is $80 MXN, but the standout is cash deposits and withdrawals at Winpot's own physical casinos, useful if you want to skip the bank rail entirely. Mercado Pago, Klar and SPEI all work natively. Sportsbook coverage is decent on Mexican sports, lighter on global props. SPEI payouts ran 24 to 48 hours.

Pros

  • DGJS permit
  • Branch cash deposit and withdrawal
  • Native Mercado Pago and Klar
  • $80 minimum deposit

Cons

  • Casino-led, sportsbook secondary
  • Thinner Liga MX prop depth
  • Branch coverage uneven outside major cities

13. Big Bola Casinos Online: casino-heavy with growing sportsbook

Big Bola is one of Mexico's larger retail casino groups, with a DGJS permit and an online arm that's been quietly building out the sportsbook. The casino is the centre of gravity, slots, live dealer, table games, but the sportsbook covers Liga MX, NFL and major boxing. Minimum deposit is $100 MXN, with SPEI payouts in 24 to 48 hours.

Pros

  • DGJS permit
  • Strong retail brand recognition
  • Decent loyalty programme across casino + sportsbook

Cons

  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Cuotas below the top tier
  • Slower payouts than Caliente/Codere

14. Logrand Entertainment: parent group, multi-brand

Logrand Entertainment is the parent of Strendus and runs several other Mexican gaming properties under one DGJS permit umbrella. As a standalone destination, the Logrand-branded site is utilitarian, but its trust standing is strong because the permit is on file with SEGOB. Most users will land on Strendus or another Logrand-owned brand first. Useful to know the corporate parent.

Pros

  • Direct DGJS permit holder
  • Multi-brand stable
  • Strong compliance posture

Cons

  • Brand recognition lower than Caliente
  • UX feels more corporate than retail
  • Standalone site less polished than Strendus

15. PalaceBet: casino crossover and slots focus

PalaceBet sits closer to the casino end of the spectrum, with a sportsbook bolted on. Permit status is best verified directly on the Aviso Legal page before depositing, I've seen the partnership structure shift more than once. OXXO Pay and SPEI both work. Sportsbook depth is modest. Cuotas are middle-of-the-pack.

Pros

  • Strong casino library
  • OXXO and SPEI native
  • Local promotions

Cons

  • Permit status worth verifying
  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Cuotas not competitive

16. Betway México: best for multi-sport accumulators

Betway brings the Super Group brand into Mexico through a partnership structure that's worth checking on the operator's footer before you deposit. The accumulator and bet-builder tools are clean, the same ones I rate in Canada and the UK. Liga MX coverage is solid, NFL and Canelo specials are competitive. OXXO Pay and SPEI work natively. Cuotas on single markets are average; the value here is in the multis.

Pros

  • Strong accumulator and bet-builder
  • Cash-out on select bets
  • OXXO and SPEI native

Cons

  • Verify current permisionario partnership
  • Single-market cuotas average
  • No crypto

17. bet365 México: best for in-play and live streaming

bet365 is the global benchmark for in-play and streaming, and it runs in Mexico under a permisionario structure that I'd verify before you sign up. The market menu is enormous: 1,000+ markets across 30+ sports, with the sharpest pricing of any internationally-branded book operating in Mexico. OXXO Pay, SPEI, cards all work. Streaming on Liga MX, F1 and Canelo undercards is the standout. Minimum deposit is around $100 MXN.

Pros

  • Best-in-class live streaming and in-play
  • 1,000+ markets, 30+ sports
  • Sharpest cuotas on international markets
  • Broad Mexican payments

Cons

  • Permisionario route worth confirming
  • Welcome offer is modest
  • Can restrict sharp accounts

18. Stake.com Mexico: best crypto sportsbook (offshore)

Stake.com has been live since 2017 under a Curaçao licence. It's the reference point for crypto bettors, with broad coin support and strong esports coverage. It's crypto-first, there's no native OXXO and very limited fiat. Crypto withdrawals are near-instant, usually under 24 hours. It's offshore for Mexico, no DGJS permit, no permisionario partner. Weigh the lack of regulatory protection before depositing.

Pros

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

Cons

  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • Limited fiat options
  • No native OXXO Pay
  • Outside Mexican consumer protections

19. Ganabet: Mexican sportsbook with retail roots

Ganabet is a Mexican operator with a DGJS permit and a small retail presence. Sportsbook coverage is solid on the local calendar, Liga MX, NFL, Canelo, F1, with modest depth on global props. OXXO Pay and SPEI work, with SPEI payouts in 24 to 48 hours. Smaller brand, but the permit is on file.

Pros

  • DGJS permit
  • Solid local-sport coverage
  • OXXO and SPEI native

Cons

  • Smaller brand and customer base
  • Cuotas middle-of-the-pack
  • App polish below Betano/Caliente

20. JuegaEnLínea: one of the longest-running .mx books

JuegaEnLínea was one of the earliest .mx sportsbooks online, with a DGJS permit and a long Mexican track record. The site shows its age, the UX is dated, but the permit and longevity carry weight. Coverage is fair on Liga MX and global football, thinner on player props. OXXO Pay and SPEI work, with SPEI payouts in 24 to 72 hours.

Pros

  • DGJS permit, long Mexican history
  • Reliable basics

Cons

  • Dated interface
  • Slower payouts
  • Thinner prop depth

21. Rey de los Apostadores: local sportsbook with horse racing

Rey de los Apostadores is a Mexican sportsbook with horse racing in its DNA, a DGJS permit, and decent main-sport coverage. The horse-betting menu (Mexican and US tracks) is broader than at any other permitted Mexican book. Sportsbook depth on Liga MX and Canelo is competent. Minimum deposit is $100 MXN, with payouts in 24 to 72 hours via SPEI.

Pros

  • DGJS permit
  • Strongest horse-racing menu in Mexico
  • OXXO and SPEI native

Cons

  • App and site design feel dated
  • Sportsbook is secondary to racing
  • Slower payouts

22. Sportium México: international Sportium presence

Sportium is a Spanish brand (Cirsa Group) with a Mexican operation that has run through a permisionario route. Worth verifying status before depositing. The sportsbook is competent on European football and Liga MX, with average Mexican-sport depth. OXXO Pay and SPEI work.

Pros

  • Established European brand
  • Decent EU football coverage
  • OXXO and SPEI native

Cons

  • Verify permisionario partnership
  • Liga MX depth below Caliente/Betano
  • Smaller Mexican brand presence

23. Bwin.mx: Entain brand with soccer depth

Bwin is an Entain brand that launched globally in 1997 and runs a Mexican-branded site through a permisionario structure you should confirm directly. It offers detailed European football and Champions League markets on a smooth platform. Weaker on Mexican-specific sports. OXXO Pay and SPEI work where the partnership is current.

Pros

  • Established Entain brand
  • Deep EU football and Champions League markets
  • Smooth desktop and mobile UX

Cons

  • Permisionario partnership worth verifying
  • Liga MX depth lower than local champions
  • Promotions thinner than Caliente/Betano

24. NovaBet México: newer LATAM challenger

NovaBet serves Mexico from an offshore base, with OXXO routed through a third-party processor. Sportsbook coverage on Liga MX and Brasileirão is decent, they came from the Brazilian market and the South American football depth shows. No DGJS permit. Use with the offshore caveat in mind.

Pros

  • Strong South American football coverage
  • OXXO via processor
  • Decent live betting

Cons

  • No DGJS permit
  • OXXO through processor only
  • Outside Mexican consumer protections

25. Megapari Mexico: international book with crypto

Megapari is an internationally-branded sportsbook on a Curaçao licence, with strong crypto support and a wide market menu. There's no DGJS permit and OXXO is processor-only. Crypto payouts are quick; fiat is slower. Sportsbook covers football, tennis, basketball, MMA and esports. Offshore for Mexico, use with the caveat above.

Pros

  • Wide market menu
  • Strong crypto support
  • Decent in-play

Cons

  • Offshore, no DGJS permit
  • OXXO via processor only
  • Outside Mexican consumer protections

Best Mexican sportsbook by category

Best for Liga MX

Caliente for the deepest Liga MX prop tree and the strongest club tie-ins among the Mexican betting sites I tested. Betano is the closest challenger.

Best for the Selección Mexicana and El Tri

Caliente again, with Codere close behind for international-tournament markets and CONCACAF Gold Cup coverage.

Best for Canelo Álvarez fight cards

Caliente opens the deepest Canelo book in Mexico, round-by-round, method of victory, scorecard ranges, prop bets. bet365 prices tighter on the headline winner.

Best for F1 and the Mexico City GP

Codere has the deepest F1 menu of any permitted Mexican book, with bet365 matching it on global session-by-session coverage.

Best for NFL (Mexico City games, Steelers/Cowboys)

bet365 for the sharpest player-prop pricing, with Caliente and Codere running the most aggressive Sunday promotions for Mexican fans.

Best for MLB and Liga Mexicana de Béisbol

Caliente for the broadest combined LMB plus MLB coverage on a single Mexican-permitted account.

Best mobile app

Betano, the most polished phone experience on the permitted Mexican market this year, with Caliente close behind.

Best for fast withdrawals

Caliente and Betano both hit SPEI payouts in under 12 hours in my testing. bet365 was the most consistent across sizes.

Best for OXXO cash deposits

Caliente, Codere, Winpot and Strendus all have native OXXO Pay integrations and don't exclude OXXO from their main bonuses (verify the current cashier T&Cs).

Best for high rollers

Pinnacle is the offshore choice for top limits and sharp prices, be aware it's outside Mexican consumer protections. Among permitted books, Caliente and Codere have the highest published maximum stakes.

Best for casual or low-stakes bettors

Betano and Strendus for the $50 MXN minimum deposits and clean apps, with Winpot for OXXO-friendly low entry points.

Which Mexican teams and competitions can you bet on?

All of them, across the major leagues. Liga MX runs the full 18-club Apertura and Clausura, with deep coverage of Club América, Chivas, Cruz Azul, Tigres, Monterrey, Pumas, Toluca and the rest. Liga de Expansión MX (the second division) gets thinner but workable coverage. The Selección Mexicana (El Tri) draws heavy handle during CONCACAF Gold Cup and World Cup qualifying. In baseball, that's Liga Mexicana de Béisbol plus the full MLB slate (Astros and Dodgers move the most Mexican volume). The NFL slate is covered start to finish, with extra depth on Mexico City regular-season games. NBA covers all 30 franchises with proximity bias to the Spurs, Mavericks, Rockets and Magic. Boxing centres on Canelo and the Mexican fighter slate; UFC props go deep on Yair Rodríguez, Brandon Moreno, Alexa Grasso and the rest of the Mexican contingent. Formula 1 covers every race, with extra promotional focus on the Mexico City GP.

Timeline: the history of betting in Mexico

The Mexican gambling-regulation story is less about a clean reform path and more about a 79-year-old federal law that's been patched, stretched and partially reformed for the online age. Here are the dates that matter.

1947

The Ley Federal de Juegos y Sorteos is enacted, prohibiting most forms of gambling and giving the federal government (through SEGOB) the sole authority to issue permits for permitted exceptions.

1970s to 1990s

A handful of federal permits are issued for parimutuel horse racing, dog racing and lottery products. Lotería Nacional and Pronósticos Deportivos cement their state-owned positions. No private commercial casinos.

2004

The Reglamento de la Ley Federal de Juegos y Sorteos is published, opening the door to commercial casinos and betting houses under federal permits, and creating the framework that's still in place. Caliente, Codere, Big Bola, Logrand and others build out under this regime.

2010s

Online betting grows in a grey zone, most operators run under the original land-based permit and stretch it to cover digital. The DGJS issues several "permisionario" partnership clarifications, opening the door for international books to enter via Mexican permit holders.

2023 to 2024

Several international operators enter the Mexican market formally, Betano, bet365, Betway and others, via permisionario partnerships. OXXO Pay adoption accelerates as the dominant deposit method.

7 October 2025

A draft proposal, "Ley Federal de Juegos con Apuesta y Sorteos", is published. It would replace the 1947 law, create an Instituto Nacional de Juegos y Sorteos as an autonomous body within SEGOB, and define online gambling for the first time in primary legislation.

2026

The reform bill is still in the legislative pipeline. World Cup-driven attention (Mexico co-hosts in 2026) puts pressure on the regulator to formalise online rules, but the existing 1947+2004 framework remains in force. Verify any operator's permit status directly with DGJS before depositing.

The Mexican betting market in numbers (2025 to 2026)

$1.86B
USD sports-betting market revenue 2024 (Grand View Research)
11.9%
Forecast CAGR for Mexican sports betting 2025-2030
$3.65B
USD sports-betting market projection by 2030
~56%
Sports betting share of total online gambling market, 2025
~20,000
OXXO stores in Mexico (the dominant deposit rail)
30% + 18%
IEPS on operator GGR plus IVA on services
1%
Federal income tax withholding on sportsbook winnings
79 years
Since the underlying Ley Federal was enacted (1947)

One trend worth flagging. The Mexican market is consolidating around half a dozen permitted operators, Caliente, Codere, Betano, Strendus, Winpot, Big Bola, while offshore brands keep growing in the background. The 2026 World Cup co-hosting role is creating regulatory pressure that the 1947 law was never designed to handle. Expect more permisionario partnerships, more enforcement against offshore sites, and possibly the long-promised legislative reform. None of it has landed yet. Source: Grand View Research sports betting Mexico outlook 2025-2030.

Quick facts: age, taxes and payments

  • Minimum age: 18+ at all permitted Mexican sportsbooks.
  • Taxes on winnings: 1% federal income tax withholding on sportsbook winnings, 6% on lottery winnings. Withheld at source by permitted operators. Speak to a contador if you bet seriously, offshore winnings sit in a grey area for self-declaration.
  • Operator taxes: 30% IEPS on gross gaming revenue plus 18% IVA on services. That's why cuotas in Mexico are slightly tighter than in low-tax markets.
  • Payments: OXXO Pay and SPEI dominate. Mercado Pago and Klar are growing fast. Cards are common but card payouts are slower. Crypto is mainly an offshore route.
  • OXXO Pay limits: typically 20 to 9,999 MXN per transaction, with deposits landing in under an hour.
  • SPEI: instant, 24/7, free for the user. The default for withdrawals on permitted Mexican books.
  • Minimum deposit: $50 MXN at the most player-friendly permitted books (Betano, Strendus), up to $100 MXN at most others.
  • Regulator: Dirección General de Juegos y Sorteos (DGJS) within SEGOB. Permit register at juegosysorteos.gob.mx.

FAQ: best betting sites in Mexico

Is online betting legal in Mexico?

It operates under the 1947 Ley Federal de Juegos y Sorteos plus its 2004 Reglamento. There's no specific "online betting" law yet, operators either hold a federal DGJS permit (Caliente, Codere, Big Bola, Logrand) or run under a partnership with a Mexican permit holder (permisionario route). A reform bill has been in the legislative pipeline since 2025. Until it passes, the existing framework is what's in force.

What are the best betting sites in Mexico for Liga MX?

In my testing, Caliente has the deepest Liga MX prop tree, with Betano the closest challenger. Both are DGJS-permitted (Caliente directly, Betano via permisionario).

How do OXXO deposits work?

You open an account on a permitted sportsbook, choose OXXO Pay, generate a voucher with a 14-digit reference or barcode, pay cash in any OXXO store (20 to 9,999 MXN), and the deposit lands in your account in under an hour. OXXO is deposit-only, you can't withdraw cash at OXXO. For withdrawals, use SPEI to a bank account in your name.

How fast are SPEI withdrawals?

It varies. Caliente, Codere, Betano and Strendus all hit my SPEI payouts in under 24 hours, often inside 12. Smaller permitted books took 24 to 72 hours. Offshore books are slower and unpredictable.

Are winnings taxed in Mexico?

Yes. Permitted operators withhold 1% federal income tax on sportsbook winnings at source (6% on lottery). If you bet on offshore sites, you're responsible for self-declaring under Mexican tax rules, speak to a contador.

Can I use crypto to bet from Mexico?

Mostly on offshore books. No DGJS-permitted Mexican sportsbook currently accepts crypto as a native payment rail. If you use crypto, you're outside Mexican consumer protections.

What's the difference between a "permisionario" and an offshore site?

A permisionario is either a direct DGJS permit holder (Caliente, Codere, Logrand, Big Bola, Winpot) or an international operator running under a formal partnership with a permit holder (the route used by Betano, bet365, Betway, Sportium and others). An offshore site has neither, it operates from outside Mexico, usually on a Curaçao or Anjouan licence, with payments routed through third-party processors.

Is the 2025-2026 reform bill law yet?

No. As of June 2026, the proposal to replace the 1947 Ley Federal with a new Ley Federal de Juegos con Apuesta y Sorteos remains in the legislative pipeline. The existing framework is still in force.

Best app for live betting in Mexico?

Betano, the most polished in-play app on the permitted Mexican market this year, with Caliente close behind. bet365 still leads on live streaming where permisionario coverage allows.

Is it safe to bet at offshore sites?

Offshore books sit outside Mexican consumer protections. Mexican payment processors sometimes block transactions to them without warning. If a regulated permitted option exists, I'd use it. If you do use an offshore site, research the licensing and track record first.

My take: where I'd open my first Mexican account

This is my opinion as someone who does this for a living. It's not a verdict, and not a push to bet. If Liga MX is your sport, I'd start with Caliente for the depth and the institutional permit standing. If you want a slick app and the best live betting, Betano is the most-improved Mexican book in 2026. If F1 and European football are your priorities, Codere is hard to beat. For global market depth and sharp international pricing, bet365 through its permisionario route is the standout, just verify the partnership is current before depositing. Wherever you land, I'd pick a DGJS-permitted operator if one fits your needs. The consumer protections are worth more than any headline bonus, even in a market with looser advertising rules than Europe.


Bet responsibly. You must be 18+ to bet in Mexico. 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 through Jugadores Anónimos México at jugadoresanonimos.org.mx and via SAPTEL crisis line at 55-5259-8121 (24/7). Most permitted operators also offer deposit limits, time-outs and self-exclusion.

Sources and further reading