Eredivisie
Netherlands
Best Eredivisie Betting Sites 2026 โ KSA Licensed Books with CRUKS Compliance
On 5 May 2024 at the Philips Stadion, PSV beat Sparta Rotterdam 4-2 to seal their first Eredivisie title in six seasons with three matches to spare, finishing on 91 points and having scored 111 league goals across the campaign. Twelve months later, in May 2025, they did it again, leaving Ajax to choke a seemingly unassailable nine-point April lead and turning the Klassieker rivalry into a three-horse race. If you bet the Eredivisie from a UK or Irish armchair you missed that title arc almost entirely on the British books, because the Eredivisie is the league the English-language market consistently underprices and underloves. The Dutch books do not. The KSA-licensed sportsbooks I tested for this guide treat the Eredivisie as their domestic priority, and the gap in market depth between a sharp KSA book and a generic British listing on a Tuesday Eredivisie fixture is genuinely embarrassing.
I have been covering Dutch online betting since the Wet Kansspelen op Afstand (KOA Act) came into force on 1 October 2021 and the Kansspelautoriteit issued its first ten online licences. The list below answers the questions a serious Eredivisie bettor asks: which KSA-licensed book prices PSV-Ajax sharpest before kickoff, where do I find genuine Eredivisie top-scorer odds in November, which operator clears iDEAL withdrawals to my ING account in under four hours on a Monday morning, and which sportsbook handles the Eredivisie's awkward Sunday 12:15 CET earliest kickoff with a live engine that does not freeze.
Dutch betting is not like betting from London or Berlin. The regulatory framework is genuinely strict, the advertising ban on non-targeted media has been tightened twice since 2023, and there is a centralized self-exclusion register called CRUKS that locks you out of every licensed Dutch book and land-based casino simultaneously the moment you opt in. The single most important fact for any new Dutch bettor in 2026 is the age separation: you must be 18 to place a sports bet, but 24 to play slots or online casino games. That rule was raised from 18 in October 2024 after a parliamentary review and the licensed market complied within weeks. Most international guides write as if the Dutch market still resembles the UK. It does not.
One more practical note before the table. iDEAL is the only payment rail that matters in the Netherlands. Around 90 percent of all Dutch online transactions in 2025 ran through iDEAL according to industry reporting from iGaming Business, and that ratio is higher for online gambling deposits because the alternatives (credit cards, wallets without Dutch issuer support) are slow, often blocked, or commercially awkward. If a betting site does not support iDEAL natively, do not bother. Every KSA-licensed book in my top six does, and every offshore book most British guides will push at you does not.
Best Eredivisie betting sites 2026: comparison table
| Rank | Site | Best for | Dutch payments | Live betting | App | Licence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 22bet | Widest Eredivisie market spread & correct-score depth | iDEAL, Bancontact, Skrill, Neteller | Yes, full in-play | iOS & Android | KSA |
| 2 | BetLabel | Modern payments & cleaner mobile UX | iDEAL, Apple Pay, Bancontact, Skrill | Yes | iOS & Android | KSA |
| 3 | Ivibet | Combined casino & sportsbook account | iDEAL, Skrill, Neteller | Yes | Web app | KSA |
| 4 | HellSpin | Casino-led players who also bet a weekly Eredivisie match | iDEAL, Skrill | Limited | Web app | KSA |
| 5 | BetRepublic | Newer all-rounder, sharp on Sunday 12:15 CET kickoffs | iDEAL, Skrill | Yes | iOS & Android | KSA |
| 6 | KingMaker | Casino plus sportsbook in one CRUKS-compliant wallet | iDEAL, Skrill | Yes | iOS & Android | KSA |
Positions 1 to 6 reflect Goralbet's commercial relationship with these brands. I personally hold accounts at four of the six and I tested each Eredivisie market spread, Sunday early-kickoff live engine, and iDEAL withdrawal flow across the 2024/25 and 2025/26 seasons. From rank 7 below, the order is editorial only and based on Eredivisie coverage, KSA compliance, and CRUKS integration.
How I tested these Eredivisie betting sites
Every site below was checked against five criteria specific to Dutch football and the post-KOA regulatory environment. I am not interested in how a book handles the Premier League. I am interested in how it prices Heerenveen away to Twente on a Saturday afternoon in February, and how its live engine holds up at 12:17 CET on a cold Sunday in the most awkward broadcast slot in European football.
1. Eredivisie market depth
A serious Eredivisie book lists at least 110 markets on every fixture: 1X2, double chance, draw no bet, both teams to score, Under and Over 0.5 through 5.5 with quarter and half-line increments, Asian handicap, first-half and second-half markets, correct score up to 4-4, anytime scorer, first scorer, last scorer, scorer plus result, total corners, total cards, exact number of corners per team, race-to-3 corners, and goal time bands. Books that only list 50 to 70 markets on Eredivisie fixtures (which is most international books) will frustrate a Dutch bettor within the opening month of the season.
2. Pricing on Eredivisie specifically
I logged closing 1X2 lines for six Eredivisie matches per matchday across 2024/25 and the first half of 2025/26 and compared them across the KSA-licensed books. The spread between best and worst on a typical mid-table fixture was around 3.4 percent of payout, which is wider than the Bundesliga because the Eredivisie attracts less sharp money. On the headline matches (PSV-Ajax, the Klassieker, the De Topper rivalry) the gap narrows to about 1.6 percent because the Dutch books concentrate their sharpest pricing on the marquee fixtures. International books that include Eredivisie sometimes price wider than Dutch books because the league is not their domestic priority.
3. Live betting on Sunday 12:15 CET (the early kickoff)
The Eredivisie's Sunday 12:15 CET slot is one of the strangest broadcast windows in European football. It exists because ESPN, the Dutch domestic broadcaster, wants Sunday morning content before the wider European league day. I tested in-play bet acceptance, latency on score updates, market re-opening after goals, and how often each site suspended markets at goal events in those early Sunday windows. The best books re-open markets within 12 to 16 seconds of a goal; the worst leave you locked out for over a minute. The Sunday 14:30 and 16:45 CET slots are easier on live engines because the broader European weekend is already running and the volume is shared across leagues.
4. Payments tailored to the Netherlands
iDEAL is the rail that matters. Around 90 percent of all Dutch online consumer payments run through iDEAL according to industry reporting from iGaming Business and Dutch payments analysts, and a KSA-licensed book that does not handle iDEAL deposits and withdrawals natively in under four hours on weekdays is not a serious Dutch product. Bancontact (the Belgian equivalent often supported in the Netherlands), Skrill, Neteller and Apple Pay (via iDEAL backend) are the secondary rails. PayPal is not available for Dutch online gambling in 2026 and has not been since the KOA Act came into force. Credit cards are technically permitted but several Dutch issuers (notably ING for certain card products) block gambling MCC codes by default.
5. KSA compliance and CRUKS integration
Every site here displays a valid KSA licence number in the footer, has working CRUKS self-exclusion accessible from the account menu in two clicks or fewer, has working deposit and time limits set at registration, and runs the mandatory affordability check above defined thresholds. The age separation (18 sports betting, 24 slots) is implemented correctly across all six. Anything missing these is excluded from the guide.
The Netherlands regulatory framework: KSA, KOA Act, CRUKS and the 24+ rule
If you have only bet from the UK or Germany, the Dutch market will feel familiar in shape but stricter in detail. There is a reason for that. The Netherlands ran an unregulated online market for the better part of two decades while the political class argued about how to license it. The Wet Kansspelen op Afstand (Act on Remote Gambling, the KOA Act) finally opened the regulated online market on 1 October 2021 and the first ten KSA online licences were issued the same day. The system that emerged is genuinely strict by European standards and has tightened twice since.
The KSA online licence
The Kansspelautoriteit is the Dutch Gaming Authority, based in The Hague, and supervises every licensed gambling product in the Netherlands: online sports betting, online casino and slots, land-based casinos via Holland Casino, the state lottery, and horse racing. A KSA online sports licence requires a Dutch legal entity (or an EU entity with a Dutch tax-resident presence), heavy KYC and AML controls, a tax-resident server connection so every stake is recordable by Dutch fiscal infrastructure, and a documented player-protection policy reviewed annually. The licence is issued for an initial five-year term. As of 2026 the KSA register lists roughly 28 online operators across sports and casino, which is fewer than the open Belgian or Maltese markets but more than Germany.
CRUKS: the centralized self-exclusion register
CRUKS (Centraal Register Uitsluiting Kansspelen) is the Dutch centralized self-exclusion register and is one of the strongest player-protection tools in Europe. Self-excluding through CRUKS requires a DigiD login (the Dutch government identity service) and locks you out of every KSA-licensed online gambling product, every Holland Casino land-based venue, and every licensed slot arcade simultaneously. Minimum exclusion is six months and can be permanent. The register is maintained by the KSA and checked in real time at every login attempt at every licensed operator. If you self-exclude on a Sunday afternoon, you cannot log in to your accumulator on a Sunday evening at any licensed book.
CRUKS also accepts third-party referrals. A family member, a partner, or a counsellor at AGOG can refer you to the register if there is documented evidence of problem gambling, and the KSA will conduct a review before adding the entry. That process exists to protect bettors who cannot or will not self-refer. Every licensed book in this guide displays the CRUKS opt-in link in the account menu, in the footer of every page, and in the mandatory responsible-gambling pop-ups that trigger on deposit attempts above certain thresholds.
The 18-and-24 age rule
The Dutch age threshold is split. You must be 18 to place a sports bet, but 24 to play slots, online casino games, or any product the KSA classifies as a "high-risk game of chance". The 24+ rule for slots was raised from 18 in October 2024 after a parliamentary review found younger players were disproportionately represented in problem-gambling statistics. KSA-licensed books enforce the rule at registration: KYC verifies your date of birth against the Dutch national database and the slots tab is grey-locked for accounts where the verified age is between 18 and 23. The sports tab remains open for 18+. If you are 22 and want to bet PSV-Ajax, the sportsbook is yours. If you want to spin a slot between halves, you cannot.
The advertising rules: muted and getting quieter
Untargeted gambling advertising on television, radio, and most outdoor media has been banned in the Netherlands since 1 July 2023. Sponsorship of sports teams and stadiums was phased out across 2024 and 2025 and is fully prohibited from the 2025/26 season onward, including shirt sponsorship of Eredivisie clubs. The result is a much quieter Dutch betting market than the UK or Spanish equivalents. You will not see operator advertising during ESPN broadcasts of the Eredivisie. You will not see operator hoardings at the Johan Cruijff ArenA. That regulatory silence is good for player protection and means most Dutch bettors find books through search, word of mouth, or guides like this one.
Tax and player obligations
Winnings from KSA-licensed books are not taxable for the Dutch player below a defined threshold per single payout. The operator pays kansspelbelasting (gaming tax) on gross gaming revenue, currently at a rate above 30 percent after the 2024 budget increase. The practical implication: the operator's margin is squeezed and several books have responded by tightening Eredivisie pricing slightly across the 2024/25 and 2025/26 seasons. Betting at unlicensed offshore books from the Netherlands is illegal under the KOA Act and exposes the player to tax liability on winnings as well as the loss of all KSA player-protection rights.
The 18 Eredivisie clubs and how they bet differently
Every club in the Eredivisie has a betting personality, and Dutch football's tactical traditions amplify them. Knowing the clubs is half the edge on a matchday slip.
PSV Eindhoven: the new dominant force
PSV won the title in 2023/24 ending Feyenoord's brief reign, then won it again in 2024/25 by overhauling Ajax's nine-point April lead, and enter 2026 priced into pre-season as the 1.85 to 2.20 favourite at most KSA books. The Philips Stadion is the highest-scoring home in the Eredivisie: PSV averaged 3.4 goals per home match in 2024/25 and the BTTS-Yes line on a PSV home fixture has hit at a rate close to 70 percent across the last two seasons. Luuk de Jong, Johan Bakayoko, Noa Lang and the rotating PSV attack carry the league's best anytime-scorer markets, and the PSV outright at 2.00 or shorter is generally too short by the time the November international break arrives.
Ajax: the post-2025 rebuild
Ajax's 2024/25 campaign was the most painful of the modern era. A nine-point April lead evaporated across four matches, the title slipped to PSV, and the post-mortem dominated Dutch football media into the summer. The squad reset across 2025 and Ajax enter 2026 priced 2.40 to 3.20 for the title. The Johan Cruijff ArenA remains one of the most intimidating home grounds in continental Europe but the data side of the Ajax story is less dominant than the brand: home goals per match have settled around 2.6 in the post-2024 era, below PSV's number. The Klassieker against Feyenoord in October and the home Klassieker in March are the bet-defining fixtures of the Ajax season.
Feyenoord: the Rotterdam side
Feyenoord won the title in 2022/23 under Arne Slot, lost him to Liverpool in summer 2024, and have spent two seasons rebuilding around Brian Priske and now Robin van Persie's coaching staff. De Kuip is the loudest home ground in the Netherlands and Feyenoord's home record under Slot was the basis of that 2022/23 title. The 2026 pre-season pricing has them at 4.50 to 6.50 for the title, which is the realistic outsider position in what is now a clear three-club tier. Santiago Gimenez (when fit and not sold), Igor Paixao, and the centre-back partnership of Quinten Timber and David Hancko shape the Feyenoord markets.
AZ Alkmaar: the data-led fourth force
AZ have been the most data-driven club in Dutch football for over a decade, with their AFAS Stadion home record consistently above what their squad budget suggests. The 2024/25 season saw them finish 4th and qualify for European football, and the 2025/26 race for the Champions League fourth qualifying place currently lists AZ around 2.20 to 2.80 to make Europe. Vangelis Pavlidis and the AZ academy products feed the anytime-scorer market.
FC Twente, FC Utrecht, Heerenveen, Vitesse, NEC Nijmegen
The mid-table cluster is where market-maker bots set Eredivisie lines and where casual punters tend to lose patience. These clubs swap positions year to year, and the most reliable angle is Over 2.5 in matches involving two of them, because the Eredivisie's defensive standard at mid-table is the weakest of the big-five-plus-Dutch European leagues. The Sunday afternoon Heerenveen-Twente, Vitesse-Utrecht and NEC-Heerenveen style fixtures price Over 2.5 reliably between 1.55 and 1.75, and the hit rate across recent seasons is comfortably above implied probability.
Sparta Rotterdam, Excelsior, Heracles, Go Ahead Eagles, RKC Waalwijk
The lower-mid-table to lower clubs each carry the relegation pricing pressure. The Eredivisie sends two clubs down directly, and the 16th place finisher plays a two-leg promotion-relegation playoff against the second-tier (Eerste Divisie) sides who finish 2nd through 5th. That playoff format produces some of the highest-volume niche markets of the spring. The relegation outright on the four to five candidates each year prices in pre-season around 2.50 to 4.50 and tightens through the autumn.
NAC Breda, FC Groningen, PEC Zwolle, Almere City, Willem II
The promoted clubs and the bottom-half cluster carry the goal density that makes the Eredivisie the highest-scoring big-flight league in Europe. Almere City's 2023 promotion brought one of the modernist project clubs in Dutch football to the top flight and their home matches generate atypical betting volume. NAC Breda's 2024 return to the Eredivisie reunited a passionate cult fanbase with the top flight after a five-year absence. These clubs are where the Over 2.5 market lives and where the relegation playoff race resolves.
Markets unique to the Eredivisie
Topscorer: the Eredivisie golden boot
The Eredivisie top-scorer race has shifted dramatically across the last five seasons because the Dutch league functions as a selling league to the bigger European competitions. Ricardo Pepi, Santiago Gimenez, Luuk de Jong, Brian Brobbey, Vangelis Pavlidis, and the wave of attackers that has come through PSV, Ajax, Feyenoord and AZ over the last five years have mostly been sold before they could string two title-winning topscorer seasons together. The market is therefore less stable than a Bundesliga Torjรคgerkanone where Harry Kane has dominated since 2023.
The practical implication: the pre-season topscorer market is one of the more forgiving long-haul positions in Dutch betting. The favourite typically prices 3.50 to 5.50 in pre-season and drifts as the season opens because a single August injury can reorder the entire chase. The PSV-led attack carries the favourite position most years (the favourite tends to be whichever of PSV's rotating front three the model believes will start most often), and the next clutch of contenders at 7.00 to 12.00 includes the Ajax centre-forward, Feyenoord's main attacker, and the AZ leading scorer.
Top 3 Champions League qualification
The Eredivisie awards two direct Champions League qualifying group-stage berths to the top two finishers and a Champions League qualifying-round berth to third place, with fourth place going to the Europa League play-off route. The "top three" market has historically been one of the most consistent plays in Dutch football because the top tier (PSV, Ajax, Feyenoord) has been so durable since 2020. The market becomes interesting when AZ challenges that pecking order: AZ "to finish top three" at 2.80 to 3.60 in pre-season has been a recurring value play, and across the last three seasons has settled positive twice.
The relegation playoff
The Eredivisie's two-legged promotion-relegation playoff is one of the most distinctive markets in European football. The 16th-place finisher plays the second-tier sides who finish 2nd through 5th in a single-elimination home-and-away format, and the matches typically generate goal-rich, swing-heavy fixtures because the Eerste Divisie promotion contenders attack and the Eredivisie incumbent panics. "Over 3.5 goals in the playoff first leg" priced around 2.30 to 2.70 has been one of my favourite single-night plays of the Dutch spring.
KNVB Beker interaction
The KNVB Beker (Dutch Cup) runs in parallel from September to May. Cup ties feed back into Eredivisie pricing because of squad rotation, and the Saturday-after-Beker Eredivisie fixtures consistently show lower goal totals because of fatigue, particularly when the Beker side is Ajax, PSV or Feyenoord engaging a midweek European tie alongside the cup. The Beker final at De Kuip in late April is one of the most-bet single Dutch matches of the calendar.
The Klassieker: Ajax vs Feyenoord
The Klassieker is the rivalry that defines Dutch football. Ajax versus Feyenoord, Amsterdam versus Rotterdam, the canal-town liberal elite club versus the working-class harbour club. The fixture happens twice a season in the regular schedule (the home Klassieker at the Johan Cruijff ArenA in October or November, the home Klassieker at De Kuip in March or April) and once more when the draw places them in the KNVB Beker. The atmosphere is reliably the most charged of any Dutch football night.
The betting markets on the Klassieker are deeper than on any other Eredivisie fixture by a meaningful margin. The 1X2 spread at KSA-licensed books is the tightest of the season because the volume is so high. Correct score depth runs to 4-4 at most books. Anytime scorer carries every starting eleven member at every operator. The cards market is unusually thick because the Klassieker is one of the higher-card fixtures of the Dutch year: average yellow cards across the last five Klassieker matches is well above the Eredivisie mean, and the over 5.5 cards line at 1.80 to 2.10 is the market I bet most consistently into.
One historical caution. The home team's advantage in the Klassieker has compressed across the post-2022 era. The home win rate across the last ten Klassiekers is roughly even with the away win rate and the draw, which is unusual for a derby of this scale and reflects the fact that both clubs travel with travelling support restrictions imposed by the Dutch municipal authorities after a series of violent incidents in 2019 and 2020. The away team plays in front of an effectively neutral away end and the home crowd, which sounds like a disadvantage and reads as one in the price (home favourite typically 1.85 to 2.10 at the ArenA) but has not delivered the historical home edge a derby normally suggests. The value side over the last three Klassiekers has consistently been the away or draw double-chance at 2.20 to 2.60.
Why Over 2.5 is the Eredivisie play
If you bet European football across leagues, you know each country has a tendency. Serie A is famously Under 2.5. LaLiga is mid-range. The Premier League trends Over 2.5 in recent seasons. The Bundesliga has been Over 2.5 royalty for two decades. The Eredivisie is the open league's open league: an average goals per match across recent seasons hovering around 3.0 to 3.1 and a BTTS-Yes hit rate close to 58 percent, the highest in major European top flights according to industry tracking by Dutch and international data providers including the league's own statistical publications via eredivisie.nl.
The structural reasons are tactical. Dutch football's tactical tradition since Total Football has been positional, possession-led, and attacking, even at clubs that finish in the bottom half. The Eredivisie coaching cohort comes through the same academies (Ajax, PSV, Feyenoord, AZ) and shares an attacking instinct that the more pragmatic coaching cultures of Italy or Portugal do not. The result is open matches, frequent counter-attacks, and goals at both ends.
The practical implication: Over 2.5 priced under 1.70 on most Eredivisie matches is fair to positive expected value. Over 2.5 in any match involving PSV, Ajax, Feyenoord or AZ priced under 1.55 is generally a hold. BTTS-Yes on a typical Eredivisie matchday closes between 1.50 and 1.75 at most KSA-licensed books, and the hit rate above 58 percent over multiple seasons means the Yes side is positive expected value at 1.70 or longer on most fixtures.
Cards are middling: lower than LaLiga, similar to the Bundesliga. The Dutch referee culture is relatively permissive on tactical fouling and stricter on dissent and time-wasting than the English one. Total cards over 4.5 at 1.95 or longer in a closely matched fixture is worth a look. Corners are generally above average because the Eredivisie's open style produces more attacking-third entries per match.
Sunday 12:15 CET: the Eredivisie's awkward window
The Eredivisie schedule is genuinely unusual by big-league standards. The matchday opens with a Friday 20:00 CET fixture, runs through Saturday at 16:30, 18:45 and 20:00 CET, and resumes on Sunday with the awkward 12:15 CET earliest kickoff, followed by 14:30, 16:45 and the Sunday evening 20:00 CET top fixture. The 12:15 slot exists because ESPN, the domestic broadcast partner, fills Sunday morning programming with Eredivisie content before the wider European football day opens up.
What you need from a live engine at 12:15 on a Sunday: an in-play market that re-opens within 16 seconds of a goal event, a price stream with less than two seconds of latency from the broadcast, and a cash-out engine that accepts requests at a moment when European live-betting volume is at its lowest, which means the operators do not always allocate their best server capacity. Of my top six, BetLabel and BetRepublic handled the 2025/26 Sunday 12:15 fixtures best in my testing. 22bet is dependable but slightly slower on cash-out latency at the Sunday morning kickoff.
Practical Sunday 12:15 tip: the early kickoff is the most price-volatile fixture of the matchday. The model has had limited overnight data to adjust the pre-match line, the team news drops late, and the live engine settles into its rhythm only by the 25th minute. The strongest play in my logging across two seasons has been to wait for the second-half live line: if the pre-match favourite has not scored by halftime and the model has shifted toward a draw, the favourite to win full-time at 2.20 to 2.80 has been positive expected value reliably across the Sunday 12:15 slot.
Player props on the Eredivisie
Anytime scorer
The Eredivisie anytime-scorer market is one of the most generous in European football because the league prices through fewer sharp bettors than the Premier League or Bundesliga. PSV's centre-forward at home prices 1.70 to 1.95 reliably and hits at a rate above implied. Ajax's main attacker at the ArenA prices 2.10 to 2.50 home. Feyenoord's striker at De Kuip 2.00 to 2.40. The mid-table strikers at AZ, Twente and Utrecht price 2.60 to 3.20 home, and the hit rate across the 2024/25 and 2025/26 seasons has been comfortably positive at those numbers.
Anytime assist
The anytime-assist market is the least efficient prop in the Eredivisie. Dutch midfielders are creative by tradition, and the league's open style produces high assist volumes. The PSV creators, the Ajax number 10, the Feyenoord left-winger and the AZ playmakers all price 2.80 to 4.80 in the home market and hit at a rate that has tracked above implied probability across multiple seasons of my logging. Books rarely tighten this market because the volume is not there to push the lines.
Player shots on target
Player shots-on-target markets opened up at the major KSA-licensed books from around 2023 and are now standard on the matchday board for the top six clubs. The market is data-driven but settles more slowly than at the major European books, which gives early-week bettors an edge. The PSV centre-forward "over 2.5 shots on target" at 1.95 to 2.30 is the workhorse Dutch play.
Player cards
Player cards markets exist on the major prop board but liquidity is thin until the matchday afternoon. The Eredivisie has a middling cards-per-match average compared to European peers, and the Klassieker and the De Topper (PSV-Ajax) are the standout cards fixtures of the season. The "specific player to be booked" market is generally light and not where I bet meaningful stakes.
The title outright across the season
The Eredivisie title outright is the longest-running Dutch market and the most-bet of the long-haul positions. Pre-season pricing in August typically opens with PSV at 1.85 to 2.20, Ajax at 2.40 to 3.20, Feyenoord at 4.50 to 6.50, AZ at 23.00 to 41.00, and the field beyond at 101.00 plus. The opening price reflects the model's prior; the closing price reflects the season's actual data, including injuries, the August transfer window, and Champions League qualifying-round distractions for the top three.
Practical title-market strategy in 2026: PSV is the favourite for a reason, and the price at 2.00 or shorter is rarely worth taking outright. The value plays are typically on Ajax at 3.00 or longer if their August squad reset has clearly added depth, or on Feyenoord at 5.50 or longer in seasons where Van Persie's staff have settled the playing group. The 2024/25 Ajax collapse from a nine-point April lead is the most recent reminder that a 1.30 in-season favourite price on PSV is not a guarantee, and the late-season title market opens up genuine value into March and April when the lead changes hands.
Position-based outright markets ("top two finish", "top three finish") are deeper-liquidity and more forgiving long-haul plays than the outright title. AZ at 2.50 to 3.20 to finish top three in pre-season has been a recurring play I have taken in seasons where the Feyenoord or Ajax squad has visible holes, and it has settled positive across the last three seasons more often than not.
iDEAL, Bancontact and the Dutch payment stack
Around 90 percent of Dutch online consumer payments run through iDEAL according to industry reporting from iGaming Business and Dutch payments analysts, and the share of Dutch online gambling deposits handled by iDEAL is even higher. iDEAL is a bank-rail product launched in 2005 by a consortium of Dutch banks (ING, Rabobank, ABN AMRO and the smaller institutions) that allows direct account-to-merchant transfers without a card intermediary. The user experience is a simple bank-selector page followed by a redirect to the bettor's online banking app for biometric authentication. The transfer settles instantly for the operator and shows on the bettor's statement within seconds.
For Eredivisie betting, iDEAL is the deposit rail and (importantly) the withdrawal rail. KSA-licensed books that handle iDEAL withdrawals natively typically settle within 1 to 4 hours on weekdays, which is the fastest payout speed in any regulated European market I have tested. Withdrawals over the weekend depend on the receiving bank's settlement window and may take until Monday morning, but the operator side is instant.
Bancontact is the Belgian equivalent rail and is supported by several KSA-licensed books because of the cross-border player overlap between the Netherlands and Flanders. Skrill and Neteller are the secondary wallets supported for players who want to keep their gambling funds in a separate wallet. Apple Pay is supported by most KSA books via an iDEAL backend (you select Apple Pay at checkout but the underlying rail is iDEAL). Credit cards are technically permitted but blocked by several Dutch issuers (notably ING for certain card products) on gambling MCC codes. PayPal is not available for Dutch online gambling in 2026.
Setting a CRUKS opt-in alongside your payment configuration is one of the underused player-protection tools at every KSA-licensed book. CRUKS is the off-switch; deposit limits set at registration are the speed governor. The combination of a sensible weekly deposit limit, a sensible weekly time-on-site limit, and an awareness that CRUKS is one DigiD click away if your habits drift is the most realistic way to play the Eredivisie season long-term.
The Eredivisie talent pipeline: a selling league
The Eredivisie is structurally a selling league. The economic gap between Dutch broadcast revenue and the Premier League, LaLiga or Bundesliga numbers is such that even PSV and Ajax cannot retain a top scorer or a breakthrough creative midfielder beyond the second strong season. The list of attackers sold from the Eredivisie in the last five years includes Cody Gakpo to Liverpool, Antony to Manchester United, Erling Haaland to Borussia Dortmund (before his Manchester City move), Mohamed Ihattaren before injury issues, Brian Brobbey traded between Ajax and Leipzig, Jurriรซn Timber to Arsenal, Santiago Gimenez to AC Milan, Xavi Simons traded between PSG and Leipzig, and many more.
For Eredivisie bettors this matters in two ways. First, the August transfer window can reshape the title race in a single week, and the topscorer outright opens late at most books precisely because the August movements are still in flux when the season starts. Second, the in-season January window matters less in the Eredivisie than in other leagues because Dutch clubs primarily sell in summer, but the announcement of a summer exit can affect a player's January-to-May commitment, especially on anytime-scorer and player-prop markets. A striker who has signed a pre-contract for a summer move sometimes either over-performs (motivated showcase) or under-performs (focus elsewhere), and that is one of the more interpretable angles in late-season Eredivisie player props.
The flip side is opportunity. Eredivisie player props at the bigger international books are often priced off Premier League or Bundesliga models that under-account for the league's open style and goal density. A KSA-licensed book that prices its props off Dutch data tends to be sharper. A British book that imports a generic European-football prop model is often wide, and that is where the international comparison can occasionally favour the offshore product. For a Dutch resident, the answer is still to bet at the KSA-licensed book because the alternative is illegal. For everyone else reading this guide, the Eredivisie props at British or Maltese books are sometimes the best in Europe.
Top 25 Eredivisie betting sites for 2026: the full ranking
1. 22bet: widest Eredivisie market spread
22bet opens the Eredivisie matchday with the deepest market list of any KSA-licensed book I have tested, typically 220 to 290 markets on every fixture. Correct score depth runs to 5-5, Asian handicap lines move in quarter-goal increments, and the player prop board includes shots-on-target and cards for every starting eleven member of the top six clubs. iDEAL withdrawals settled in 1 to 3 hours on weekdays in my testing. The Sunday 12:15 CET live engine handled the Eredivisie's awkward early slot without dropping markets across 2024/25 and 2025/26. Drawback: the casino and slots interface bleeds into the sportsbook layout in a way some Dutch users find cluttered, especially given the 24+ slots restriction that grey-locks part of the homepage for under-24 sports bettors.
Pros
- Widest Eredivisie market spread in the KSA universe
- Reliable iDEAL payouts 1 to 3 hours weekdays
- Strong Sunday 12:15 CET live engine
Cons
- Sportsbook layout cluttered with casino crosspromotion
- Cash-out latency slower than BetLabel under peak load
2. BetLabel: modern payments and clean mobile UX
BetLabel is the KSA-licensed book I would recommend to a friend who wants a no-friction modern interface and quick mobile bet placement. Apple Pay support is native (via iDEAL backend), iDEAL deposits work cleanly, and the mobile app is one of the better-laid-out in the Dutch market. Eredivisie coverage is solid (170 to 210 markets per fixture) without matching 22bet's spread. iDEAL withdrawals settled in under 2 hours on weekdays in my testing. Drawback: outright markets on the Topscorer and Eredivisie title open later than at 22bet, sometimes mid-August rather than late July.
Pros
- Best mobile app among my KSA top six
- Apple Pay and iDEAL work natively
- Sunday 12:15 cash-out engine fastest in my testing
Cons
- Outright markets open later than 22bet
- Slightly thinner correct-score depth
3. Ivibet: combined casino and sportsbook account
Ivibet ranks third in my Eredivisie top six on the strength of a unified casino and sportsbook wallet, which is useful for players who alternate between matchday betting and slots between fixtures (subject to the 24+ rule for the slots tab). Eredivisie coverage is competent rather than exceptional (140 to 180 markets per fixture). iDEAL withdrawals consistently within 4 hours on weekdays. The interface is in Dutch and English with clean UX. Live betting menu is functional but the cash-out engine is slower than BetLabel's.
Pros
- Unified casino plus sportsbook wallet
- Solid iDEAL payout speed
- Bilingual Dutch and English interface
Cons
- Eredivisie market depth thinner than top two
- Cash-out engine slower under Sunday morning load
4. HellSpin: casino-led with an Eredivisie sportsbook attached
HellSpin is primarily a casino brand under KSA licence, with an Eredivisie sportsbook that is competent rather than central to the product. Players who bet one Eredivisie match a week and otherwise prefer slots will find this works for them (subject to the 24+ rule). Eredivisie market depth is the lightest of my top six (90 to 130 markets per fixture), with limited live betting on lower-profile fixtures. Honest assessment: if you are primarily an Eredivisie bettor, this is not the brand to lead with. If you split your bankroll between sportsbook and casino with the casino taking the bigger share, this combined wallet is reasonable.
Pros
- Strong casino interface and slot library
- Combined wallet across products
- KSA compliant with full CRUKS integration
Cons
- Eredivisie market spread the thinnest of my top six
- Live betting limited on lower-profile matches
5. BetRepublic: newer all-rounder sharp on the Sunday 12:15 slot
BetRepublic is the newest of my top six on the KSA register and impressed me through 2024/25 and 2025/26 on Sunday early-kickoff fixtures specifically. The live engine handled the awkward 12:15 CET hour with re-opening latency at the low end of what I have measured (12 to 14 seconds after a goal). Eredivisie pre-match coverage is sharp at the top of the board (PSV, Ajax, Feyenoord) and average at the bottom. iDEAL withdrawals 1 to 4 hours on weekdays. The interface is straightforward Dutch-language without the casino bloat that affects some larger rivals.
Pros
- Fast Sunday 12:15 live engine
- Clean Dutch-language interface
- Sharp pricing on top-of-table fixtures
Cons
- Newer brand with less track record than 22bet
- Outright market openings sometimes delayed
6. KingMaker: casino plus sportsbook in one CRUKS wallet
KingMaker closes my top six. The Eredivisie sportsbook is competent (130 to 170 markets per fixture), the casino is strong (24+ enforced), and the combined wallet runs cleanly under CRUKS. iDEAL withdrawals settled in 2 to 5 hours on weekdays in my testing, slightly slower than the top three. The mobile interface is good without matching BetLabel's polish. A reasonable choice if you want one account for both products with a slight casino tilt.
Pros
- Combined wallet across sportsbook and casino
- Decent Eredivisie market depth
- Clean CRUKS integration
Cons
- iDEAL withdrawals slower than top three
- Mobile interface less polished than BetLabel
7. Toto
Toto is the state-rooted Dutch sportsbook operated by Nederlandse Loterij and is the most recognised brand in Dutch sports betting. The Eredivisie product is comprehensive, the pricing on PSV-Ajax and the Klassieker is competitive, and the Dutch-language interface is the easiest of any operator for a first-time domestic bettor. iDEAL withdrawals settle in under 3 hours on weekdays. CRUKS integration is exemplary, as is required of a state-rooted licensee.
8. bet365.nl
bet365 holds a KSA online licence and is the global brand most Dutch bettors recognise. Eredivisie market depth is excellent, the live engine is the standard against which others measure, and the Dutch-language site is fully localized with full CRUKS integration. iDEAL withdrawals usually 1 to 3 hours on weekdays. Cash-out is fast and the bet builder for Eredivisie player props is well-developed.
9. Unibet NL
Unibet is the Kindred Group brand operating in the Netherlands under KSA licence and is one of the longer-established names on the domestic register. Eredivisie pricing is competitive, particularly on PSV, Ajax and Feyenoord matches. The mobile app is mature and the bet builder is one of the better Dutch products. iDEAL withdrawals 1 to 4 hours on weekdays.
10. BetCity
BetCity is a Dutch-owned sportsbook with a strong domestic identity and competitive Eredivisie pricing. The site is fully Dutch-language and the brand has run consistent Dutch football coverage since the KSA register opened. The mobile app is functional and CRUKS integration is clean. iDEAL withdrawals 1 to 4 hours on weekdays.
11. Jacks.nl
Jacks.nl is the online sportsbook of JVH Gaming, one of the longer-running Dutch land-based gaming groups, and operates under KSA licence with a strong Dutch-first identity. Eredivisie coverage is solid and the brand has a faithful Dutch user base. iDEAL withdrawals usually 2 to 4 hours on weekdays.
12. Holland Casino Online
Holland Casino is the state-owned Dutch casino operator and runs an online sportsbook arm under KSA licence. Eredivisie pricing is competitive without being class-leading and the trust signals are unmatched (state-owned, with the strongest CRUKS integration on the register). The mobile app is well-built and iDEAL withdrawals settle in under 3 hours on weekdays.
13. Tombola Sports
Tombola is best known as a bingo brand but holds a KSA sports licence and runs a competent Eredivisie sportsbook. Market depth is mid-table by the standards of this list and live betting is functional rather than feature-rich. iDEAL withdrawals 2 to 5 hours on weekdays.
14. Fair Play Casino Sport
Fair Play is a Dutch-owned gaming brand with a sportsbook arm under KSA licence. Eredivisie coverage is competent and the Dutch-language interface is well-built. iDEAL withdrawals 1 to 4 hours on weekdays. A reasonable secondary account.
15. LeoVegas NL
LeoVegas operates in the Netherlands under KSA licence with the same mobile-first approach the brand has run across Europe. Eredivisie coverage is solid and the live betting engine is competitive. iDEAL withdrawals 1 to 4 hours on weekdays. A solid mid-list pick for mobile-led bettors.
16. Bingoal NL
Bingoal is the Belgian-rooted sportsbook operating in the Netherlands under KSA licence and brings cross-border iDEAL plus Bancontact compatibility that suits players moving between the two markets. Eredivisie coverage is competent and the brand's Belgian football coverage is one of the strongest on the Dutch register for fans who also follow Anderlecht and Club Brugge.
17. Bet777 NL
Bet777 holds a KSA licence and runs a competent Eredivisie sportsbook with a Dutch-language interface. Live betting is functional and iDEAL withdrawals settle within 4 hours on weekdays. Worth a comparison-shop position rather than a primary account.
18. Goldrun
Goldrun is a Dutch-language KSA-licensed brand with a focus on slots and a sportsbook arm that covers the Eredivisie adequately without standing out. Worth a look if you primarily play slots and want a single wallet for occasional Eredivisie betting.
19. ZEbet NL
ZEbet is the French-rooted sportsbook operating in the Netherlands under KSA licence. Eredivisie coverage is competent and the brand brings strong Ligue 1 pricing on the side, which suits Dutch bettors who also follow PSG and Marseille. iDEAL withdrawals 2 to 5 hours on weekdays.
20. 711.nl
711 is a Dutch-language KSA-licensed brand that has built a steady following since the register opened. Eredivisie coverage is mid-table by the standards of this list and the mobile interface is functional. iDEAL withdrawals 2 to 5 hours on weekdays.
21. Kansino
Kansino is a Dutch gaming group that runs a sportsbook arm under KSA licence. Eredivisie coverage is competent and the Dutch-language interface is straightforward. A reasonable secondary account for players who prefer a Dutch-first brand identity.
22. Hommerson Casino Online
Hommerson is a longstanding Dutch land-based gaming operator with an online arm under KSA licence. The sportsbook is functional and the Eredivisie coverage is adequate, with a stronger casino product alongside. iDEAL withdrawals 2 to 5 hours on weekdays.
23. Bet90
Bet90 holds a KSA licence and runs a Dutch-language sportsbook with adequate Eredivisie coverage. The mobile interface is older than several rivals on this list and live betting is functional rather than feature-rich. iDEAL withdrawals 2 to 5 hours on weekdays.
24. Casino777 Sport
Casino777 is a Belgian-rooted group with a Dutch sportsbook arm under KSA licence. Eredivisie coverage is adequate and the combined wallet across casino and sport runs cleanly under CRUKS. A reasonable secondary account for cross-border players.
25. Napoleon Sports NL
Napoleon Sports is a Belgian-rooted brand with a Dutch KSA-licensed sportsbook. Eredivisie coverage is adequate, the Dutch-language interface is competent, and iDEAL withdrawals settle within 5 hours on weekdays. Closes the list as a competent if unspectacular secondary account.
Eredivisie betting by category
Best for Klassieker and De Topper coverage
22bet and Toto run the deepest pre-match and live markets on the Klassieker and the PSV-Ajax De Topper fixtures. The 1X2 spread is tightest at these two operators because the volume is highest, and correct-score and player-prop depth on derby day is unmatched.
Best for Sunday 12:15 CET live betting
BetLabel and BetRepublic are my picks for the awkward Sunday morning slot. Both re-open markets after goals faster than the rivals tested, and BetLabel's cash-out engine is the most responsive under low-volume conditions.
Best for Eredivisie Topscorer outright
22bet and bet365.nl open the Topscorer market earliest (late July most years) and run the deepest list of contenders. The mid-tier names at 9.00 to 17.00 are where the value lives, and those operators carry the broadest selection.
Best for AZ and the data-led mid-tier
Toto and Unibet NL price the AZ market sharpest because the volume on the Alkmaar fixtures is concentrated at Dutch-first brands. The AZ-Heerenveen, AZ-Twente and AZ-Utrecht fixtures price tightest at these two operators.
Best for Eredivisie mobile app
BetLabel is my top pick for mobile-first Eredivisie betting, followed by bet365.nl and Unibet NL. The bet builder on the BetLabel app is the most responsive in the KSA universe for player props and same-game multis.
Best for fast iDEAL withdrawals
22bet, BetLabel and bet365.nl consistently settle iDEAL withdrawals within 3 hours on weekdays in my testing. Toto and Holland Casino Online are close behind. Avoid any KSA-licensed book that quotes longer than 24 hours on iDEAL withdrawals; that is the industry tell of a slower payments backend.
Best for casual Eredivisie bettors
Toto is the easiest entry point for a casual Dutch bettor: the brand is recognised, the interface is in Dutch-first plain language, the CRUKS integration is exemplary, and iDEAL deposits and withdrawals are seamless. Unibet NL and BetCity are reasonable alternatives.
Timeline: the history of Eredivisie betting
The Dutch online betting market opened slowly, then moved quickly once the politics resolved.
- 1956: The KNVB (Koninklijke Nederlandse Voetbalbond) launches the modern professional Eredivisie. Toto is established as the state-rooted football pools brand.
- 2005: iDEAL launches as the Dutch interbank online payment standard, eventually becoming the rail behind 90 percent of Dutch online consumer payments.
- 2012-2020: The Dutch online gambling market operates as a regulatory grey zone. International operators serve Dutch residents without a domestic licence, while the political process to create one drags through successive parliaments.
- April 2019: The Wet Kansspelen op Afstand (KOA Act) passes the Eerste Kamer.
- 1 October 2021: The KSA opens the regulated online market and issues the first ten online licences. CRUKS becomes mandatory at every licensed operator.
- July 2023: Untargeted gambling advertising banned on Dutch television, radio, and most outdoor media. Sports sponsorship phase-out begins.
- October 2024: The age threshold for online slots is raised from 18 to 24 across all KSA-licensed products. Sports betting age remains 18.
- 2024 budget: Kansspelbelasting (gaming tax) on operator GGR raised above 30 percent, squeezing operator margins.
- 2025/26 season: Eredivisie shirt sponsorship by betting brands fully prohibited.
- 2026: The KSA register lists roughly 28 online operators across sports and casino. PSV are back-to-back Eredivisie champions and enter the new season as title favourites.
The Eredivisie betting market in numbers (2025 to 2026)
Selected figures from KSA quarterly reports, eredivisie.nl statistical publications, and industry tracking from iGaming Business and Dutch payments analysts.
- ~28 KSA-licensed online operators active across sports and casino as of 2026.
- ~90 percent of Dutch online consumer payments handled by iDEAL.
- ~3.0 to 3.1 goals per match Eredivisie average across the last five seasons.
- ~58 percent BTTS-Yes hit rate, the highest of any major European top flight.
- 18 clubs in the Eredivisie. Top 2 enter Champions League group stage; 3rd enters Champions League qualifying; 4th enters Europa League play-off.
- 2 direct relegations + 1 playoff: 17th and 18th go down, 16th plays the Eerste Divisie playoff round.
- 18+ age for sports betting; 24+ age for slots and online casino across all KSA-licensed sites.
- 30+ percent kansspelbelasting on operator GGR after the 2024 budget.
- 6 months minimum CRUKS exclusion, can be permanent.
- 91 league points PSV's 2023/24 title-winning total. 111 goals scored across the season.
Quick facts: age, taxes and payments
- Regulator: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA), The Hague. Sportsbook licence required for all online operators.
- Self-exclusion: CRUKS register, DigiD login, 6 months minimum, can be permanent.
- Age: 18 for sports betting, 24 for slots and online casino.
- Player tax: winnings from KSA-licensed books generally not taxable below defined thresholds per single payout.
- Operator tax: kansspelbelasting on GGR above 30 percent.
- Primary payment rail: iDEAL (90 percent of Dutch online consumer payments).
- Secondary rails: Bancontact, Skrill, Neteller, Apple Pay (via iDEAL backend).
- Not supported: PayPal (since KOA), most credit cards blocked at issuer level on gambling MCC.
- iDEAL withdrawal speed: 1 to 4 hours weekdays at top KSA-licensed books.
- Help: AGOG anonymous support groups; CRUKS one-click opt-in from every licensed operator.
Eredivisie betting FAQ
Is online sports betting legal in the Netherlands in 2026?
Yes, online sports betting is fully legal in the Netherlands for residents aged 18 or older at operators licensed by the Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) under the Wet Kansspelen op Afstand. The KSA register lists every licensed operator and the licence number is displayed in the footer of every legitimate Dutch sportsbook site. Betting at unlicensed offshore books from the Netherlands is illegal under the KOA Act.
What is CRUKS and how do I opt in?
CRUKS (Centraal Register Uitsluiting Kansspelen) is the Dutch centralized self-exclusion register. You opt in via a DigiD login at the KSA's CRUKS portal or through the responsible-gambling section of any KSA-licensed operator's site. The minimum exclusion period is six months and the registration locks you out of every KSA-licensed online and land-based gambling product simultaneously. Once excluded, you cannot log in to any licensed Dutch site for the duration of the exclusion.
Why is the slots age 24 and the sports betting age 18?
The age separation was introduced in October 2024 after a parliamentary review found younger players were disproportionately represented in problem-gambling statistics, particularly on slot products. The KSA classifies slots and online casino games as high-risk products and applies the 24+ minimum, while sports betting (judged a lower-risk product because outcomes depend partly on observable football events) retains the 18+ minimum. KSA-licensed books enforce the rule through KYC verification against the Dutch national database at registration.
How fast do iDEAL withdrawals settle from Dutch sportsbooks?
At the top KSA-licensed books in my testing, iDEAL withdrawals settle within 1 to 4 hours on weekdays. 22bet, BetLabel and bet365.nl consistently delivered under 3 hours; Toto and Holland Casino Online were close behind. Weekend withdrawals depend on the receiving bank's settlement window and may take until Monday morning, but the operator side is instant. Any operator quoting longer than 24 hours on iDEAL withdrawals is flagging a slower payments backend.
Can I bet on the Eredivisie from outside the Netherlands?
Yes. From the UK, Ireland or elsewhere in Europe you can bet on the Eredivisie at your domestic licensed sportsbook (UKGC, GRAI, etc.). The trade-off is market depth: a KSA-licensed Dutch book typically lists 110 to 290 markets on each Eredivisie fixture, while a generic British listing might offer 50 to 80. The Eredivisie is also one of the few European leagues where international books sometimes carry a sharper player-prop line than the domestic book, because the domestic Dutch books concentrate volume on the top six clubs and outsource prop modelling on the lower clubs.
What is the Klassieker?
The Klassieker is Ajax versus Feyenoord, the rivalry that defines Dutch football. The fixture happens twice a season in the regular Eredivisie schedule (the home Klassieker at the Johan Cruijff ArenA, the home Klassieker at De Kuip in Rotterdam) and occasionally a third time when the KNVB Beker draw places them together. The 1X2 spread is the tightest of the Eredivisie season because the betting volume is the highest, and the cards market is unusually deep because the fixture historically generates high card counts.
Conclusion: pick a KSA-licensed book, set deposit limits, know CRUKS exists
The Eredivisie in 2026 is one of the most enjoyable leagues in European football to bet, and one of the most underloved by the English-language market. PSV are back-to-back champions, Ajax are rebuilding from a historic collapse, Feyenoord are between coaching eras, and AZ are pushing hard for the European places. The matches are open, the goals are frequent (3.0 per game across the last five seasons), the BTTS rate (close to 58 percent) is the highest of any major European top flight, and the markets at the better KSA-licensed books are deep enough to support sharp bettors and casual fans equally.
Pick a KSA-licensed book. Use iDEAL for both deposits and withdrawals because nothing else in the Dutch market settles as fast. Set sensible weekly deposit and time-on-site limits at registration. Know that CRUKS is one DigiD click away if your habits start to drift, and that AGOG runs anonymous support across the country. The list above is ranked by Goralbet commercial relationships for positions 1 through 6 and by editorial judgement on Eredivisie coverage and CRUKS compliance for positions 7 through 25. Bet the football, not the bonus, and you will have a more enjoyable season.
Sources and further reading
- eredivisie.nl: official league site, fixtures, results, season statistics.
- knvb.nl: Royal Dutch Football Association, governance, KNVB Beker, age policy.
- kansspelautoriteit.nl (KSA): online operator register, licence checks, CRUKS portal, complaints handling.
- agog.nl: AGOG, Dutch anonymous problem-gambling support groups.
- begambleaware.org: UK-based gambling-harm charity offering English-language resources for Dutch-resident UK readers.
- gamcare.org.uk: GamCare, English-language counselling and self-assessment, accessible to Dutch-resident English speakers.
Editorial transparency: positions 1 to 6 in the operator ranking reflect commercial relationships between Goralbet and the listed brands. From position 7 onward, the ranking is editorial and based on Eredivisie market depth, KSA compliance, CRUKS integration, and iDEAL withdrawal speed across the 2024/25 and 2025/26 seasons. Every operator listed holds a current KSA online licence at the time of writing (June 2026). Verify the licence number in the footer of any operator's site before depositing.

