Predictions

Compare the top-rated NLRC and state-licensed sportsbooks for players in Nigeria. Paystack, Flutterwave and OPay deposits, ₦300M weekly jackpot pools and the 5%–10% withholding on winnings explained.
Reviewed by
Martin Anderson
Updated 05 Jul 2026
At a glance
How we evaluate
Local payments
30%We test the deposit methods Nigeria players actually use and confirm withdrawals land in the local currency without KYC surprises.
Local licensing
25%We verify each operator holds a valid NLRC licence, visible in the site footer with the whitelist entry ID.
Bonus terms
25%We read the wagering requirement, minimum odds, expiry window and excluded markets before we call an offer good.
Local support
20%We test customer service in the local language and time the response — chat, email and phone where offered.
Payment Methods
Exclusive 100% Sports Bonus up to $130
100% Sportsbook Bonus up to €100
100% First Deposit Bonus up to €100
Exclusive Invite-Only Bonus up to €200
The shortlist above is not exhaustive. Here's what we deliberately left off for Nigeria:
Nigeria is one of Africa's most competitive sports-betting markets, and the regulatory picture matured in a specific way in late 2023 — the Supreme Court ruled that gambling regulation is a residual matter for the states, not the federal government. In practice that means most sportsbooks Nigerian players actually use hold a state licence from Lagos (LSLGA), Osun or Rivers rather than a federal NLRC permit. Two things separate the operators Nigerians actually keep money at from the ones that get abandoned: instant payment rails (Paystack, Flutterwave, OPay and PalmPay wallets that settle deposits in seconds), and honest, transparent handling of the 5%–10% withholding tax on winnings above ₦100,000 the Federal Inland Revenue Service applies under the 2023 Finance Act amendments. Every operator on the shortlist has been checked against both, plus a valid state licence, in the last month.
The National Lottery Regulatory Commission (NLRC) still issues federal permits, but after the 2023 Supreme Court ruling most enforcement now sits with state authorities. Lagos State Lotteries and Gaming Authority (LSLGA) is the largest state jurisdiction; Osun and Rivers state gaming boards license the rest. A legitimate Nigerian sportsbook footer displays either an NLRC permit number, a state licence number (typically formatted LSLGA/L/{year} for Lagos), or both. Operators with only a Curaçao licence — Melbet Nigeria, some smaller international brands — accept Nigerian players but are not authorised locally, meaning you have no BCLB-style recourse if a payout is delayed or a bonus is voided.
Under Section 65 of Nigeria's Personal Income Tax Act as amended by the 2023 Finance Act, betting winnings above ₦100,000 in a single event are subject to withholding tax. The rate is 5% for winnings up to ₦500,000 and 10% above that, deducted by the operator at settlement and remitted to the Federal Inland Revenue Service. Nigeria doesn't apply excise duty on stakes, so unlike Kenya (12.5% off the top) or Germany (5.3% Sportwetten-Steuer), the odds you see on the bet slip are the odds you get on your stake — the tax only hits at the winnings side.
Practical example: a ₦10,000 wager at odds of 5.00 wins a gross return of ₦50,000. Net winnings are ₦40,000, above the ₦100,000 threshold means the 10% rate wouldn't apply here, but even a bigger multi-leg accumulator that clears the threshold would only be taxed on the amount above ₦100,000. The good sportsbooks show both the pre-tax and post-tax payout on the bet slip; the sketchy ones hide the deduction until you look at your statement.
The Nigerian payment stack has shifted dramatically since the Central Bank's Cashless Nigeria push and the launch of NIBSS Instant Payment (NIP). What genuinely works today:
Debit cards were the default before 2022, but the Central Bank's naira-devaluation-linked restrictions and gambling MCC blocks have made cards unreliable. Crypto is not a legally recognised payment method at NLRC or state-licensed operators, despite what some offshore sites market. Withdrawal times: the fastest operators in the shortlist process wallet withdrawals in under 15 minutes, bank-account withdrawals in 15–60 minutes during banking hours.
The betting menu in Nigeria is football-first and English Premier League–heavy, but 2025–26 is unusually deep on marquee events:
Weekly jackpot pools are a Nigerian institution — Bet9ja's ₦300M Jackpot and SportyBet's Multibet regularly hit substantial prize pools. What differentiates the top-tier operators from the rest:
Every state-licensed operator on this page must offer deposit limits, session limits and self-exclusion under the LSLGA and NLRC codes of practice. In Nigeria there is no shared, network-wide exclusion register yet — so blocking yourself at one operator doesn't automatically block you at others; if you want to exclude across the board you have to submit at each. Nigeria doesn't have a state-funded gambling helpline yet, but the Nigerian Mental Health Association (0806 210 6493) can direct callers to counsellors, and BeGambleAware.org lists free international English-language resources. Gam-Anon runs virtual meetings accessible from anywhere in Nigeria for family members affected by someone else's gambling.
Each operator is scored across four weighted criteria — payments and cash-out speed (30%), licensing and consumer protection (25%), bonus value net of terms (25%), and support and product quality (20%). Scoring is refreshed monthly against a real Nigerian-verified account running a full deposit-play-withdraw cycle. We only feature operators with a valid NLRC or state licence, and every affiliate link is clearly marked. The full methodology is at the top of the page.
All bookmakers
Browse every reviewed sportsbook and casino, with filters.
Live sports predictions
AI and expert picks across football, basketball, hockey and tennis — updated daily.
Check out our top-rated bookmaker offers