Best Betting Sites in the USA

The US sports betting market is not “one country, one license.” It is a state-by-state system, so the best betting app for you depends on where you are standing when you place the bet. This guide explains how that works, then lists the top legal sportsbooks (and the most common offshore alternatives in non-legal states).

Ihor Balanchuk
Cody Aceveda

Sports betting in the United States changed in 2018, when the US Supreme Court struck down the federal law (PASPA) that blocked most states from legalizing sports wagering. After that decision, each state became free to build its own rules and licensing system. There is still no single national regulator for sports betting, so “legal” and “available online” can mean very different things from one state to another.

This is why you will see state-level differences like these:

  • Some states allow statewide online betting plus retail kiosks.
  • Some states allow retail betting only (usually in casinos or at tribal venues).
  • Some states have “online betting,” but only inside approved premises, which makes it feel closer to retail than true at-home mobile betting.

Montana is the cleanest example of that last category. Sports Bet Montana lets you use an app, but you can only place the bet while you are physically inside an authorized location (for example, at a licensed venue with kiosks). So it is “online” in a technical sense, but not accessible from home.

Even in states that do allow true online betting, you must usually be physically inside the state to place a wager. Regulators require sports bookies to verify your location, so most apps run a geolocation check using GPS, Wi-Fi, and/or Bluetooth. On a desktop, you may be asked to install a location plug-in (many biggest sports betting sites use GeoComply tools for this).

Tennessee shows the opposite model: it is an online-only market. Licensed online sportsbooks are legal, but retail betting kiosks are not.

Daily fantasy sports (DFS) is a separate category from sportsbook betting. In many states that do not offer legal sports betting, DFS contests can still be permitted or tolerated. But that is not universal: some states explicitly restrict DFS as well (Idaho and Hawaii are often cited examples).

In the US, horse racing is usually regulated separately from standard sportsbook betting, so many legal operators either offer it through a separate racing product or do not include it in the main bookmaker menu.

The table below is meant as a simplified state snapshot for quick scanning. Because laws and court fights can change access quickly, treat it as a starting point and double-check your current status when you are ready to sign up.

State Online Betting is Permitted Retail Betting is Permitted DFS is Permitted Notes
Alabama No No Yes
Alaska No No Yes
Arizona Yes Yes Yes
Arkansas Yes Yes Yes Retail only in casinos.
California No No Yes
Colorado Yes Yes Yes
Connecticut Yes Yes Yes
Delaware Yes Yes Yes Very limited online. Only available through casinos and lottery.
Florida Yes Yes Yes
Georgia No No Yes
Hawaii No No No
Idaho No No No
Illinois Yes Yes Yes
Indiana Yes Yes Yes
Iowa Yes Yes Yes
Kansas Yes Yes Yes
Kentucky Yes Yes Yes
Louisiana Yes Yes Yes Legal both online and retail, though sometimes only in casinos.
Maine Yes Yes Yes
Maryland Yes Yes Yes
Massachusetts Yes Yes Yes Legal both online and retail; legal disputes around prediction markets.
Michigan Yes Yes Yes
Minnesota No No Yes
Mississippi No Yes Yes Retail only in casinos.
Missouri Yes Yes Yes Market launched in December 2025.
Montana No Yes No Online available only at casinos or kiosks.
Nebraska No Yes Yes Retail only in casinos; online betting is not fully legal.
Nevada Yes Yes No Pioneer in the market.
New Hampshire Yes Yes Yes
New Jersey Yes Yes Yes
New Mexico No Yes Yes Retail only via tribes
New York Yes Yes Yes
North Carolina Yes Yes Yes Retail only via tribes
North Dakota No Yes Yes Retail only via tribes
Ohio Yes Yes Yes
Oklahoma No No Yes
Oregon Yes Yes Yes
Pennsylvania Yes Yes Yes
Rhode Island Yes Yes Yes
South Carolina No No Yes
South Dakota No Yes Yes Retail only in Deadwood and tribal locations.
Tennessee Yes No Yes
Texas No No Yes
Utah No No Yes
Vermont Yes No Yes
Virginia Yes Yes Yes
Washington No Yes No Retail only via tribes
Washington, D.C. Yes Yes Yes Supported by the DC Lottery.
West Virginia Yes Yes Yes
Wisconsin Yes Yes Yes Online sports betting has been legalized, but the official launch is pending.
Wyoming Yes Yes Yes

One more practical note: gambling winnings are treated as income and therefore taxable in the US. You are responsible for reporting your gambling winnings to the federal government, but betting companies also play a role in the case of large winnings. Sportsbooks will issue a Form W-2G for certain wins over $600 (depending on size of your payout relative to your bet). Sportsbooks also withhold at 24% for tax purposes  when winnings exceed $5,000.

Is Betting Legal? Depends on the state. Sports betting is legal in certain states in the U.S. after the Supreme Court’s ruling in 2018.
Sports Betting Legal Since 2018. The repeal of the 1992 Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act opened up legal sports betting in the U.S.
Regulatory Body State-based regulatory bodies. While the Supreme Court allowed legal sports betting, each state has its own regulatory framework.
Taxation If your winnings exceed $600, they may be reported on Form W-2G, but a 24% federal withholding tax only applies if your winnings meet certain criteria, such as exceeding $5,000 in net winnings and being 300 times the size of your original bet. This withholding tax may also apply if you haven’t provided your Social Security Number (SSN) to the sportsbook.
Favorite Sports to Bet On NFL and NCAA Football

NBA and College Basketball

NFL

NHL

Esports

Golf

Tennis

Horse Racing

Other Popular Gambling Markets DFS, Casinos, lotteries, bingo, poker
Top Sports Betting Sites Legal: FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, Caesars Sportsbook, bet365, BetRivers, theScore Bet, Fanatics Sportsbook

Offshore: Bovada, BetOnline, MyBookie, Everygame, Bookmaker.eu, BetUS

Legal Gambling Age 18 or 21, depending on the state. For online betting, the age requirement is typically 21.

Here are the top legal, state-licensed American betting sites. They are regulated by state authorities, not offshore licenses. Rules are different in each state, so a sportsbook may be legal in one state but not in another. In most cases, you can only place bets when you are physically inside a state where that sportsbook is licensed, and the app will check your location. The legal age is usually 21, but a few states allow 18.

FanDuel

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, CT, DC, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MA, MI, MO, NJ, NY, NC, OH, PA, TN, VT, VA, WA, WV, WY

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Clear pricing difference by market type: the margin table suggests main game markets (like NHL moneyline and totals) are priced much tighter than outrights, so it is easier to “shop for value" in standard markets.
  • Strong feature mix for modern US bettors: Same Game Parlay is built-in, and Cash Out is available on many events, which helps manage risk when a game turns against you.
  • Useful protection mechanic for prop bettors: Bet Protect can refund certain NBA pre-live player prop bets as Bonus Bets if an injury happens early, which is rare and genuinely valuable for this niche.
  • Very flexible cashier for a regulated bookmaker: deposits include options like online banking, Venmo, PayPal, PayNearMe cash, Play+ prepaid, and even gift cards, which helps when card deposits fail.
CONS
  • Outrights look expensive in the margin table: they can cost much more than main game markets, so they are weaker for value-focused betting.
  • Cash Out is not guaranteed: FanDuel says it may be unavailable or turned off for some markets or moments, so you cannot rely on it as a safety net.
  • Promo value can be “conditional," not automatic: a common welcome example pays only if your first bet wins, which is less beginner-friendly than win-or-lose offers.
  • Mobile friction risk: iOS app access did not load cleanly in my check, and some Android users report frequent location-check errors.

When I look at the US legal sportsbook market, FanDuel is clearly one of the core “big brands.” In Flutter Entertainment’s annual report filed with the SEC, Flutter calls FanDuel the US market’s leading online sportsbook (and iGaming operator). That matters for a beginner because scale usually means a stable app, lots of markets, and frequent promos.

FanDuel is a legal, state-licensed sportsbook, so it only works where it has approval. In practice, you must be physically inside an eligible state, and the app uses geolocation signals like Wi-Fi, GPS, mobile signals to confirm your location. FanDuel’s own support notes these signals and also warns that VPNs or remote desktop tools can break location checks.

FanDuel Website

FanDuel Website

From a product point of view, I like FanDuel for its breadth. When I look at the site, I see the standard US menu: moneyline, spreads, totals, props, parlays, and futures, plus clear sections for live betting and alternative lines. To me, this fits how most Americans bet. NFL and NBA are the main sports, but MLB and NHL also matter a lot because they drive steady betting volume through the season.

At the time of my check, the market depth mainly reflected where each sport was in its calendar. That was especially clear in the NFL and NBA, because neither season was underway yet. For the Super Bowl, I only saw outright betting, which made sense in an offseason view with no live weekly game board. The NBA menu also leaned heavily toward futures and season-long sections such as All-Star, Playoffs, Conference/Division, Regular Season Wins, and To Make Play-In, rather than standard game-day markets. That is normal when the regular season has not started and there are no live matchups to price. Other parts of the sportsbook looked more complete. In NCAA basketball, I saw the main game markets I would expect, including moneyline, point spread, and over/under, plus some extra options, although player props and futures were not visible in that view. The NHL looked strongest in my check, with moneyline, puck line, over/under goals, player props, outrights, and additional markets all available. Overall, I would not treat these differences as a product weakness. Market availability changes with the sports calendar, the stage of the season, and state-level rules, so the sportsbook can look very different depending on timing and location.

If you look at the average margin table, outrights stand out as the most “expensive” market type compared with moneyline and over/under. This is normal in sports betting, so outrights are best used for small, fun bets, not for value hunting.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 22.18%
NBA Not available Not available 13.37%
NHL 4.87% 5.84% 13.35%

Live betting is also a key part of the product. FanDuel’s guide lists Live Bets as a main feature and explains that markets update during the game as the score and time change. In practice, this is most useful in fast-moving sports like NBA basketball, NHL hockey, and tennis. For example, you might see odds move quickly during an NBA scoring run, after a power play starts in the NHL, or right after a break of serve in tennis.

FanDuel supports Same Game Parlay (SGP), which lets you combine multiple picks from the same game into one bet. FanDuel also offers Cash Out, so you can settle some bets before the event ends. The operator notes that Cash Out is not always available and can be turned off for certain markets or moments.

Horse racing is available, but it is not fully inside the main sportsbook. When you click the Horse Racing / Racebook tab, it opens in a new tab and takes you to a different website (the Betfair-powered racing site). This makes horse racing feel like a separate product, even though it is linked from the FanDuel Sportsbook interface.

Promos are a big part of FanDuel’s value, but I always treat them as state- and date-dependent. A common welcome example is “Bet $5, Get $150 in Bonus Bets if your bet wins,” published on FanDuel’s own promo/research pages. It’s simple, but it’s not “risk-free” because you only get the bonus if your first bet wins. For retention, FanDuel also runs special mechanics like Bet Protect; the official Bet Protect page says qualifying injury cases are paid back as Bonus Bets, and those Bonus Bets expire 21 days after receipt.

Payments are one of FanDuel’s strongest “practical” points for beginners. FanDuel lists many deposit options, including online banking, debit card, Venmo, PayPal, wire transfer, cash at the counter, cash with PayNearMe, Play+ prepaid, and gift card. That variety helps because US card deposits can fail depending on the bank, and having backup methods reduces frustration. Withdrawals are also flexible, but they can vary by state. FanDuel lists PayPal, Venmo, online banking, check, and the Play+ prepaid card as common withdrawal methods. One important rule for beginners: FanDuel says that to withdraw using online banking, Play+, Venmo, or PayPal, you usually must have made a deposit using that same method first. This can surprise new users, so it is worth planning your first deposit method in advance.

FanDuel works on both desktop and mobile, but the mobile apps are still a big part of the real-money experience because they combine fast betting with strict state-based location checks. On iOS, the FanDuel Sportsbook & Casino app shows a 4.8/5 rating with about 2.1M ratings, which suggests a very large, active user base. On Android, it shows a 4.5-star rating (around 385Kreviews), was updated on May 6, 2026, and it clearly lists the eligible states where the app can be used. In app-store reviews (both iOS and Android), a common theme is that location errors can interrupt play, and some users also complain about support and occasional data display issues, so I treat location stability as the key practical risk on mobile. In my own check, I also ran into iOS friction: the iOS download button on the FanDuel website led to a page that did not load, and the App Store search showed an “An Error Occurred” message, while FanDuel’s separate casino and fantasy apps did not seem to have the same problem.

If you are in a legal state and you want a high-coverage US sportsbook with strong SGP/live features, lots of promos, and many payment options, FanDuel is a top-tier pick. Just remember the two big realities of US betting: state-by-state rules, and promos that look generous but often have strict terms (like “only if your first bet wins”).

DraftKings

Jurisdiction: AZ, AK, CO, CT, DC, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, ME, MI, MO, NH, NJ, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, TN, VT, VA, WV, WY

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Good value in main game markets: the margin table suggests NBA moneyline and totals are priced tighter than outrights, so it is easier to find “normal" value outside futures.
  • Strong live-betting menu for fast sports: typical live options cover core lines (moneyline, totals), plus sport-specific lines (like puck line) and situational markets (example: next team to score, double chance).
  • Beginner-friendly explanation layer: the platform explains parlays and teasers in plain language, which helps avoid common mistakes when building combo bets.
  • Practical flexibility on bet management: Cash Out is available on eligible bets, so you can sometimes reduce risk without waiting for the final result.
  • Promo variety beyond welcome offers: frequent opt-in mechanics (boosts, event-based Bet & Get, referral, protection-style promos like Early Exit) give regular bettors extra value without always needing big deposits.
CONS
  • Outrights look expensive: the table shows futures/outrights can carry much wider margins than main markets, so they are weaker for value-focused betting.
  • Cash Out is not universal: it may be slow or missing on some niche bets (example mentioned in user comments about NHL parlays/shots markets), so you cannot rely on it.
  • Promo terms can be strict: the headline welcome offer pays only if the first bet wins, and cashed out bets may not qualify.
  • Withdrawals can be “method-locked": some methods require you to have deposited with the same method first, and timing varies a lot by payout route (fast for some methods, much slower for checks).

When I look at the US legal sportsbook market, DraftKings is one of the few “default” operators most beginners will hear about early. It is a state-licensed sportsbook, so it only works in approved states, and you must be physically located in the state to place bets.

From a product view, DraftKings is built around the mainstream US menu: moneyline, point spread, over/under (totals), props, parlays, and futures. The platform also pushes fast navigation for live (in-play) betting and same-game parlays, which matches how many US bettors actually stake on game day.

DraftKings Website

DraftKings Website

In my check at that moment, the market mix varied mostly because different leagues were at different points in their season. For the NFL (including the Super Bowl) and College Football, I mainly saw futures, which is not unusual outside the main part of the season. MLB also looked futures-focused, which is typical before regular games are fully available. For NBA and NCAA basketball, the sportsbook showed the main game markets, including moneyline, spread, and totals, along with outrights. The NHL also appeared more futures-heavy in that view. I would not treat this as a permanent weakness. In the US, available markets often depend on the time of year, whether a league is in season, and, in some cases, state-specific rules.

The margin table tells a very normal story: outrights are priced much “wider” than main game markets. Here, the NBA main markets were in the mid single digits, while outrights were higher. That is why I usually tell beginners to treat futures/outrights as “small fun bets,” not the place to chase value.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 22.05%
NBA 4.47% 4.74% 8.11%
NHL Not available Not available 20.87%

Live betting is a key part of the DraftKings offer. The bookmaker describes live betting as real-time markets that move during the game, and in practice, it is most useful in fast sports like NBA basketball, NHL hockey, soccer, and tennis. In these sports, the common live markets you will typically see include moneyline, totals, and key line markets (like puck line in the NHL). You can also get situational options like next team to score in hockey, or double chance in soccer, depending on the event.

DraftKings also leans hard into “combo” betting. Same Game Parlay (multiple picks from one match) is a core feature in the product messaging. Traditional parlays and teasers are also part of the menu, and the interface gives quick explanations for beginners, which helps reduce basic mistakes (for example, how a teaser changes spreads/totals). On eligible bets, DraftKings also offers Cash Out, which lets you settle a wager early for the amount shown on the website.

Promos are important on DraftKings, but they are always state- and date-dependent, so I describe them as examples. One common pattern is a “bet-and-get” welcome: place a $5+ bet and receive $300 in bonus bets if that bet wins (the example terms shown by DraftKings include minimum odds of -500 and payout as 12 x $25 bonus bets). It is simple, but it is not risk-free because you only get the bonus if the first bet wins, and cash out bets may not qualify under the promo rules. Beyond the welcome offer, DraftKings regularly runs smaller “opt-in” promos like Profit Boosts for specific games or sports, Bet & Get-style offers tied to events (for example, NBA SGP-related deals), referral bonuses, and protection-style promos like “Early Exit” that refund certain bets as bonus bets if a player leaves early due to injury.

On payments, the important practical point is that withdrawal options depend on your jurisdiction and the payment methods you have already set up. DraftKings’ own withdrawal flow explains a key rule beginners often miss: if you want to withdraw using a method, you usually need to have deposited with that same method first. In my case, my debit card deposit was quick and the funds showed up in my balance within a few seconds, which is what I would normally expect from card funding. DraftKings says Online Banking withdrawals require a prior Online Banking deposit and are typically up to 5 business days. Apple Pay withdrawals require a prior Apple Pay debit-card deposit and are only available on iOS. On timing, DraftKings publishes typical withdrawal speeds by method: debit card up to 24 hours, PayPal and Venmo up to 2 days, cash around 1 hour, online banking up to 24 hours to 4 days, and checks can take up to 14 business days for smaller amounts.

On mobile, DraftKings is clearly designed for app-first use, even though the desktop site also works. The biggest “real world” factor is not the UI, but the state-based access model (you only get the full experience when you are eligible and located correctly). The App Store page shows a 4.8/5 rating based on over 1 million ratings, which signals a very large active user base. In the reviews I checked, people often praise the “trust” side of the product: payouts feel real, and withdrawals can be fast when everything is working (one reviewer even described money reaching a bank account shortly after a win). On the negative side, the most useful criticism is about edge-case betting features: one reviewer said NHL parlays can be slow to offer Cash Out (especially on shots markets), and another theme is that some bettors want more bet types/market options compared with competitors. These are user opinions, but they are the kind of practical issues that matter day to day.

If you want a top-tier legal US sportsbook with strong mainstream markets, heavy live/SGP focus, and frequent promo mechanics, DraftKings is a safe mainstream pick. Just keep your expectations realistic on two things: outrights usually cost more in the odds, and promo terms can be strict even when the headline looks simple.

BetMGM

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, DC, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, MI, MS, MO, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, SD, TN, VA, WA, WV, WY

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Strong NBA and college basketball menu, including player props and Same Game Parlay, which is where most daily volume sits.
  • Competitive pricing on core NBA markets in my check, while some rivals push higher holds on the same staples.
  • Useful bet-building tools for big leagues, with SGP available on many events.
  • Cash Out is available, which gives flexibility when you want to reduce risk mid-game.
  • Very strong banking mix for a legal US bookmaker, including PayPal, Venmo, Apple Pay, PayNearMe, and bank-style options like VIP Preferred and Play+.
  • No extra withdrawal fees are stated by BetMGM, which helps if you withdraw often.
  • Solid mobile setup across iOS, Android, and a mobile-optimized site, so you are not forced into one platform.
CONS
  • Outrights pricing is expensive versus core markets, with margins jumping into the teens and above 20% in the examples.
  • Cash Out is not consistent across bet types and can disappear during volatile moments, especially in live betting.
  • Bonus value is capped by bonus-bet mechanics and short expiry windows, which reduces the practical value if you do not bet quickly.
  • App feedback suggests gaps in advanced live tools and some limits on certain parlay combinations.

BetMGM is a legal, state-regulated sportsbook in the US. So the exact app version, promos, banking options, limits, and even some bet types can change from state to state. I always check the BetMGM site and terms for the specific state I am writing about, because one offer or payment method in Arizona can look different in New York or New Jersey.

BetMGM Website

BetMGM Website

BetMGM looked strong overall in my check, but the exact market mix depended on timing. For NFL and college football, futures often showed up first, which is normal when the regular slate is not yet fully live. The main game markets on those sports would usually include moneyline, point spread, over/under, and player props once games are posted in full. Basketball looked the most complete in my review: NBA, NCAAM, and NCAAW all had a wide menu, including moneyline, spreads, totals, player markets, and Same Game Parlay (SGP). MLB looked more limited at that moment, with mostly moneyline and outrights visible, while spreads and totals were marked as “locked,” which usually means they had not opened yet. The NHL also looked narrower in that moment, with mainly outrights available, even though a typical in-season board would usually include moneyline, puck line, over/under goals, and player props. I also did not see horse racing in my review, so there was no separate racebook section or website. Live betting was available across a range of sports, including hockey, tennis, basketball, soccer, and cricket, with standard in-play markets such as spreads, totals, period betting, and parlay options.

Odds quality is best on the core markets. In my check, the NBA moneyline and totals sat around a 4.6%-4.8% margin in the table. Outrights were much more expensive, often in the teens, and some examples were above 20%. I treat outrights as a “pay more for the long shot” area.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 22.87%
NBA 4.59% 4.76% 13.11%
NHL Not available Not available 20.09%

Features are solid, but not universal. I see Same Game Parlay on many events, and it is one of the most useful tools for the NBA and other big leagues. It lets me combine several picks from one match into one bet. Cash Out is available, but it is not guaranteed. It does not work on every bet type, and it can disappear during volatile moments in a game. That is common for online US sportsbooks, especially in live betting. I also saw a soccer early payout style promo (EPL 2-Up), but these promos are often state-specific.

For bonuses, I look at what you actually receive and how hard it is to turn it into withdrawable value. The first-bet offer I checked returns up to $1,500 in bonus bets if your first bet loses, with a $10 minimum deposit, a 7-day window to use the token, and bonus bets that expire in 7 days, so it is easy to understand but time-sensitive and not as strong as real cash. I also saw Odds Boost Tokens, which can be valuable because they raise the payout on a winning bet, but the real upside depends on the token limits and eligible markets. Beyond that, promos like Second Chance (stake back in cash for a golfer who finishes second), Refer-a-Friend bonuses, and leaderboard or VIP-trip campaigns can add value, yet their usefulness depends on the exact terms, eligibility rules, and how often you bet those sports.

Banking is a strong part of the BetMGM setup I checked. I saw PayPal, Venmo, Apple Pay, cards, and bank-style options like VIP Preferred and Play+. PayNearMe is there, too, which helps cash users. For withdrawals, the list included Play+, debit cards, PayPal, VIP Preferred, online banking, and Venmo. BetMGM states there are no extra withdrawal fees.

On mobile, BetMGM feels like a mature product. The iOS app sits at about 4.8 stars from roughly 257K ratings, and the Android app is around 4.1 stars with about 39K reviews. The mobile website is also well optimized, so I can place bets comfortably without installing the app. In the reviews I checked, people often praise how easy it is to use and how promos are presented, while the most common complaints are about missing advanced live tools and occasional limits on certain parlay combinations.

My bottom line is that BetMGM is strongest as a full-package legal option. It gives a wide menu of markets, solid live betting, and flexible banking. I still suggest checking pricing on your exact bet types, because that is where the real difference shows up.

Caesars Sportsbook

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, DC, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MS, MO, NE, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, TN, VA, WA, WV, WY

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Strong basketball menu: NBA + NCAAM + NCAAW had deep coverage (core lines, props, and team futures).
  • Good parlay toolkit: SGP, Super Parlays, and Quick Picks make parlay building fast.
  • Promos are active: welcome Bonus Bet is simple to use, plus rotating offers (NBA Flips, odds/profit boosts).
  • Rewards angle: Caesars Rewards is a real extra if you already use Caesars (and you can redeem Reward Credits for sports bets in the app).
  • Low digital minimums: $5 deposit and $1 withdrawal minimums make it easy to start small.
  • Live betting range: live markets showed up across several sports beyond the “big four" (tennis, table tennis, Esports, Olympics).
CONS
  • Futures can be expensive: margins are much higher on outrights/awards than on main straight markets (especially NHL outrights).
  • Cash Out limits: not available on every bet or every moment, and it is not available on odds boost markets.
  • App experience complaints repeat: users often mention speed/lag and being logged out (not everyone, but it shows up often enough to flag).

When I review Caesars Sportsbook, I see a classic US “state-licensed” brand. It only works in approved jurisdictions, and you must be physically inside the state to place bets.

On the betting menu, Caesars is built around the mainstream US leagues and bet types. They put NFL and college football first and highlight the core markets (spreads, moneyline, player props, and futures). They also push Same Game Parlays (SGPs), Super Parlays, and Quick Picks. In the same description, Caesars says it covers other major leagues too, and it names NBA, NHL, MLB, and UFC, with live betting as a key feature.

Caesars Website

Website

In my check from February 2026, the Caesars Sportsbook menu looked quite uneven across sports, but that mostly reflected timing rather than a fixed weakness. I did not see NFL or college football in the menu, which is not unusual outside the main football season. The only US soccer league I noticed was MLS. Basketball looked much stronger, with NBA plus college basketball (NCAAM and NCAAW) and a full range of standard markets, including moneyline, spread, totals, player props, and team futures. MLB looked more limited in that snapshot, with mostly outrights available. The NHL seemed more geared toward futures-style markets such as playoffs, conference and division betting, team futures, and awards. I also didn’t see any horse racing or a separate racebook section. However, Caesars has a dedicated mobile racebook app for iOS and Android. Live betting was available in sports such as tennis, table tennis, soccer, Esports, and the Olympics. I would treat this as a snapshot of what was available at that moment, since sportsbook menus in the US can change by season and by state.

Odds quality matters most on straight markets. In my margin table, the NBA looked reasonable (about 4.2% on moneyline and 4.76% on totals). Futures were more expensive (around 7.41% in NBA outrights), and NHL outrights were very high (about 26.54%). My takeaway is simple: Caesars can be fine for day-to-day NBA bets, but I would be careful with futures and awards markets because the built-in cost can be much higher.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available Not available
NBA 4.2% 4.76% 7.41%
NHL Not available Not available 26.54%

Live betting is a core part of Caesars Sportsbook. I could see live markets running in tennis, table tennis, soccer, Esports, and the Olympics. The live menu changed from event to event, but the common structure was the same: simple winners (1X2 in soccer), totals (over/under), and spread-style lines where they make sense for the sport. On bigger matches, the live board usually has more options and more frequent odds updates, because prices move every time the game state changes (score, time, momentum).

In terms of features, Caesars offers Same Game Parlays (SGP), Super Parlays (an SGP combined with other picks), and Quick Picks (pre-made parlays). I also see odds boosts pushed a lot around big games. Cash Out is the main “risk control” tool I look for. Caesars’ house rules describe Cash Out as settling a wager before it is resolved. It may be available on selected markets in both pregame and live betting, but not on every bet and not at every moment. Caesars also notes that Cash Out is not available for odds boost markets.

For bonuses, the main offer I saw was simple: Caesars matches my first cash bet up to $250 as a Bonus Bet (win or lose). The rules were very “US standard”: the qualifying bet had to meet a minimum-odds rule (-500 or longer), I had 30 days after registration to place it, and the Bonus Bet expired 30 days after it was issued (and it is not cash, so you cannot withdraw it, and winnings usually do not include the original stake). Overall, I think the value is decent for beginners because it is easy to understand, and it protects you if your first bet loses. But the $250 cap and the odds rule stop you from using ultra-short favorites, so you need to pick a qualifying bet on purpose. Beyond the welcome offer, I saw rotating promos like NBA Flips with a $50,000 weekly Bonus Bet prize pool and regular odds/profit-boost style promos, so there is usually something extra to opt into.

Payments are strong for a legal US sportsbook. Caesars lists major options like cards (Visa, Mastercard, Discover, AmEx) and popular e-wallet rails such as PayPal and Venmo. Availability can vary by state. Every state has a $5 minimum for digital deposits and a $1 minimum for digital withdrawals.

On mobile, Caesars looks strong. The mobile website is well-optimized, so pages fit the screen, buttons are easy to tap, and the navigation is clear. In the app stores, Caesars shows 4.7/5 on iOS with about 100K ratings, and 4.6/5 on Google Play with about 33.5K reviews. From what I see in user feedback, people like the clean layout and promos, but complaints often focus on speed, lag, or being logged out. I treat reviews as opinions, but repeated themes still tell me what to expect.

Caesars Sportsbook is a good pick if you care about Caesars Rewards and you want a mainstream US sportsbook with SGPs and live betting. The pricing on the main NBA straight markets can be quite competitive, but futures often come with higher built-in margins. The sports menu can also change by state and by season.

bet365

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, MD, MI, MO, NJ, NC, OH, PA, TN, VA

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Very deep futures menu across multiple sports (more than just “champion" markets).
  • Strong basketball coverage with a big props menu.
  • Live betting feels “full-featured" across several sports (not only the big US leagues).
  • Useful promo tools for regular bettors: Same Game Parlay+, boosts (Bet Boost, Parlay Boost, Super Boost), and Early Payout-style offers.
  • Welcome offers are beginner-friendly (clear choices, “win or lose" framing), so it is easy to understand what you get.
  • Payments (in TN) include modern rails like Apple Pay, Venmo, PayPal, and PayNearMe cash, which is convenient for many US users.
CONS
  • Futures pricing is noticeably more expensive than straight markets (especially outrights), so you need to shop carefully there.
  • Short Bonus Bet expiry (7 days) reduces real value if you do not bet often.
  • Promo ecosystem pushes parlays/boosted bets, which are often higher-margin bet types.
  • Repeated user-review pain points: occasional glitches and slowdowns and “account friction" (verification, support, withdrawal expectations).

bet365 is a legal, state-licensed sportsbook in the US, but it is not nationwide. On its official US states page, bet365 lists 17 “live” states and says you must be physically located in a licensed state to deposit or place bets.

In my check, the American football menu looked light, but that seemed to reflect the sports calendar more than any fixed weakness. I did not see NFL or college football at that moment, which is fairly normal outside the main part of the season. Basketball looked much stronger, with NBA, NCAAB, and WNBA all available, plus the standard core markets such as spreads, moneyline, totals, and a wide props menu. Baseball and hockey were available, too, but not in the way many US users would expect during the middle of the season. MLB was mainly focused on futures, which made sense in the offseason. The NHL also looked futures-heavy in that snapshot, with few or no straight game markets visible in the main lobby. I also did not see a horse racing or racebook section, so in my review, it did not look like a combined sports-and-racing product. Where bet365 really stood out was futures coverage across several sports. The futures menu went well beyond simple outright winners and included division and league markets, playoff-related options, finish-position or seeding markets, awards, and player stat leader bets. That is a genuine plus for people who like longer-term betting, though futures are still worth treating carefully because they often come with higher margins than regular straight markets.

On odds quality, I focus on the “everyday” straight markets first (moneyline, spread, totals). In the table below, NBA straight-market averages look competitive: around 4% on moneyline and about 4.76% on totals. Futures were materially more expensive: about 12.31% for NBA outrights, and about 21.77% for NHL outrights. My takeaway is simple: bet365 can be strong for day-to-day lines, but I treat futures and awards as “shop carefully” markets because the built-in cost is often higher.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available Not available
NBA 3.99% 4.76% 12.31%
NHL Not available Not available 21.77%

Live betting is a core part of the experience. In my check, I saw live markets across sports like basketball, hockey, tennis, and soccer. The basic live structure was what beginners expect: moneyline, totals, and spread-style lines, with more options on higher-profile events as odds update in real time.

For betting tools, bet365 pushes parlays hard. I can use Same Game Parlay+ on supported games, and there are multiple boost mechanics around it (Bet Boost, Parlay Boost, and bigger “Super Boost”-style promos shown in the promos area). I also saw Early Payout offers (a “settle early” promo tied to game conditions) for some NBA games. These tools are fun, but they also nudge you toward higher-margin bet types, so I treat them as optional extras, not a reason to force parlays.

For bonuses, bet365 gives new customers a simple choice: $1,000 First Bet Safety Net or “Bet $5 & Get $200 in Bonus Bets (win or lose).” On the same official page, bet365 also lists the key limits I look for: a minimum $10 deposit, you must claim the offer in the app, the first bet has an odds cap (it references -500 cutoffs in the terms), and Bonus Bets expire 7 days after they are added. For beginners, the value is good because the offers are easy to understand, and the “win or lose” format reduces stress. The main downside is the short 7-day expiry, so you need to use the Bonus Bets quickly. Beyond the welcome offer, I also saw a steady flow of “extra value” promos inside the promos area. These included boosted-odds style deals (Bet Boost, Super Boost), Parlay Boost (extra return on eligible parlays), and sport-specific protections like Prop Protect, plus event rules like Early Payout for NBA, NHL, NCAAB and a Tennis Retirement Guarantee. These promos can be valuable if you already bet those markets, but they are usually limited to selected events, and some pay out as Bonus Bets, so I treat them as nice add-ons rather than guaranteed value every day.

Payments in Tennessee are well documented on bet365’s own help pages. For deposits, it lists debit card, Apple Pay, online banking, Venmo, PayPal, and PayNearMe cash, with clear min/max limits by method. For example, the debit card minimum is $10, while PayNearMe cash goes up to $500. In my own test, the card deposit felt smooth and almost instant. The money reached my balance in under a minute, which is usually what I expect from a standard card payment on a US sportsbook. For withdrawals, it lists options like online banking, Venmo, debit card, PayPal, and Apple Pay, again with method limits and typical processing times, often shown in hours for e-wallet methods.

On mobile, bet365 feels very polished to me: the mobile website scales well to different screen sizes, the layout stays clean, and navigation is easy. In the app stores, bet365 shows strong ratings (4.8/5 on iOS with over 300K ratings, and 4.6/5 on Google Play with about 57.2K reviews). In user reviews, I often see praise for the smooth interface and the depth of betting options. The repeated complaints are different. People mention occasional glitches or slowdowns. Some also mention “account friction,” like verification steps, support issues, or withdrawals not being as quick as they expected.

bet365 can feel like a strong alternative to FanDuel and DraftKings if you care about a clean product, deep futures menus, and a lot of “promo tools” (boosts, parlay mechanics, early payout). The trade-off is that availability and sport depth can look inconsistent at specific moments, so I always recommend checking your exact state lobby before you commit your bankroll.

BetRivers

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, DE, IL, IN, IA, LA, MD, MI, NJ, NY, OH, PA, VA, WV

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Strong basketball depth: NBA plus NCAAB, NCAAW with a full spread, totals, props menu, not just basic lines.
  • Good straight-market value for day-to-day betting compared with its own futures pricing (moneyline and totals look more reasonable than outrights).
  • Futures coverage is usable even when some leagues look “thin" on game lines (MLB and NHL were still active via futures).
  • Solid parlay toolkit for US-style betting: Same Game Parlay plus Teaser+ for people who like structured combo bets.
  • Promos are not just generic boosts: PropPacks and other prop/parlay mechanics give extra value if you already bet those markets.
  • Mobile experience feels product-first: fast navigation, clean layout, and strong app-store sentiment around usability.
CONS
  • Outrights pricing is expensive versus straight markets, so long-term bets (futures/awards) need extra caution.
  • NHL coverage looked narrow in the lobby: Win + futures-style focus, with little/no straight match depth shown.
  • “Promo-led" experience can steer you into higher-margin bet types (parlays/props), so it’s easy to overuse the flashy mechanics.
  • Repeated user-feedback theme of “account friction": occasional glitches, plus verification, support, withdrawal expectations not always matching reality.

BetRivers is a legal, state-licensed sportsbook, but it is not a nationwide app. I see it as a solid “third option” brand in the US: less dominant than FanDuel or DraftKings, but often very competitive on product design and promos. BetRivers is clear about the basics.

On markets, the sportsbook looked a bit uneven across sports in my check, but that seemed to reflect timing more than any permanent limitation. The NFL was available, although I mainly saw Super Bowl outrights, which is fairly normal depending on the point in the football calendar and whether full game markets are already live. Basketball looked much stronger, with NBA plus college basketball and the main US markets users would expect, including moneyline, point spread, totals, player props, and futures. MLB was also present, but the lobby leaned mostly toward futures at that moment. NHL was available, too, with “Win” and other futures-style markets showing in that snapshot. I also did not see horse racing or a racebook section in the menu.

BetRivers Website

Website

For pricing, I focus on straight markets first. In the margin table below, NBA moneyline and totals sit in a mid-range zone, while outrights are clearly more expensive. That is normal in US betting, but it matters if you like futures and awards.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 22.49%
NBA 5.32% 5.43% 17.68%
NHL 4.68% Not available 16.81%

Live betting is active across many sports, including soccer, tennis, and basketball. The live layout sticks to beginner-friendly staples like spread, moneyline, and totals, with extra options on bigger games.

On tools, BetRivers supports Same Game Parlay, and I also saw Teaser+ in the interface. Teaser+ is a pre-match combo format where the main line is adjusted (the platform explains it as a mix of total points and handicap, with the mainline moved by a set range). This is useful if you like structured bet builders, but it also nudges you toward combo bets, so I treat it as an “option,” not a default.

Promos are a big part of the BetRivers pitch. The welcome offer is a Second Chance Bonus Bet up to $100, and I also saw recurring mechanics like PropPacks (with a $10,000 headline prize) plus an iRush Rewards loyalty layer. The value is decent if you already bet props and parlays, but the welcome cap is not huge, so it is more “nice boost” than a bank-changing offer.

Payments depend on the state. From what I saw in the deposits and withdrawals help area, the platform supports common US methods like credit and debit cards, plus PayPal, Venmo, online banking, PayNearMe cash, and a Play+ card option, with state rules and limits shown inside the help center. My own card deposit was processed very quickly. The funds appeared in my account in about 30 seconds, so the top-up experience felt simple and reliable.

On mobile, the product feels clean and fast to navigate. The site works well on a phone screen, and the apps rate strongly: the iOS app shows 4.9/5 with about 40K ratings, and the Android app shows 4.7/5 with about 17K reviews. In iOS reviews, the positives I see most are simple navigation and strong promos. The negatives repeat, too: occasional glitches and slowdowns, plus “account friction” like verification, support back-and-forth, or withdrawals feeling slower than expected.

BetRivers is worth checking if you want a clean interface, strong basketball coverage, and lots of promo mechanics around props and parlays. I would still be careful with outrights because the built-in cost is usually much higher than straight lines.

Other App-only Sports Bookmakers

When I review “app-only” sportsbooks in the US, I treat them as mobile-first products. In practice, the website is often just a sign-up or info hub, and the real betting experience sits inside the iOS and Android app.

theScore Bet

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, DC, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, MI, MO, NC, NJ, NY, OH, PA, TN, VA, WV

I treat theScore Bet as a phone-first sportsbook built by a major sports media brand. The app itself leans hard into promos and game day convenience, not a “deepest menu” promise. It also pushes streaming as a differentiator, and it claims access to over 150,000 live events inside the app.

On markets, I focus on the core US bet types for football and basketball, plus futures for longer term positions. theScore Bet’s confirmed product emphasis is parlays. It promotes Same Game Parlays, cross-sport parlays, and teasers. theScore Bet also explicitly advertises live betting and fast game day usage.

TheScore Bet highlights “daily promos,” “profit boosts,” and a “daily odds boost.” I read that as a good add-on account for price shopping and promo timing, rather than a main account you use for every bet.

On payments, the exact cashier options can change by state and user profile. I treat it as a standard state-by-state setup, like other licensed apps, and I always verify the methods in the cashier before I plan deposits and withdrawals.

On mobile, this is an app product. On the Apple App Store, theScore Bet shows a 4.8 rating and 218K ratings. On Google Play, it shows 4.4 with 19.3Kreviews. In App Store reviews, I mostly see praise for the prop variety and easy deposits, while the repeating complaints are about extra verification steps and withdrawals or support taking longer than expected.

Compared with FanDuel and DraftKings, I use theScore Bet as a secondary option. It is most useful when you want quick game day betting, parlay tools, and promos in one simple app.

Fanatics Sportsbook

Jurisdiction: AZ, CO, CT, DC, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, MI, MO, NC, NJ, NY, OH, PA, TN, VT, VA, WV, WY

I see Fanatics as a rewards-led sportsbook. The app pushes FanCash as the headline difference, and it says you can earn FanCash rewards while betting. That is a very different positioning versus FanDuel and DraftKings, which usually win on habit and scale.

On markets, I judge it on the same US basics first. That means football and basketball lines, props, and futures. Fanatics does not market itself as “the deepest board.” Instead, it leans on a clean, simple app experience and its rewards angle.

Live betting is part of the app. Fanatics also confirms Cash Out is available, which matters if you actively manage positions during games.

Fanatics has a few product touches that are worth calling out. It promotes a Withdrawal Tracker, so you can see payout status, and it promotes a “Fair Play” feature tied to certain injuries and in-game events.

On bonuses, Fanatics publicly advertises welcome style offers, but promos are state-specific and change often. I see the reward rate and the terms as the real story here, not the headline number.

On payments, I treat Fanatics like other state-licensed apps. Methods can vary by state, so I do not assume a single banking menu across all locations. I always confirm what is available for my state at the cashier.

On mobile, Fanatics shows strong store scores right now. On the Apple App Store, it shows a 4.8 rating and about 240K ratings. On Google Play, it shows 4.7 with about 50K reviews. In App Store reviews, many users praise the rewards and overall app experience, but the recurring complaints mention glitches that make navigation harder and sometimes affect FanCash or Cash Out.

Compared with FanDuel and DraftKings, I would not switch by default just for odds depth. I add Fanatics when the rewards math makes sense, or when I want another price check on a big slate.

Offshore US-friendly Sportsbooks

Warning: These sites are not legal in the US. If you have a dispute, you cannot expect protection from your state regulator. If sports betting is legal in your state, it is safer to use a bookmaker licensed there. In any case, think twice before using an offshore sportsbook.

Offshore sportsbooks are websites for sports betting that accept US bettors but are licensed outside the US and are not overseen by your state gaming regulator. Because of that, protections can be weaker than in state-licensed markets, and US authorities warn that illegal/offshore sites may leave consumers exposed if something goes wrong. If your state does not have legal sports betting, the list of offshore offers below lets you compare the most common options with those risks in mind.

Bovada

Jurisdiction: Curaçao

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Very deep NBA and college basketball prop menus on big games, including player points/rebounds, player combos, game props, score props, and even niche ideas like squares and correct score.
  • A real Horses section that is easy to find, with classic racing bet types like Win, Place, Show, and W/P/S.
  • Strong bet-building tools for props: Same Game Parlays let me stack up to six picks including spreads, totals, team totals and player stat props, and there is also a Prop Builder tool for creating more prop combinations.
  • Crypto banking is a core strength: Bovada supports multiple coins and vouchers for deposits and withdrawals, and it says crypto deposits have no fees.
CONS
  • Card deposits can get expensive after your first one: Bovada says later credit-card deposits can carry fees of 15.9% or higher.
  • The welcome bonus is “workable," but it is not light: Bovada lists a 5x sports rollover on both the deposit and the bonus amount.
  • No native app flow: Bovada tells users there are no apps to download, and you should log in on Bovada.lv instead.
  • The consumer-protection layer is different from state apps because Bovada presents itself as licensed offshore (not by a US state regulator).

I see Bovada as a long-running offshore sportsbook that many US bettors know, but it is not a state-licensed US operator. Bovada states that Bovada.lv is “licensed and regulated” by the Union of the Comoros and the Central Reserve Authority of Western Sahara. That is why I treat it as an offshore option, not as a legal US “state bookie,” and I always tell people to check their own state rules first.

Bovada Website

Bovada Website

Bovada covers the main US sports well, but what the menu looks like depends a lot on timing. The NFL, including the Super Bowl, was available in my check, though the menu looked narrower than it would during the main part of the season. At that moment, I mostly saw moneyline, game props, and futures. Basketball was a clearer strength. The NBA and college basketball had strong coverage, and on major games, the props board looked especially deep. Alongside the standard markets like moneyline, spread, and totals, I saw a wide range of player points, rebounds, combo lines, game props, and score props. Some events also included more niche markets such as correct score and squares, plus futures for longer-term bets. MLB and NHL were available, too, but both leaned more toward futures in that snapshot, which fits the offseason cycle. Horse racing was separate and easy to find, with a dedicated Horses section and the usual bet types such as Win, Place, Show, and W/P/S. That is still one of Bovada’s more noticeable strengths if you want both sports and racing in one account, since many US state-regulated apps do not offer that setup.

Here is how my average margin table looked when I compared straight markets (moneyline and totals) versus outrights. NBA straight lines were fairly competitive, but outrights were clearly more expensive (which is common, but still matters if you bet futures a lot).

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl 4.55% Not available 19.43%
NBA 3.92% 4.76% 8.83%
NHL Not available Not available 18.1%

Live betting is also active, and it is not limited to one sport. In my check, I saw live markets across basketball, tennis, soccer, hockey, Olympics, baseball, Esports, and more. The live board usually starts with simple lines like moneyline, spread-style options, and totals, then adds deeper props on bigger events.

For bet building tools, Bovada pushes combos. It promotes Same Game Parlays for NBA and NFL, and it says you can build up to six picks on supported games: spreads, totals, team totals, and player props. I also see Teaser options (moving the line in your favor for a lower payout) and a Prop Builder style feature for stacking player-prop ideas. These tools are useful, but they usually come with a higher built-in cost than simple straight bets, so I use them selectively.

On bonuses, Bovada keeps the welcome choice simple. New customers can pick either a 75% crypto match bonus up to $750 or a 50% card match bonus up to $250. The key detail is rollover: Bovada requires 5x playthrough for sports (and 5x for horse betting), while the casino playthrough is much higher. For me, that makes the sports welcome bonus “workable” if you already plan to bet regularly, but it is not a free win. Beyond the welcome offer, the most relevant sports promo I see is Parlay Booster. Bovada says it can add extra profit on eligible parlays, with the boost level tied to the number of legs (for example, it lists 5% for 4 legs and up to 20% for 10+ legs). It can add value if you already play parlays, but it is still a parlay mechanic, so I do not treat it as “guaranteed value every day.”

Payments are one of Bovada’s biggest differences versus state-licensed online bookies, mainly because crypto is a core rail here. On Bovada, I can deposit by cards (Visa, MasterCard, and AmEx) or by crypto (Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT, Litecoin, Bitcoin SV, and Bitcoin Cash), and I can also fund the account with a Voucher that I can buy from another player in the Bovada Community. The exact methods shown can vary by account and region, so I always check the cashier. The platform also lists deposit limits by method. For example, cards run from $20 up to $1,500 per transaction, and crypto deposits commonly go up to $5,000 per transaction, depending on the coin. In my own test, the USDT deposit was straightforward. After I sent the transfer, the funds reached my Bovada balance in around 3 to 5 minutes, which felt normal for a crypto payment that needs network confirmation. On fees, Bovada says your first credit-card deposit is free, and later card deposits can carry fees. It mentions 15.9% or higher depending on the card. It also says Bovada does not charge fees for crypto deposits, although your wallet or exchange may. For withdrawals, Bovada lists options like crypto and vouchers. Bovada also notes that your withdrawal method may depend on your deposit method, and it may process large withdrawals in the way it sees as most appropriate.

On mobile, Bovada is mainly a mobile-website experience. The site is built to run well on a phone, and that is the path I recommend. I did not see an official Bovada sportsbook app in the main app stores in my check, so I would be careful with any third-party “Bovada” apps and stick to the official site.

My bottom line is simple. Bovada is an offshore option with deep props, strong basketball coverage, a real Horses section, and serious crypto banking support. The trade-off is the offshore status, and the fact that bonuses come with rollover, and long-term markets can be expensive, so I focus on straight lines and use parlays and futures with extra caution.

BetOnline

Jurisdiction: Panama

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Very strong banking flexibility for an offshore sportsbook, with lots of crypto rails and high crypto limits.
  • Racebook is designed as a separate section, so it works well if you want sports and horses in one wallet.
  • Basketball depth stands out, especially the range of “extra" markets like team totals and margin of victory.
  • NBA straight-line pricing looks competitive, which is where most beginners start.
  • The welcome offer is simple and not tied to a heavy rollover, so it is easy to use if you bet within the 30-day window.
CONS
  • Outrights are expensive, so futures and awards are the markets where I would be most cautious.
  • The free bet mechanics reduce real value because the stake is not returned.
  • Mobile web can feel less polished, with occasional layout overlap that slows navigation.
  • Offshore status means a different consumer protection layer than US-state licensed legal online sports betting sites.

I see BetOnline as an offshore sportsbook, not a US state-licensed app like FanDuel or DraftKings. It can be a practical option if you want crypto banking and a racebook in the same account, but I still treat it as a different risk category than regulated state online bookmakers.

On the sports menu, football looked lighter in my check, but that mostly seemed to be a matter of timing. The NFL and college football were available, though only futures were posted at that moment, which is fairly normal outside the main season. Basketball was the clearer strength. The NBA and college basketball both had the main markets users would expect, including moneyline, point spread, and total points, plus a wider mix of extras such as player props, team total props, margin of victory, and futures. The MLB and NHL were on the board, too, but both were futures-only in that snapshot, which fits the offseason cycle. For horse racing, BetOnline had a separate Racebook section with the standard bet types, including Win, Place, and Show.

BetOnline Website

BetOnline Website

For odds quality, I built a simple average margin table to compare straight markets versus outrights. NBA straight lines looked competitive, but outrights were much more expensive, which is the pattern I watch on offshore sports betting websites.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 20.86%
NBA 3.69% 4.73% 21.07%
NHL Not available Not available 15.63%

Live betting is available across sports like soccer, tennis, and hockey. On soccer, I see familiar live staples like 1×2 and Draw No Bet, while other sports lean more toward match winner style lines and totals when they are offered.

For tools, the main feature I see is a Same Game Parlay builder on supported games. It is useful if you like building one ticket from multiple picks, but I treat it as a higher cost bet type than simple straight lines.

On bonuses, the headline offer I see is the No Strings Welcome Offer. It gives up to $250 in free bets, which is 50% back on your first deposit, and it requires a $50 deposit with promo code FREE250. The free bet expires in 30 days, and the stake is not returned on settlement. Value-wise, I like it because it is straightforward and it does not look like a typical match bonus with heavy rollover, but the “stake not returned” rule means the real value is lower than the headline amount, so I treat it as a nice boost, not free money. The wagering is easier than most offshore welcome deals. You only need to place the free bet within 30 days. That is simple if you bet often. If you bet rarely, you can miss the expiry and lose the value. There is also a VIP Rewards program with tier levels, which can be meaningful for frequent bettors, but the real value depends on what level you reach.

Payments are a major differentiator here. In the cashier, I see cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover) plus a long list of crypto options (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, Tether, USDC, Solana, Tron, Ripple, Dogecoin, Cardano, Polygon, Stellar, Shiba Inu, Bitcoin Cash, Avalanche, Binance, and even Trump Meme), with deposit minimums commonly $10 for crypto (up to $500,000) and $25 for cards (up to $2,500), plus Person to Person ($100 to $600) and Money Orders ($300 to $9,000). On withdrawals, I see many of the same crypto rails with a $20 minimum and max limits that vary by coin, plus Person to Person ($50 to $400), Money Orders ($1,000 to $5,000), Bank Wire ($2,500 to $25,000), and a Check by courier option ($500 to $2,500).

On mobile, I can use the site on a phone, but I do notice that some elements can overlap and make navigation feel less smooth. BetOnline as a browser-first product.

My bottom line is simple. BetOnline is strongest when you want deep basketball markets, a separate racebook, and lots of crypto banking options. I would still be selective with futures and outrights, and I would expect sports availability to vary more than it does at the big regulated US betting sites.

MyBookie

Jurisdiction: Curaçao

PROS CONS
PROS
  • NBA straight-line pricing looks usable for an offshore sportsbook, especially on moneyline and totals.
  • The basketball menu goes deeper than “basics," with lots of prop depth and extra markets beyond standard spreads and totals.
  • A separate racing section makes it easy to mix sports bets with Win, Place, and Show style horse markets in one account.
  • Very broad crypto banking menu with high limits, plus traditional backup methods like wires, money orders, and checks.
CONS
  • The pricing gap is big between straight lines and outrights, so futures can get expensive fast, especially in the NFL and the NHL.
  • The same Game Parlay builder is convenient but usually comes with a higher built-in cost than straight bets.
  • Bonus value is lower than the headline because the free-bet stake is not returned, and the 30-day expiry punishes very casual bettors.

MyBookie fits the offshore category, not the regulated state sportsbook group. That matters because the consumer protection layer is not the same as a regulated state bookie. I treat it as a higher-risk option, and I always tell people to check their own state rules first.

On the sports menu, the market mix in my check depended a lot on the league and the timing. The NFL and college football were available, though I only saw futures at that moment, which is fairly normal outside the main season. Basketball looked much stronger, with the NBA and NCAA offering the main markets users would expect, including spreads, winner markets, totals, and outrights. The MLB and NHL were also on the board, but both were futures-only in that snapshot, which fits the offseason cycle. Horse racing was separate in a Racing section, with the standard pools such as Win, Place, and Show.

MyBookie Website

MyBookie Website

To judge odds quality, I built an average margin table that compares straight lines (moneyline and totals) with outrights. The pattern was clear. NBA straight markets were the most usable part of the board, while outrights carried a much higher built-in cost. So if you mainly bet NBA moneyline and totals, the pricing can be acceptable for an offshore sportsbook. If you bet futures often, the overall cost rises fast, especially on NFL and NHL outrights.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 22.68%
NBA 5.01% 4.76% 14.69%
NHL Not available Not available 27.12%

Live betting is also available, including football and basketball. In practice, the live board leans on the basics. I mostly see moneyline style markets, spreads, and totals when they are offered. The exact menu changes by sport and by event.

For features, I see Cash Out and Bet Boost on some matches and markets. Cash Out can be useful when you want to close a position early, but the price is usually worse than letting the bet settle. Bet Boost can add value, but only if the boosted price is still competitive versus other sites for betting.

On bonuses, MyBookie pushes two main welcome choices on its bonus page. One is a 100% first deposit bonus for crypto deposits up to $1,000. The other is a first deposit bet back promo that refunds up to $500 in Free Play if your first bet loses. Value-wise, these can help if you already plan to bet often, but you need to respect rollover. MyBookie notes that for sportsbook rollover, only the win amount counts, heavy favorites at minus 250 or shorter do not count, and some bet types like props and futures do not count toward sportsbook rollover. That combination can make big match style bonuses harder than they look, especially if you bet a lot of short odds. The cleanest promo on the page is the 8% horse rebate, since it states there is no rollover tied to that rebate.

Payments are a real differentiator. On deposits, MyBookie lists cards like Visa, Mastercard, and Discover with a $45 minimum and a $2,500 maximum, plus Person to Person with a $100 minimum and a $500 maximum, and several crypto rails with a $20 minimum such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, BNB, Solana, Tether, Cardano, Dogecoin, and Shiba Inu. For withdrawals, MyBookie’s help center highlights Bitcoin and bank wire. Bitcoin is shown as the recommended option with no fee, with up to 24 hours for review and up to 24 hours for delivery. It also shows bank wire review of 1 to 2 days, delivery of 5 to 7 business days, and fees that depend on the payout amount. It also notes that you must meet the deposit and bonus rollover, and you must roll over deposited funds at least once before requesting a withdrawal.

On mobile, MyBookie presents itself as a browser first. It says there is no need to download an app or use a special mobile URL, and you can log in and bet from a phone or tablet. In real use, that usually means the mobile site experience is the product.

MyBookie is most interesting when you want basketball markets, plus crypto and racing in one account. I would be cautious with futures and outrights because the margins can be steep. I would also treat the bonus value as highly dependent on rollover rules, and plan your staking around that before you deposit.

Everygame (ex-Intertops)

Jurisdiction: Unknown

Warning: This bookmaker does not clearly disclose any licensing information. It is popular with many US players, so I cannot ignore it in this review, but I do not recommend betting on sites that do not operate in a transparent way.

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Horse Racing is a real section with specific markets like To Place 1-3 and outrights, so it works for sports + racing in one wallet.
  • Boosted Odds promos can add value on selected matches if you are not tied to rollover targets.
  • Payments mix cards and crypto, with cash-out routes like Bitcoin, some altcoins, checks, and bank wires.
CONS
  • Outrights pricing is expensive in the margin table, especially NHL outrights, so futures and awards need extra caution.
  • The welcome bonus rollover is heavy (12x on deposit + bonus at minimum odds), which is tough for casual bettors and can push you into volume betting.
  • Withdrawal flow can involve more review and more “process" than a regulated state book, which some users will find frustrating.
  • No official app in the main stores in this check, so you are relying on the mobile site experience.

I look at Everygame as an offshore sportsbook option for US bettors, not a state-regulated app. On its own sportsbook pages, Everygame markets itself to “sports betting USA” and says it accepts users from most US states. However, it also notes that it can refuse accounts, so I always tell people to check their local rules first.

On the sports menu, I saw the usual offshore mix of major US leagues and more niche categories, but the exact board clearly depended on timing. The NFL and college football were available in my check, though the menu looked fairly limited and was mostly focused on futures-style markets, which is normal outside the main season. The NBA and college basketball looked like the strongest part of the sportsbook, with the main lines I would expect, including spread, total, and moneyline, plus futures as a longer-term option. The MLB and NHL were on the board, too, but both leaned more toward outrights in that snapshot, which fits the offseason cycle. The site also had a dedicated Horse Racing section in the navigation, where I could see markets such as To Place 1-3 and outrights.

Everygame Website

Everygame Website

To judge odds quality, I built an average margin table that compares straight lines (moneyline and totals) with outrights. The pattern was clear. NBA straight markets were the most usable part of the board, while outrights carried a much higher built-in cost. So if you mainly bet NBA moneyline and totals, the pricing can be acceptable for an offshore bookmaker. If you bet futures often, the overall cost rises fast, especially on NFL and NHL outrights.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 20.91%
NBA 4.02% 4.75% 16.38%
NHL Not available Not available 23.8%

Live betting is part of the product. On the promos page and the sportsbook layout, Everygame actively pushes in-play betting, and my own browsing showed live coverage for sports like soccer, tennis, table tennis, and others. The live board usually starts with simple markets like match winner, totals, and handicaps, then gets deeper on bigger events.

On features, the main tool I see is Boosted Odds. Everygame runs boosted prices as a promo category, but it is also strict about bonus counting because bets placed on boosted odds do not count toward rollover. That detail matters if you plan to combine promos with a welcome bonus.

For bonuses, Everygame sells a two part sign up package “worth up to $1500” made of two deposit bonuses: BONUS CODE WELCOME500 (100% up to $500 for non crypto methods) and BONUS CODE CRYPTO1K (50% up to $1000 for crypto methods like Bitcoin, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, Lightning Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Tether). Both require a $50 minimum deposit, and both come with a 12x rollover on deposit plus bonus at minimum odds of -200 (1.5). That rollover is heavy for many casual bettors, so I only rate it as good value if you already bet often, and you can meet the playthrough without forcing bad bets. Beyond the welcome package, I also see several ongoing promos that can add small, targeted value if you already bet those markets. Examples include Weekly Live Free Bets for hockey, Hoops Chase for NBA and NCAAB action, and contest-style offers like a monthly parlay prize and “odds hunter” rewards. These can be worth using when they match your normal betting habits, but they are not “free value” because many of them still come with rules, and some rewards use rollover mechanics.

Payments are another clear offshore difference. In the cashier, I see both cards and crypto rails on the deposit side, and withdrawals that include Bitcoin, selected altcoins, checks, and bank wire transfers. I also note the common rule that withdrawals can be subject to internal review and account requirements, so I expect more “process” than I do with a regulated state app.

On mobile, Everygame presents itself as a browser-first sportsbook. It says you can use the site from a phone without downloading an app, and in my check, I did not find iOS or Android apps.

Everygame can make sense if you want an offshore bookmaker with lots of promos, live betting hooks, horse racing access, and crypto banking options. The trade-off is that bonuses come with real rollover, and the long-term markets in my margin table looked expensive, so I would focus on straight lines and be very selective with futures. I also do not like the fact that the site does not clearly show whether it holds a valid licence. That lack of transparency is a serious risk for me, and it makes the overall operation feel much less trustworthy.

Bookmaker.eu

Jurisdiction: Unknown

Warning: This bookmaker does not clearly disclose any licensing information. It is popular with many US players, so I cannot ignore it in this review, but I do not recommend betting on sites that do not operate in a transparent way.

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Live-first focus is clear, with dedicated live lines pages and a strong emphasis on in-play props and fast grading.
  • “Free crypto payouts" messaging suggests a crypto-friendly payout angle, which can matter if you want lower banking friction.
  • Early cash out is promoted on some markets, which is useful for live bettors who manage positions during games.
  • The mobile site works as the main product and is easy to use on a phone.
CONS
  • Outrights pricing is expensive, so futures and awards are the highest-cost area.
  • Limited tool stack compared with top US apps, with fewer clearly surfaced features beyond live betting and early cash out.
  • Offshore terms include strict location rules and anti-VPN language, so access and account handling can be stricter than users expect.
  • No iOS app, and the Android app looks more like an odds viewer than a full betting app, so the app experience is not a strong point.

I put Bookmaker.eu in the offshore category, not in the US state-licensed group like FanDuel or DraftKings. That matters because the consumer protection layer is different, and their own Terms also show state-based restrictions and a strict rule against using a VPN or similar tools to hide your location.

Bookmaker.eu Website

Bookmaker.eu Website

On the sports menu, football stood out in my check, but the view also looked very dependent on timing. The NFL, including the Super Bowl, was available, though I only saw futures-style markets for football at that moment. This is normal when full pre-match lines are not yet live, or the schedule is outside the main betting window. For the NBA and NCAA, the usual core markets were visible, including moneyline, spread, and totals, but the events I opened were marked as “ended” when I checked them. I saw much the same in the MLB and the NHL. Those sections displayed familiar markets such as run line or puck line, totals, and moneyline, yet the specific lines I clicked were also no longer active at that moment. The clearest strength was futures, including longer-term season markets and stat-style props. Based on what I could access publicly, this looked more like a snapshot of available lines at that moment than a fixed limitation of the sportsbook.

The public Bookmaker Live Lines pages also make it clear the brand cares a lot about in-play. On those pages, Bookmaker describes live odds and props that update in real time, and it even mentions bets being graded quickly with the account credited instantly. That is the core “live first” story I take from what I could see publicly.

For odds quality, I built an average margin table to compare straight markets versus outrights. In my sample, only outrights were available for the big leagues I tracked, and the built-in cost was high across the board. That is why I would not start here for futures unless you are very price sensitive, and you shop lines across multiple sports betting websites.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 24.74%
NBA Not available Not available 18.3%
NHL Not available Not available 28.29%

On features, I did not find the same “tool stack” you get in big regulated apps. What I can confirm from Bookmaker’s own pages is that it heavily promotes live betting, with live lines and props that update in real time. I also see Bookmaker promoting an early cash out option on some markets.

For bonuses, the headline message I saw was a $500 cash welcome bonus, and I also saw “free payouts” promoted. Value-wise, a cash style headline can look attractive, but offshore welcome offers almost always come with rollover, so I only call it good value if the playthrough is realistic for your normal betting volume. “Free payouts” is a plus if it means lower fees on the payout method you actually use, but it still does not fix expensive pricing on outrights.

Payments looked card-friendly on the public pages I saw, and Bookmaker also pushes crypto-based banking on its own content, including “free crypto payouts” language. If you care about payout costs, that is the angle I would verify first inside the cashier before depositing.

On mobile, Bookmaker.eu presents the website as the main product, and it says you can access your betting account from a phone with no download needed. There is no iOS app in my check, and the Android listing I found looks more like a live-odds viewer than a full sportsbook app, so I would rely on the mobile website for betting and treat the Android app as optional.

Bookmaker.eu looks most useful as a live betting focused offshore option, especially if crypto payouts are a priority for you. The trade-off is that the pricing I saw on outrights was expensive, and the overall product and protections are not the same as state-regulated legal online betting sites in the USA, so I would keep it as a secondary account and shop lines carefully. I also see a serious issue in the way the site does not clearly disclose its licensing status. For me, that makes the business feel opaque, and that lack of transparency is a real risk.

BetUS

Jurisdiction: Comoros Union

PROS CONS
PROS
  • Strong basketball depth, including quarters, halves, and game props, not just the basic lines.
  • The futures menu is unusually broad, with season-long options like division winners, playoff specials, and regular-season wins.
  • Separate Racebook makes it easy to bet horses with classic Win, Place, and Show markets in the same account.
  • Useful bet-building tools for modern US-style betting, including Same Game Parlay, Prop Builder, and Teasers.
  • Very flexible banking for an offshore book, with Zelle and multiple crypto options alongside cards and wires.
  • Big promo inventory for frequent bettors, especially on crypto deposits.
CONS
  • Outrights are expensive in the margin table, especially Super Bowl and NHL-style long-term markets.
  • Welcome and re-up promos can be hard for casual bettors because sports rollover sits in the high teens on some offers.
  • Promo-led experience can push you into parlays, teasers, and boosted bets, which often carry a higher built-in cost.
  • Browser-first only, so you lose the smoother app experience and app tools that top-rated sports betting sites with state license offer.
  • Offshore status means a different dispute and protection layer than state-licensed online betting websites.

BetUS sits in the offshore bucket, rather than the US state-licensed group. For me, that puts it in a different risk category. The upside is flexibility, especially in banking options and promos. The downside is that you do not get the same US state-level consumer protections.

On the sports menu, my check looked a bit uneven across sports, but that mostly seemed to come down to timing. The NFL, including the Super Bowl, was available, though I only saw futures-style markets for football at that moment. Basketball looked much stronger. The NBA and college basketball both had the main lines users would expect, including moneyline, point spread, and totals, plus deeper layers such as halves, quarters, game props, and futures. The MLB and the NHL were on the board, too, but both leaned more toward futures in the lobby when I checked, which fits the offseason cycle. One clear strength was the variety inside the futures menu. I saw the kind of season-long options many offshore bookies like to offer, including division futures, playoff-related specials, and regular-season-wins style markets. BetUS also had a separate Racebook with the standard bet types, including Win, Place, and Show.

BetUS Website

BetUS Website

To judge odds quality, I built an average margin table that compares straight lines with outrights. NBA straight markets looked usable for an offshore sportsbook, but outrights were much more expensive. The same pattern showed up in other leagues, and the Super Bowl outrights were especially high. If you mainly bet NBA moneyline and totals, the pricing can be acceptable. If you bet on futures often, the built-in cost rises fast.

Moneyline Over/Under Outrights
NFL Super Bowl Not available Not available 24.94%
NBA 3.91% 4.76% 14.95%
NHL Not available Not available 19.98%

Live betting is part of the product. I can see in-play coverage across sports like basketball, soccer, baseball, tennis, ice hockey, and many others. The live board usually starts with the basics like game winner, totals, and spreads, then adds more options on bigger events.

On tools, BetUS leans into promo mechanics and bet building. I can see Odds Boost offers, a Prop Builder, and Same Game Parlay on supported games. I also see a Teaser feature, which is a combo bet where you move the lines in your favor for a lower payout.

On bonuses, BetUS pushes big headline percentages, especially on crypto. The typical entry point looks like a $100 minimum deposit, and the key detail is rollover on sports. I see sports rollover figures in the high teens on some offers, which is heavy. That can be fine if you already bet often, and you can clear the playthrough naturally. It is a poor fit for casual bettors who will feel forced into extra volume just to unlock withdrawals. I also see re-up style promos for repeat deposits, including a lower minimum on at least one crypto re-up offer, but the real value still comes down to the rollover terms.

Payments are one of the main differentiators. BetUS says it accepts Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Zelle, crypto, cash transfers, and bank wire transfers. If you care about speed and fees, I would confirm the exact rails and payout conditions inside the cashier before depositing because offshore processing can vary by method.

On mobile, the website is built to work on a phone screen. I did not see iOS or Android apps in my check, and customer support said there are no mobile apps, so I view BetUS as a browser-first product.

Choosing BetUS makes sense if you want deep basketball markets, lots of futures categories, and aggressive promo options, especially on crypto. I would stay cautious on outrights because the pricing can get expensive fast, and I would only use the bigger welcome bonuses if I was confident I could meet the rollover without changing how I normally bet.

Conclusion

  • The US is a state-by-state market, so “legal” and “available online” depend on your location and your state’s rules.
  • In legal states, use state-licensed safest betting sites first. They operate under state regulator oversight and must follow local consumer-protection rules.
  • Expect strict geolocation checks. In many states, you can only bet when you are physically inside that state, and the sportsbook will verify your location.
  • Minimum age is set by the state (most commonly 21, with limited 18+ exceptions).
  • Online access is not the same everywhere: some states are retail-only, and some “online” models still require you to be on-site at approved venues.
  • DFS is a separate category from sports betting. In some states without legal sportsbooks, DFS may still be allowed or not explicitly banned, but this varies.
  • In non-legal states, many bettors use offshore sites. These are licensed outside the US and are not overseen by your state regulator, so protections and dispute handling can be weaker.
  • Promos are never “free money.” Read the terms, especially win-only welcome deals, bonus-bet expiry, and any rules that restrict withdrawal or specific markets.
  • Odds are usually best on straight markets (moneyline, spread, totals). Futures often carry a higher built-in margin, so treat them as higher-cost bets.
  • Payments can be a deciding factor. Some US sports betting sites “method-lock” withdrawals (you may need to withdraw back to the same method you used to deposit).
  • Winnings are taxable in the US, and certain thresholds can trigger reporting and federal withholding rules.
  • Best practical approach: confirm your state status first, then pick one strong legal sportsbook as your main account and keep a second one for price-checking (or compare offshore options only if you are outside legal markets and understand the trade-offs).
Author
Bookmaker Reviewer

I started writing about sports betting in 2020. Since then, I have worked as a journalist, copywriter, and content manager in the betting industry, covering betting news, gambling rules, and sports content. I have also been making sports bets since 2012, mostly on football, Formula 1, and major Counter-Strike tournaments. My background combines professional work in betting media with long personal experience as a sports bettor.

Fact Check
Sportsbook Reviewer

Cody Aceveda is an experienced sports betting expert with a focus on North American markets. He has written about sports betting in almost every American state with open markets and covered the Canadian industry since sports betting was legalized in 2021.

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