betXchange is run by betXchange.Com (Pty) Ltd, licensed by the Eastern Cape Gambling Board under licence ECBM 041. The brand traces back to 1988, when it began as the horse-racing bookmaker Keith Ho Racing, before rebranding to betXchange in 2002.
What stands out
- Runs betting shops in five of South Africa’s nine provinces alongside the online betting site.
- Native apps exist for Android, iPhone and Huawei, all linked from the site.
- Our scanner tracks betXchange’s soccer match result and total-goals prices, tennis match winners, and match results on rugby and UFC fight cards.
Deposits and withdrawals
betXchange doesn’t list its deposit methods or a minimum publicly.
Withdrawing needs your FICA documents submitted and verified first: no request is processed until they clear, and an unverified request is deleted after two weeks. You can submit one withdrawal request a day, Monday to Friday between 8am and 6pm. Anything requested after 10am waits for the next business day, and funds can take up to 72 hours to reflect once processed. Payment goes to a South African bank account in your name, or in cash collected in person.
Odds and markets
betXchange also prices horse and greyhound racing. On the competitions OddsBash tracks, it prices soccer match result and over/under goal lines at 0.5, 1.5, 2.5 and 3.5 goals, tennis match winners, and match results on rugby and UFC fight cards. The margin and coverage figures above are measured from odds betXchange actually published. They refresh with every scan.
Good to know
- A second licensed entity, betXchange Western Cape (Pty) Ltd, holds the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board licence. No number is published for it.
- A published win-limit schedule caps the maximum payout by sport and market, on top of any per-bet odds limit.
- betXchange also runs Lucky Numbers, Betgames and casino games including Aviator. OddsBash measures the sportsbook only.