Bravobet is a South African betting site run by AJ Tattersalls (Pty) Ltd, licensed by the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board under bookmaker licence 10010857-030, issued 26 November 2025. Bravobet runs on a sportsbook platform shared with a couple of other licensed South African sites.
What stands out
- Full match-result pricing plus all four total-goals lines on the football tournaments we track.
- Two-way match-winner markets, with no draw option, on tennis and UFC, alongside match-result pricing on rugby internationals.
- Its football and rugby prices have tracked the shared default book of its betting platform rather than an independent margin, at least on the events we’ve checked so far.
- Nine deposit methods on the cashier, from Capitec Pay and Ozow to five voucher brands.
Deposits and withdrawals
Deposits run through Capitec Pay, Ozow, SnapScan, credit card and voucher brands including OTT Voucher, 1Voucher and Blu Voucher, though the site’s own FAQ doesn’t state a minimum deposit amount for any method.
Withdrawal requests go to Bravobet’s own auditors for review, then pay out within 24 hours once approved. The site publishes a maximum single-bet stake of R100,000 and a maximum win of R500,000 per 24 hours, but doesn’t state separate minimum or maximum withdrawal amounts.
Odds and markets
On the competitions OddsBash tracks, Bravobet prices the FIFA World Cup, the Rugby Nations Championship, Wimbledon, UFC and the Women’s T20 World Cup.
Football carries a full match-result market and all four total-goals lines; rugby carries match-result only; tennis and UFC price as two-way markets, with no draw outcome on offer. The margin and coverage figures above are measured from odds Bravobet actually published. They refresh with every scan.
Good to know
- FICA verification is required before a first withdrawal rather than at signup, standard practice at any licensed South African book.
- Bravobet also runs casino games and an Aviator-style crash game. OddsBash measures the sportsbook only.