Mzansibet is a South African sportsbook run by SMS2Bet Betting Services, licensed by the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board. The cashier runs on cards, instant EFT and vouchers, and Mzansibet adds no fee of its own when you take money out.
What stands out
- Deposits start at R10, by card, Ozow instant EFT, or by redeeming a 1Voucher, OTT Voucher or Blu Voucher.
- Withdrawals carry no Mzansibet fee. You only pay what the payment provider charges.
- Money typically lands in your bank account within 1 to 3 business days of a withdrawal request.
- Our scans see close to 500 markets on a single football match, spanning many total-goals lines from 0.5 upward.
Deposits and withdrawals
Fund an account with a bank card, an Ozow instant EFT, or by redeeming a 1Voucher, OTT Voucher or Blu Voucher code. The minimum is usually R10, though it can shift with the method you pick.
FICA is compulsory for every account. Mzansibet’s own terms say new accounts are checked automatically at registration; if that check fails, you upload documents on the Documents page or email them with your account number. Withdrawals go out by EFT, bank transfer or Instant Money, and clear in 1 to 3 business days. Mzansibet charges nothing for the withdrawal itself, though your bank or payment provider might.
Odds and markets
On the competitions OddsBash tracks, Mzansibet prices football match results and total-goals lines, plus two-way winner markets on tennis. The margin and coverage figures above come from odds Mzansibet actually published. They update every time we scan.
Good to know
- FICA needs to clear before a withdrawal pays out, though Mzansibet says most accounts verify automatically at sign-up.
- Mzansibet also runs a casino product. OddsBash measures the sportsbook only.
- Tennis draws can list a placeholder opponent (for example “R32P20”) before an earlier round finishes. OddsBash skips those matches until a real name appears.