Top Five Legal Cricket Betting Sites in Ghana
In this section, I focus on five licensed bookmakers that work well for cricket in Ghana: Betway, 1xBet, Melbet, SportyBet and MSport. I look at how they perform on live betting, pre-match markets, mobile experience, payments and bonuses.
Betway
| PROS |
CONS |
- Very strong live cricket toolkit: ball-by-ball graphic, full scorecard, stats, H2H, line-ups on one screen, no need for a separate stats site.
- Cash Out, Partial Cash Out, Auto Cash Out on many markets (useful for swingy T20 games).
- Good cricket market mix in-play (next-over runs, first-6-overs brackets, player runs, dismissal method) without becoming “too much".
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- Outrights are expensive and basic: mostly “tournament winner" only, with a high outright margin (~15.8%).
- Streaming exists only on selected events, but access rules are not explained clearly, so it’s not something you can rely on.
- Welcome value is mid-level (good for testing, not a big boost) and the bonus has conditions you must read carefully.
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I see Betway as one of the biggest regulated online bookmakers in Ghana. It operates through Sports Betting Group Ghana Limited, which holds a licences No GCSB24K2300J & No GCCA24A5339M from the Gaming Commission of Ghana, so it is a legal option for local punters. Betway holds around 18–20% of online GGR, which makes it a clear top-tier brand by size, just behind SportyBet.
For live cricket, Betway offers a good range of markets without being overwhelming. For the big leagues, you get match winner, team totals by over and by innings, next-over runs, first-6-overs brackets, player runs and player dismissal method bets. This covers the main markets where most cricket money usually goes. The live match winner margin is around 5.78% based on the odds I checked, which is in line with normal sportsbook pricing.
What I like most about the live cricket section is the data panel. Betway shows a ball-by-ball graphic, full scorecard, stats, head-to-head and line-ups on the same screen, so you do not need a separate stats site. There is live streaming for selected events in the apps, although access rules (balance, recent bet) are not written very clearly, so I treat it as a “nice extra” rather than a guarantee. Cash Out is well integrated and, on many markets, you also get Partial Cash Out and Auto Cash Out, which is very useful when a cricket game swings quickly.
Pre-match cricket is strong, too. For big games, I see the key markets like match winner, double chance, and team total runs, plus some nice cricket specials, such as first-6-overs runs brackets, any player to score 100, most fours/sixes, and player of the match. The match winner margin is around 5.4%, which is similar to the live odds and roughly average for a major bookmaker.
Outrights are more basic. Betway covers many tournaments, such as the T20 World Cup, CPL, Big Bash (men and women), T20 Blast and even future seasons, but most of the time you only get the simple winner market. A few events add to finish bottom or to reach the final options. The average margin on outright winner is high, around 15.8%, which is typical for long-term markets but considerably higher than margins on individual match bets.
On mobile, Betway is clearly built for Ghana’s mobile-first reality. The mobile site loads fast and feels clean enough, even on mid-range devices. There are native apps on both platforms. The Android app in Google Play has a score of about 3.5/5, and the iOS app in the Ghana App Store is rated around 4.5/5, which is very strong for a betting app. Reviews praise features but sometimes complain that the interface is busy and withdrawals can feel slow, so the experience is good but not perfect.
For payments, Betway supports what most Ghanaian punters actually use: MTN MoMo, Vodafone / Telecel Cash, AirtelTigo money, plus cards and voucher-type top-ups. Deposits by mobile money are usually near-instant; withdrawals are often quick as well, although the exact time and limits depend on your wallet and KYC level. If fees apply, they are typically charged by the mobile money provider, not the bookmaker.
On bonuses, Betway Ghana sits in the middle of the pack for cricket fans. New customers typically get a 50% first-deposit sports bonus up to around GHS 200 in free bets, plus a welcome pack with a GHS 5 free bet on sports, free spins for casino games and free flights for Aviator. The GHS 5 sports free bet is simple and good for testing a cricket market; the 50% match is okay but not very generous compared with 100% offers, and it comes with minimum odds and rollover that you must read carefully.
Beyond that, Betway runs ongoing promos and a Rewards programme where points can be converted to cash (1 point is treated as GHS 1 in the examples Betway gives). Most of the bigger campaigns are football-led, but cricket bets usually count towards turnover-based offers and Rewards points. For a regular cricket bettor, this feels more like a steady small boost than a big game-changer.
In short, I see Betway as a very solid option for cricket in Ghana: legal, big, with good live tools and a deep enough market list for serious in-play action. Odds are fair but not the absolute sharpest, outrights are expensive, and the bonus value is moderate rather than huge. If you like to bet live on T20 and you are comfortable with a slightly busy interface, Betway is a sensible “main account” to have for cricket.
1xBet
| PROS |
CONS |
- One of the deepest live cricket lines: wickets-in-the-over, dot balls, first scoring shot, boundary props, even/odd totals, and many niche markets.
- Strong live tools: streaming on many games with a movable video window, pin/favourites, and partial cash out on many markets.
- Pre-match can be extremely deep (some events with 600+ markets), plus extra windows for standings and an odds-movement chart.
- Very flexible payments.
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- High margins on key cricket markets (example: ~11.6% on live 1×2; ~10.5% pre-match 1×2), so price-shopping matters.
- Cricket outrights are weak right now.
- Mobile website UX is a problem; the apps are the safer option.
- Withdrawal experience can be stressful if you delay verification.
- The big welcome bonus looks great, but the rollover is accumulator-based with conditions and a time limit (not friendly for casual singles).
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To me, 1xBet is a bookmaker mainly aimed at more experienced bettors in Ghana. It works under local licences №GCSB25H4885G & №GCCA25E0038Z and targets punters who want a lot of markets and tools, not just simple bets. It is not as mainstream as Betway or SportyBet, but it has a strong presence among professional gamblers.
For live cricket, 1xBet is one of the deepest options on this list. In one match, you can bet on team wins, over-by-over runs, intervals of overs, whether a wicket will fall in a specific over, even/odd totals, and many small props. There are also markets on dot balls, first scoring shot, each team to hit a boundary and more. The margin on the 1×2 market is around 11.6%, so the choice is huge, but the pricing is not cheap.
The live centre is packed with tools. You get a detailed scoreboard with runs, overs, strike rates and fallen wickets. Live streaming is available on many games, and the video window can be moved around the screen. The platform lets you pin matches, add them to your favourites, and use cash out features, including partial cash out on many markets. On my side, the stream worked smoothly; some users do report lag, usually when their internet is weak.
Pre-match cricket is even richer. 1xBet covers many international and domestic leagues, and some events have more than 600 markets. Besides standard match winner and totals, there are lots of player and team props, plus many specials. The 1×2 margin before the match is around 10.5%, which is still on the high side but slightly better than live. For stats, you can open extra windows with standings and an odds movement chart.
Outrights on cricket are quite limited. At the moment, I see only The Ashes 2025/26, with markets like series winner, ground with most runs, top batsman and a few specials. The main market is simply who will win the series, with a margin of about 14.6%. For long-term cricket bets, this is not a strong offer.
On mobile, the website is the main weakness. It is not well adapted to small screens: panels overlap, navigation is heavy, and it is easy to get lost. The Android and iOS apps are more comfortable. The Android app in Google Play has a rating of a bit above 4/5, and the iOS app in the Ghana store is closer to 3.7/5. In practice, if you like 1xBet for cricket, I would use the app and avoid the mobile browser version.
Payments are very flexible. 1xBet supports Ghanaian mobile money (MTN, Vodafone, AirtelTigo), cards, several e-wallets and even crypto. Deposits by mobile money are usually instant. Withdrawals through mobile money can be quite fast, too, often within minutes. Cards and bank transfers can take longer. There are many complaints online about document checks and blocked withdrawals, so I suggest verifying your account early and withdrawing winnings regularly.
The main bonus is a 100% welcome offer on the first deposit up to 5,500 GHS. The headline number looks very attractive, especially compared with other Ghanaian trusted cricket betting sites. The catch is in the rollover: you must place accumulator bets with minimum odds and clear the bonus within a time limit. This is fine if you already plan to bet actively on high-odds cricket multiples, but it is not ideal for casual punters who prefer simple singles. There are also regular promos like cashback and boosted odds, which you can often use on big cricket events.
In short, I see 1xBet as a good choice for cricket fans who love variety and live tools and are ready to deal with a busy interface and higher margins. If you mainly want a clean design and the lowest possible prices, it is not the first bookmaker I would recommend.
Melbet
| PROS |
CONS |
- Good balance of market variety and acceptable pricing: live match-winner margin around ~8.22%, and pre-match match-winner margin around ~6.3% (quite competitive vs many high-margin cricket bookies).
- On big matches, pre-match can reach hundreds of markets, while still keeping key cricket bets available.
- Small GHS 2 registration free bet is easy to understand for testing cricket markets.
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- Live centre is basic, and you don’t see rich stats/graphics. No clear sign of cricket live streaming.
- Futures are very expensive with an outright winner margin ~25.1%.
- Mobile web feels like a desktop squeezed into a phone (horizontal scrolling). Apps are better, but iOS rating is much weaker than Android.
- The 300% deposit bonus is heavy to clear, so it suits active bettors more than casual cricket fans.
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In Ghana, Melbet is a smaller brand, but it stands out by offering a lot of betting options. It is licensed in the country (№GCSB25J8590V) and sits a bit below the biggest names by popularity, but still feels like a serious option for cricket.
Live cricket on Melbet is built for people who like many ways to bet. You get match winner, team runs, runs in the next over, different brackets for overs, wicket-in-the-over bets, and various player-style markets. This covers the main areas where most cricket stakes go. Based on the odds I checked, the match winner margin in live cricket is around 8.22%. That is not the cheapest, but it is acceptable for in-play.
The downside is the live centre itself: I only see the score and basic updates, without rich stats or graphics. I don’t see live streaming for cricket on Melbet Ghana, so I wouldn’t rely on it being available. Melbet has cash out, often even partial cash out, but the feature feels less smooth than on the bigger brands.
Pre-match cricket follows the same pattern. Melbet lists many leagues and tournaments. Some top events have hundreds of markets, while smaller games may show only 5–7 simple options. You still get all the key bets like match winner, team totals, and innings runs, with a decent choice of props on top matches. The pre-match match winner margin is around 6.3%, which is fairly competitive and better than some African high-margin cricket online betting sites. I do not see extra pre-match features like deep stats or odds-movement charts, so you still need an external stats site if you like detailed analysis.
Outrights are a weak point. Melbet offers futures on big tournaments such as the T20 World Cup, IPL (including women’s), SA20, and the UAE league. Most of the time, you can only bet on who wins the tournament, but sometimes there are extra options like “to reach the final” or “name the finalists.” There are almost no extra tools around these bets. The margin on outright winners is very high, around 25.1%. For me, that makes these bets more like fun long-shots than serious value picks.
On mobile, my experience is mixed. The website is not well adapted to phones. You often need to scroll sideways to see the whole page, and the layout feels like a desktop squeezed onto a small screen. The Android and iOS apps are better. The Android app in Google Play has an average rating of around 4.4, which is a strong score. The iOS app in the Ghana App Store sits closer to 3.2, which is more average. In practice, if you want to use Melbet for cricket, I would choose the app over the mobile browser.
For payments, Melbet works well with how people use money in Ghana. It supports the main mobile money options, plus cards and some online gateways. Deposits by mobile money are usually quick and simple. Withdrawals go back to the same wallet and are often processed within a short time once your account is verified. Exact limits and any small fees depend on the method and can change, so I always suggest checking the latest numbers in the cashier before you start.
The welcome offer looks very aggressive on paper. New customers get a 2 GHS free bet for registration and a 300% first-deposit bonus up to 2,100 GHS. The free bet is small but easy to understand and good for testing the cricket market. The 300% bonus looks huge, but it comes with heavy wagering on accumulator bets and minimum odds for each selection. That is a lot of betting volume. I see this big bonus as something more suited to experienced, active punters who already plan to place many bets during a cricket season, not to casual gamblers.
Overall, I see Melbet as a good second or third account for a cricket fan in Ghana. It gives you lots of live and pre-match options and a strong welcome boost, but the site is not very mobile-friendly, outrights are expensive, and the interface is less polished than the top-tier brands.
SportyBet
| PROS |
CONS |
- Very clean, user-friendly live cricket experience with an animated match tracker — easy to follow without TV.
- Good pricing: live match-winner margin ~6.16%, pre-match match-winner margin ~5.82%.
- Pre-match depth can be strong in big leagues (e.g., 100+ markets on top events like Big Bash).
- One of the best mobile performers with strong app ratings on both platforms.
- The welcome offer is small but simple, which many casual bettors finish more easily than “huge but complex" deals.
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- No clear cricket live streaming inside the site/apps.
- Outrights are basically missing on the Ghana site right now.
- Bonus size is modest vs headline-heavy competitors.
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SportyBet is one of the strongest online bookmakers in Ghana. It is fully licensed, very visible in local advertising and has a big mobile user base. For cricket fans, this means a stable platform with good traffic during the big tournaments.
Live cricket on SportyBet is solid and quite user-friendly. Depending on the match, you get from just a couple of markets up to around 30–35. The important options are all there: match winner, team totals, over-by-over runs, “will there be a tie,” various innings totals, and player performance lines. This covers the main markets where most cricket stakes go. The average margin on the live match winner market is about 6.16%, which is pretty fair for in-play betting.
The live centre is one of the nicest parts. SportyBet has an animated match tracker that shows the pitch, ball-by-ball events, current run rate, required run rate, wickets, and basic batter and bowler stats. You can follow a game comfortably even without a TV. I don’t see live video streams for cricket, so I wouldn’t plan around having a live stream inside the site. Cash out works well in live mode and is available on most main markets, so you can close a bet early if the game swings.
Pre-match cricket markets are also strong. For some small games, there are only 2-3 markets, but top leagues like the Big Bash can have over 100 options per match. You’ll find match winner, total fours and sixes, team totals, different innings brackets, and a decent list of player performance bets. The average margin on the pre-match match winner market is about 5.82%, which is slightly better than live betting margins and competitive with other major brands. There are no extra pre-match stats or deep analysis tools on the page, so if you want detailed numbers, you still need a separate stats site. Cash out is available on many pre-match bets, too.
For outright cricket betting, SportyBet is weak. I could not find tournament-winner or top-batsman markets on the Ghana site for current competitions. It may add outrights for some events in the future, but right now, I don’t treat SportyBet as a good place for long-term cricket bets.
On mobile, SportyBet is one of the best performers. The site is well adapted for phones, loads quickly, and the page layout on mobile looks almost the same as on desktop, just narrower. That makes it easy to switch between devices. The Android app has an average rating of around 4.4 out of 5, and the iOS app is around 4.2, which are strong scores for betting apps. In daily use, the interface feels clean and modern, without too many pop-ups.
For payments, SportyBet works very well with how people pay in Ghana. It supports the main mobile money services, so you can deposit and withdraw directly from your wallet. Deposits are usually instant, and withdrawals are often processed quickly once your account is verified. Minimum amounts are low, and the bookmaker itself does not normally add extra fees, though your mobile money provider may charge its standard transaction cost.
The welcome bonus on SportyBet Ghana is modest but simple. New customers can get up to 100 GHS in bonus value after making a 10 GHS first deposit, with clear terms on how to place qualifying bets. This is much smaller than the big headline offers at some rivals, but it is also easier to understand and complete. If you bet on cricket with sensible stakes and care more about good odds, smooth apps, and fast MoMo payouts than a huge but complex bonus, SportyBet is a very good all-round choice.
MSport
| PROS |
CONS |
- Competitive cricket odds: live match-winner margin ~6.26% and pre-match match-winner margin ~5.59%.
- Strong visual layer for live: 2D pitch, ball-by-ball, scorecards, graphs, stats/H2H/line-ups.
- Partial Cash Out on eligible bets.
- Pre-match can be very deep on big competitions (100+ markets on SA20 mentioned), and the stats widget is available already pre-match.
- Works well for low-stake, fast, mobile-first cricket betting.
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- No obvious embedded live video for cricket.
- No regular cricket outrights spotted on the Ghana site at the time of checking.
- Mobile website is clunky on small screens (page cut-off, horizontal scrolling); apps help, but iOS rating is only mid-3s.
- Welcome bonus looks big, but it’s mainly voucher/free-bet style with rollover and minimum-odds conditions, so you must read the rules carefully.
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MSport is a fully licensed Ghanaian bookmaker, operating under the Gaming Commission of Ghana through Mobile Sport Limited. It competes in the same “big league” as SportyBet, Betway and betPawa, but with a slightly different angle: very light apps, low minimum stakes, and fast mobile-money withdrawals.
For live cricket betting, MSport offers a solid, though not extreme, amount of choice. On current events, I see up to about 30 live markets per match. The main high-turnover markets are well covered, including match winner, innings team totals, over-by-over runs, a range of player run totals, and several specials like first delivery and highest-scoring over. This is enough for most casual and mid-level bettors, even if heavy cricket traders may want deeper props. The match-winner margin sits around 6.26%, which is on the sharper side for a Ghana-licensed bookie and competitive with other local options.
The live product is helped by a strong visual layer. MSport’s match tracker shows a 2D pitch, ball-by-ball updates, scorecards and graphs, plus extra tabs for statistics, head-to-head results and line-ups. From what I can see, this is an animated centre rather than a full live video: I do not see a clear option to watch cricket via embedded streaming. Cash out is available, with MSport also supporting partial cash out on eligible bets. This allows you to close a position fully or cash out only part of your stake while the game is still in progress.
Pre-match cricket is one of MSport’s strengths. For big competitions such as the SA20 League, there can be 100+ markets on a single match, including outright winner, team totals, player runs, performance combos, “team with top batter/bowler,” and various over-based lines. The match-winner margin is around 5.59%, which is quite competitive by Ghana standards and slightly better than what you usually see live. For smaller games, the menu becomes thinner, but the core markets (match winner and main totals) are still there. A useful touch is that the same stats widget with H2H and tracker is already available pre-match, which helps with basic analysis before you place a bet.
On the outright side, MSport is weaker. At the time of checking, the Ghana version of the site did not offer dedicated cricket outrights. There were no markets for World Cup winners, league champions, or top run-scorers. Some futures may appear closer to major tournaments, but MSport primarily focuses on match-by-match betting rather than long-term cricket markets.
The desktop interface is clean, but from a mobile browser, the experience is mixed. On my tests, the main site is not properly optimised for smaller screens: the right-hand side of the page gets cut off, and horizontal scrolling is needed to see odds and betslip elements. Navigation feels cramped compared with more modern mobile-first sportsbooks. MSport tries to solve this with native apps. The Android app in Google Play holds a rating of a bit above 4 out of 5, and the iOS app sits in the mid-3s, which is decent but not outstanding and suggests some users have performance or UX issues.
For payments, MSport leans heavily on Ghana’s core mobile-money rails. MTN Mobile Money, AirtelTigo Money, and Vodafone/Telecel-linked wallets are the main deposit and withdrawal channels, often with USSD shortcuts for funding an account. Deposits through MoMo are typically processed almost instantly; withdrawals are fast, often within minutes, though, as always, they can be slower during busy periods or when extra KYC checks are needed. On MSport, you can deposit small amounts (just a few cedis) and usually withdraw from around 10 GHS. In practice, your daily cap is driven more by your mobile-money wallet limits than by MSport itself.
Bonus-wise, MSport promotes a headline welcome package of up to 3,000 GHS in free bonus funds. This looks eye-catching on paper and can be attractive for high-volume punters who plan to bet a lot on football and cricket. However, the bonus is structured as free-bet style vouchers with rollover requirements and minimum-odds conditions, rather than as simple withdrawable cash.
Overall, MSport sits in the cluster of serious licensed operators in Ghana with a clear mobile focus, quick MoMo payments, and a decent cricket product. Its live cricket offering is strong enough for most users, thanks to the match tracker and key markets, even though there is no obvious live video and no regular outrights. If you like low data use and quick small-stake bets on mainstream T20 and ODI games, MSport is a reasonable option. Just note that the mobile website feels clunky, and the bonuses have conditions you should read first.