LiveScore Group has taken Virgin Bet into South Africa, giving the brand its first overseas launch and putting it in one of Africa’s busiest regulated betting markets.
Why South Africa Was the Logical Next Step
Virgin Bet has officially gone live in South Africa, marking the first time the brand has launched outside the United Kingdom since its debut in 2019. For LiveScore Group, this is more than a flag-planting exercise. It is a clear push to grow across Africa, with South Africa joining Nigeria, where the company already operates through LiveScore Bet.
That choice makes sense. South Africa is one of the continent’s biggest regulated betting markets, and it is heavily driven by the kind of sports that keep sportsbook traffic ticking over year-round: football, rugby, and cricket. For players, that usually means one thing first: a market built around familiar fixtures, local passion, and plenty of betting volume.
A Big Market With No Shortage of Competition
Virgin Bet is not walking into an empty room. South Africa’s betting scene is crowded, active, and already home to plenty of established brands. Still, the numbers explain why operators keep circling.
According to industry figures cited in the original reporting, total wagers in the 2024/2025 financial year hit ZAR1.5 trillion, up more than 30% from the prior period. Sports betting made up the clear majority of that action, with casinos accounting for a smaller but still healthy share.
That tells you where Virgin Bet is likely to make its early play. A sportsbook-first approach fits both the market and the company’s wider model, which leans on sports media, betting, and in-house tech working together rather than as separate pieces stitched together later.
What South African Players Can Expect
The new local platform, virginbet.co.za, launches with the usual toolkit customers now expect from a modern sportsbook, but the company is also making a point of its responsible gambling setup from day one.
Virgin Bet said the site includes deposit limits, time-outs, self-exclusion tools, age verification checks, and customer support based locally in South Africa. It also said more safer gambling initiatives are planned as part of its community and CSR work.
For the average player, that is not just corporate box-ticking. A market can look flashy on the front end, but trust is usually built through the boring stuff: fast support, clear controls, and fewer nasty surprises when something goes wrong.
Gail Odgers Fronts the Local Rollout
To help steer the launch, the company has named Gail Odgers as Head of Marketing for Virgin Bet South Africa. Her comments make it clear the brand wants to pitch itself as entertainment-led, but with a steady line on player protection.
“Launching in South Africa is a proud moment for us,” Odgers said. “At Virgin Bet, we believe that ‘A Good Bet’ means delivering standout experiences for our customers, while also taking our responsibility to players and communities seriously.”
She also tied the launch to the role sport plays in everyday life across the country, pointing to football, rugby, and cricket as key touchpoints for the brand. In plain terms, Virgin Bet is trying to sound less like a foreign import and more like a betting product built around what local fans already care about.
Odgers added that the company wants to enhance that experience responsibly, while setting a high bar for safer gambling from the start. That “A Good Bet” line is expected to shape both the product and its wider community messaging.
Growth Opportunity With a Few Regulatory Clouds
The launch arrives at a time when South Africa remains attractive to operators, even as policy debates continue in the background. One of the bigger talking points is a proposed framework from the National Treasury that could bring in a 20% levy on online gambling activity, a plan that has already drawn pushback from parts of the industry.
That does not appear to have cooled operator interest. South Africa still offers scale, a regulated structure, and a player base that already understands online betting. Those are hard boxes to ignore.
For Virgin Bet, the immediate challenge is not just getting noticed. It is proving it can carve out space in a market where customers already have options and little patience for weak promos, clunky apps, or support that disappears when they need it most.
What This Means for Virgin Bet
This launch gives Virgin Bet a fresh growth route and gives LiveScore Group another piece in its wider Africa plan. It also gives the company a shot at testing whether its mix of sports content, betting, and owned technology can travel beyond the UK.
For players in South Africa, the arrival of another major brand should mean more choice and, if the market behaves as expected, sharper competition. That usually works in the customer’s favor, at least while operators are still in the mood to impress.










