Hard to find this info not even asking betfair themselves so let´s make our own list! I´ll update on this post the reports sent by traders all over the world. As far as we know betfair. com is fully available from these countries:
-UK
-Ireland
-Malta
-Andorra
-Gibraltar
-Brazil
-Romania *( As far as I know in Romania you get re-directed to the .ro site were you have acces to international liquidity but you have to open a romanian account, your .com account is not valid... Will look for confirmation )
Please note the majority of the rest of countries have the betfair. com site banned or re-directs you to the local betfair site with no acces to international liquidity.
List of countries betfair. com is available from
Added!
As far as I know in Romania you get re-directed to the .ro site were you have acces to international liquidity but you have to open a romanian account, your .com account is not valid... Will look for confirmation.
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- Posts: 88
- Joined: Wed Jan 22, 2020 1:13 pm
I can confirm. I had oppened my .com account and 7 months later when the new betting legislation passed I was transferred to .ro without any possibility to access my account from a .com endpoint. But BA still works just fine nonetheless. The only pain in the ass is that you won't have access to historical data because BF doesn't bother to implement a .ro endpoint for that service.
Not sure how reliable this site is, last updated Feb 24th 2023:
https://globalextramoney.com/bookmakers ... books#toc9
"Betfair Exchange - Currently available only in the UK, Ireland, Sweden, Norway, Malta, Jersey, IOM, Guernsey, Gibraltar, New Zealand, Chile, Brazil & USA Colorado (Indiana is coming soon)"
https://globalextramoney.com/bookmakers ... books#toc9
"Betfair Exchange - Currently available only in the UK, Ireland, Sweden, Norway, Malta, Jersey, IOM, Guernsey, Gibraltar, New Zealand, Chile, Brazil & USA Colorado (Indiana is coming soon)"
https://www.ra-goldenstein.de/neuigkeit ... onen-euro/
(Article in German)
ChatGPT Synopsis:
"In a recent ruling by the Landgericht (LG) Kleve in North Rhine-Westphalia, a gambler has been awarded a staggering €546,006 plus interest for his losses in online gambling, confirming the right of affected gamblers to reclaim their losses from companies operating without a German license. The plaintiff deposited €1,849,507 with the Maltese gambling company Martingale Malta 2 between July 2012 and October 2020, but only withdrew €1,303,501, losing the rest on the website. Despite the absence of a German license, Martingale Malta 2 targeted German customers, a practice now deemed illegal following the nationwide liberalization of online gambling in July 2021.
The verdict in Kleve is part of a trend of consumer-friendly decisions across German civil courts, with many rulings favouring plaintiffs in similar cases. A case involving Tipico was scheduled for the Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice) in March 2024, but was postponed due to ongoing settlement negotiations. Tipico's willingness to settle suggests a desire to avoid a precedent-setting ruling and potential flood of lawsuits."
Quote of the plaintiff's lawyer:
"For the responsible gambling providers, their own greed for profit becomes a boomerang through the claims of their German customers. More and more affected consumers are becoming aware of the illegality of the respective offers and are reclaiming their losses," says the jurist. This claim for reimbursement exists because the contracts between the gambling providers and their German customers are void. "It is not possible to enter into legally binding contracts for an illegal offer." The providers argue, however, that they are legal in Germany with licenses from EU countries such as Malta or Cyprus. But the European Court of Justice, the Federal Administrative Court, and the Federal Court of Justice have confirmed that national gambling laws concerning youth and consumer protection are to be weighed higher than entrepreneurial freedom."
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Re: this thread as I reckon that (at least in the European Union) any grey area countries without a distinct license will disappear from the Betfair/Betdaq map pretty soon.
(Article in German)
ChatGPT Synopsis:
"In a recent ruling by the Landgericht (LG) Kleve in North Rhine-Westphalia, a gambler has been awarded a staggering €546,006 plus interest for his losses in online gambling, confirming the right of affected gamblers to reclaim their losses from companies operating without a German license. The plaintiff deposited €1,849,507 with the Maltese gambling company Martingale Malta 2 between July 2012 and October 2020, but only withdrew €1,303,501, losing the rest on the website. Despite the absence of a German license, Martingale Malta 2 targeted German customers, a practice now deemed illegal following the nationwide liberalization of online gambling in July 2021.
The verdict in Kleve is part of a trend of consumer-friendly decisions across German civil courts, with many rulings favouring plaintiffs in similar cases. A case involving Tipico was scheduled for the Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice) in March 2024, but was postponed due to ongoing settlement negotiations. Tipico's willingness to settle suggests a desire to avoid a precedent-setting ruling and potential flood of lawsuits."
Quote of the plaintiff's lawyer:
"For the responsible gambling providers, their own greed for profit becomes a boomerang through the claims of their German customers. More and more affected consumers are becoming aware of the illegality of the respective offers and are reclaiming their losses," says the jurist. This claim for reimbursement exists because the contracts between the gambling providers and their German customers are void. "It is not possible to enter into legally binding contracts for an illegal offer." The providers argue, however, that they are legal in Germany with licenses from EU countries such as Malta or Cyprus. But the European Court of Justice, the Federal Administrative Court, and the Federal Court of Justice have confirmed that national gambling laws concerning youth and consumer protection are to be weighed higher than entrepreneurial freedom."
---
Re: this thread as I reckon that (at least in the European Union) any grey area countries without a distinct license will disappear from the Betfair/Betdaq map pretty soon.
To not open a new topic i have a question about this area.
If i lived in a country that betfair has legal rights to operate and now i moved, it is legal for me to use a vpn to acces my account?
I saw a lot of people trading with vpn and i dont know if that is legal or not.
In my opinion i dont see any problem if i still have an id of that country, just my work and taxes are in other country, what do you think about that?
If i lived in a country that betfair has legal rights to operate and now i moved, it is legal for me to use a vpn to acces my account?
I saw a lot of people trading with vpn and i dont know if that is legal or not.
In my opinion i dont see any problem if i still have an id of that country, just my work and taxes are in other country, what do you think about that?
Yes, if it wasn't allowed then Bet Angel VPS wouldn't be a service
- firlandsfarm
- Posts: 2720
- Joined: Sat May 03, 2014 8:20 am
I'm thinking there is a bit of confusion here between VPN and VPS. But can a person living in an unauthorised country use a VPS in an authorised country? That seems too easy to circumvent the rules! (Oh and be careful if you discuss this with Bf directly ... I raised a VPS question with them and was told they did not allow VPN connection. The person who responded did not know the difference!).
Afaik their BF acc address is the important bit, if it says authorised country then yesfirlandsfarm wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2024 9:37 amBut can a person living in an unauthorised country use a VPS in an authorised country?
You can't take support agent's word as gospel, they can quote the T&C etc but aren't privy to all the nuances
- firlandsfarm
- Posts: 2720
- Joined: Sat May 03, 2014 8:20 am
I appreciate what the rules say Kai, my point was really how easy is it for someone in a banned country claiming to be living in an 'allowed' country and using a VPS located in that 'allowed' country 'to get a BF account? (Does not apply to me personally! )Kai wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2024 11:13 amAfaik their BF acc address is the important bit, if it says authorised country then yesfirlandsfarm wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2024 9:37 amBut can a person living in an unauthorised country use a VPS in an authorised country?
You need to send in proof of address documents e.g. utility bill for that
Once bf account in place, accessing for example a BetAngel VPS in UK from a "banned country" should be no issue as all your traffic requests are originating honestly from a place of legal origin
Once bf account in place, accessing for example a BetAngel VPS in UK from a "banned country" should be no issue as all your traffic requests are originating honestly from a place of legal origin
- firlandsfarm
- Posts: 2720
- Joined: Sat May 03, 2014 8:20 am
That was my thinking! ... is there a market in opening Bf accounts in say the UK and 'selling' them to those in banned countries!?eightbo wrote: ↑Tue Apr 09, 2024 12:05 pmYou need to send in proof of address documents e.g. utility bill for that
Once bf account in place, accessing for example a BetAngel VPS in UK from a "banned country" should be no issue as all your traffic requests are originating honestly from a place of legal origin