Oddschecker is a brilliant website. I dread to think how many hours it’s been open on my desktop these past 15 years, waiting for a new tip to land in my inbox.
For those of you not familiar with oddschecker, it’s primary focus is to provide punters with the best odds across all sports. It’s an odds comparison website.
If you want to find the best odds on your wager, oddschecker is generally your first port of call. They’ve currently got 23 bookmakers and 2 betting exchanges on their odds grid.
They cover a vast range of markets too, although it has to be said, in recent years the service they offer to punters has declined.
For the lesser sports like tennis and cricket they are now covering fewer markets than they did several years ago which is a real shame for punters.
They have their own tips section with some excellent tipsters. At the moment I’m following horse racing tipster Steve Ryder who is closing in on +100pts profit for the first 5 months of 2023 (according to the oddschecker app, that’s not my profit).
In recent times there has been a strong emphasis on promoting free bets and bookmaker bonuses. That’s a little frustrating for us punters who have suffered as the markets compared have fallen, but that seems to be the nature of the business now.
It’s possible to link your bookmaker accounts to oddschecker. This allows you to place bets without even having to leave the site.
Personally that’s something I used a few times but really didn’t feel that comfortable.
Getting the best odds on all of your selections is one of the first bits of advice I’ll give to any punter, so using a site like oddschecker is imperative to achieve that goal.
Hopefully in years to come we’ll see the service restored to what it once was and less focus on bookmaker promotions. After all, as punters, that’s not our reason for using an odds comparison website.