Forty-eight teams. One hundred and four matches. Thirty-nine days from June 11 to July 19 across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The 2026 World Cup is the biggest ever, and for a sportsbook, a month like that is the whole year compressed into a few weeks.
Research from Paysafe found that 60 percent of World Cup fans plan to bet online during the tournament, with 19 percent placing their first-ever bet. Most brands will react to that wave. BetScore looks like it planned for it.
The Markets Are Already Live
Open the World Cup section, and every fixture is there. Kickoff times locked in. Match results, goal totals, both teams to score, all up front where they should be. None of it is buried three menus deep.
The depth is where it gets serious. Under each fixture, a boosted-odds tag shows hundreds of extra markets: corners, cards, exact scores, player props, and half-time lines. A casual fan backs a winner in two taps. A serious bettor disappears into five hundred markets on one match.
There is also a Futures section for calling the champion now, group-by-group pages for the standings, a Boosted Odds area, and a Rebet button for running the same slip again. That kind of setup takes time to build. BetScore had it ready before a ball was kicked.
A Full Season of Promotions, Not a Single Welcome Offer
The promotions page tells the same story. This is not one welcome bonus with a couple of extras bolted on. It is a full lineup designed for someone who plans to bet from the first group game to the final whistle in July.
The starting point is the welcome offer. New bettors get a First Deposit Bonus of 100 percent up to €100, doubling that opening stake on day one. For context, our testing of sports betting sites found BetScore’s 6x rollover is lower than most competitors running 8x to 10x, which makes it noticeably easier to clear.
But the welcome bonus is just the opener.
Built for a Month of Football, Not a Single Bet
A World Cup is not one bet. It is a daily habit that lasts five weeks. BetScore built its promotions around that.
Weekly Reloads run at 50 percent up to €500. Weekend Reloads step up to 50 percent up to €750 when the fixtures stack. Cashback gives back 10 percent up to €500 for the weeks a fancied side crashes out. A Risk Free Bet Builder refunds up to €50 on a losing multi-leg slip. Even the Horse Racing Reload kept running at 50 percent up to €50 for anyone following the horses between matches.
Two offers feel purpose-built for tournament football. Early Payout (€50,000 headline) settles your bet as a winner the moment your team goes two goals clear, even if the lead collapses later. The Accumulator Boost (€100,000 headline) adds extra winnings as you stack favourites across the group stage into one slip. Three matches a day, multiple groups, one growing payout.
Every Offer Has a Crypto Version
Here is the detail that shows how much planning went into this. Almost every sports offer comes in a crypto version too.
There is a Crypto Welcome Bonus of 100 percent up to 200 USDT. The Weekly and Weekend Reloads both have crypto twins at 50 percent up to 500 USDT and 50 percent up to 1,000 USDT. A bettor who lives in stablecoins never has to settle for a watered-down version of the offer. The brand mirrored its whole sports lineup for crypto users.
That is not something you throw together last minute. It is a decision that someone made early and built out properly.
A Tournament Inside the Tournament
While the World Cup plays out on the pitch, BetScore runs its own competition alongside it. The Masters FIFA World Cup 2026.
The setup is straightforward. A prize pool of €1,500, a minimum qualifying bet of €10, and football as the only sport that counts. Place bets through the tournament window and you climb a leaderboard.
First place takes €200, second €170, third €150, and prizes keep stepping down from there, paying out well past twenty-fifth place. You do not have to win it to win something. A solid month of betting can land you in the money even if you never touch the podium.
Every bet you were already going to place now also pushes you up the board, with a share of the pool waiting at the end. The football gives you the reason to bet. The leaderboard gives you the reason to keep betting until the final.
For comparison, BetRepublic took a different route entirely, offering a VIP trip to the World Cup final as their headline promotion. One big prize versus a spread of smaller payouts. BetScore’s leaderboard rewards volume over the full month. BetRepublic’s promo rewards one lucky bet. Different strategies, same tournament. Worth knowing both exist before you pick where to put your money for the next five weeks.
What Is Missing
No review from us is complete without noting what we have not tested yet.
BetScore is new. We have not done long-term odds margin testing or compared their Premier League market depth against more established books. The promotions look strong on paper, but we have not tracked enough withdrawal cycles to know how smoothly bonus winnings actually cash out.
The platform runs well and the World Cup coverage is deep. But if you are considering BetScore as your primary book for the tournament, our full BetScore review covers deposit methods, withdrawal speeds, and bonus terms in detail. Start with the welcome bonus, place a few bets, request a withdrawal before going heavy. That is how we approach every new operator, and our process is the same whether it is a sportsbook or a prediction market platform.
The Bottom Line
BetScore walks into the 2026 World Cup with the whole tournament on the board, eleven sports promotions, a full crypto mirror, and a leaderboard competition running on top of it all. Every fixture is posted. Hundreds of markets per match. Futures ready. Weekly and weekend reloads to keep accounts fuelled. Cashback and a risk-free bet builder for when results turn. Early Payout and Accumulator Boost for the bettors chasing upside. And the Masters tournament pays out a prize pool to anyone who stays the course.
The tournament kicks off on June 11. BetScore did its prep work well before that date. For a World Cup this size, showing up ready might be the smartest play of all.