
Sister Sites Guide
BoyleSports is a proper brick-and-mortar bookmaker, not an online casino group pretending to have a high-street past. It comes from Ireland, still has betting shops across Ireland and the UK, and carries that retail bookmaker character into its online sportsbook. That’s why the sister sites picture is a little different here. There isn’t a row of separate Boyle brands sitting behind the main site. There’s one big BoyleSports brand with several product routes attached to it, all with their own URL and mini-site.
The UKGC record for Boylesports Enterprise backs that up. The connected names aren’t sister brands in the usual sense. They’re active trading names and product domains such as BoyleCasino, BoyleBingo, BoyleGames, BoylePoker and BoyleVegas. If you’re expecting a BetMGM-style casino family or a BetVictor-style white-label list, you won’t find it here. BoyleSports is more of a bookmaker with product wings.
The BoyleSports sister sites in a nutshell
BoyleSports doesn’t have separate UK sister sites in the usual network sense. The closest connected brands are its own product arms: BoyleCasino, BoyleBingo, BoyleGames, BoylePoker and BoyleVegas.
Because of that, the practical move isn’t switching to another Boyle-owned casino. It’s choosing the right part of BoyleSports itself. If you want sports, stay with the sportsbook. If you want slots and live casino games, go to BoyleCasino or BoyleGames. If you want bingo, BoyleBingo is the relevant route. If you want a completely different bookmaker, then Betfred, BetVictor, Unibet and Hollywoodbets are good comparisons, but they’re not sister sites.
At a glance
Brand reviewed
BoyleSports
UK operator
Boylesports Enterprise
UKGC account
39469
UK status
Licensed for Great Britain
Retail presence
Betting shops across Ireland and the UK
Connected product names
BoyleCasino, BoyleBingo, BoyleGames, BoylePoker, BoyleVegas
Welcome offers
Change constantly
Last checked
24 April 2026
The Boyle products that matter
BoyleSports splits itself by product rather than by brand personality. That’s not as exciting as a big sister site family, but it’s easier to follow for a lot of players. You’re not opening five unrelated accounts and trying to work out who owns what. You’re dealing with one bookmaker that breaks out sport, casino, bingo, poker, games and Vegas-style casino play into separate doors.


BoyleCasino
- Identity: The main casino arm of BoyleSports, aimed at players who want slots, live casino and table games without leaving the Boyle account family.
- Best for: Sportsbook users who already trust BoyleSports and want the simplest move into casino play.
- What feels similar: Same Boyle identity, same overall licence footing and the same support setup behind the account.
- What feels different: The tone shifts from odds, racing and football into slots, free spins, live roulette and casino promotions.
- Why it matters: It’s the closest thing to a BoyleSports casino sister site, even though it’s really a product wing rather than a separate brand.

BoyleBingo
- Identity: The bingo option inside the BoyleSports setup, with a softer pace than the sportsbook or casino lobby.
- Best for: Players who want bingo rooms and lighter gaming without moving to an unrelated bingo operator.
- What feels similar: Same licensed business, same Boyle account logic and the same wider payment and support environment.
- What feels different: BoyleBingo feels more community-led and slower than the sportsbook, which is naturally more odds and event-driven.
- Why it matters: It gives BoyleSports a proper bingo outlet, so bingo players don’t need a separate sister brand to stay inside the network.

BoyleGames
- Identity: The wider gaming lobby, covering slots, instant games, Slingo-style titles and casino promotions.
- Best for: BoyleSports players who want something lighter and quicker than a full live casino session.
- What feels similar: Same account family, same casino permissions, and the same BoyleSports presentation.
- What feels different: BoyleGames is less bookmaker and more arcade-like, with game browsing doing more work than homepage features.
- Why it matters: It’s useful for players who search for a sister site because they want variety, when the variety is already inside the Boyle setup.

BoylePoker
- Identity: The poker route attached to BoyleSports, built for players who want card room play rather than slots or sportsbook markets.
- Best for: BoyleSports users who like the brand but want a more tactical game with other players involved.
- What feels similar: Same overall Boyle account world and the same operator relationship behind the scenes.
- What feels different: Poker is slower, more skill-based and far less about instant outcomes than the sportsbook or slots lobby.
- Why it matters: It broadens BoyleSports beyond ordinary bookmaking and stops the site from feeling like sport plus a token casino tab.

BoyleVegas
- Identity: The Vegas-flavoured casino route within the BoyleSports umbrella, aimed at players who want a more casino-room feel.
- Best for: Players who care more about slots, live tables and casino atmosphere than sport or racing.
- What feels similar: Same BoyleSports licensing structure and the same games universe as the other casino routes.
- What feels different: BoyleVegas leans more into a casino mood, while BoyleSports itself is still clearly a bookmaker first.
- Why it matters: It’s the product name that best explains why BoyleSports looks like a network on paper but behaves like one brand with several rooms.
What the Boyle setup means for accounts, shops and switching products
The point I want to be clear about here is not that BoyleSports has many names on the UKGC record. It’s that those names mostly describe how one bookmaker has split its online estate. BoyleCasino, BoyleBingo, BoyleGames and BoylePoker are better understood as product routes than separate personalities. That’s good if you like one account doing several jobs, but less useful if you want a genuine second brand with a different style.
The shop estate also changes the feel. BoyleSports isn’t just a website with a bookmaker skin. It has physical betting shops with retail staff, opening hours, cash deposit support, and a high-street presence across Ireland and the UK. That gives the brand more old-school bookmaker substance than many online-only rivals, even if the sister site list itself isn’t especially exciting.

Best picks by player type
Best if you want sports and racing
BoyleSports itself is still the main event. This is a bookmaker first, and the sportsbook is where the brand makes most sense.
Best if you want slots and a live casino
BoyleCasino is the obvious product route if you like the brand but want to move away from sports markets.
Best if bingo is the reason you’re looking around
BoyleBingo is the way to go because it keeps you inside the Boyle setup without forcing a new operator choice.
Best if you want a poker angle
BoylePoker is the relevant route if you’re looking for poker rather than another slots lobby.
Best if you want a different bookmaker altogether
Betfred is the most natural comparison for old-school UK bookmaking, while BetVictor and Unibet are stronger if you want a more polished online account.
Ownership, licensing and the UK position
BoyleSports is legal for players in Great Britain. The online UKGC account is Boylesports Enterprise, account number 39469, with active remote permissions for bingo, casino, general betting standard real event, general betting standard virtual event and pool betting.
The UKGC record lists no regulatory actions, which is a positive sign for a bookmaker of this size. The head office address on the British record is in Dundalk, Co Louth, Ireland, which aligns with the company’s wider Irish identity. BoyleSports also makes it clear that other customers are served through its Gibraltar-licensed setup.
The trading name list is the key to everything I’ve been talking about on this page. It includes boylebingo.com, boylecasino.com, boylegames.com, boylepoker.com and boylesports.com. The full domain list is longer, with active subdomains for casino, bingo, games, live casino, lotto, poker, Vegas and mobile use. That sounds like a network until you look closer. It’s really one bookmaker split across product doors.
The welcome offers depend on the route you take
BoyleSports is awkward in one very practical way: the sign-up offer can change depending on location, device and the promotional route used to join. The help pages say exactly that, too, so you can’t treat any of the promotions you see as permanent. The best approach is to check the offers before registering and make sure the journey you take matches the product you actually want.
The clearest sports route is Bet £10, get £20. New UK mobile customers, excluding Northern Ireland, need to open an account, deposit at least £10 and place a qualifying bet of £10 or more at minimum odds of 2.0 within 30 days of opening the account. The free bet is credited within 5 minutes of the qualifying bet settling and expires after 7 days. Cashed-out qualifying bets don’t count.
You’ll also see other promotions cropping up occasionally, including free bet offers that go higher than the mobile help-page figure. That’s not unusual for a bookmaker running different acquisition routes. It just means BoyleSports isn’t a site where I’d skim-read the banner and assume I can guess the terms.
The casino welcome offer is cleaner in shape but still tiered. BoyleSports Games promotes up to 100 free spins, with 20, 50 or 100 free spins depending on same-day staking at £20, £50 or £100. The free spins are listed at 10p each and valid for 72 hours, with account and game restrictions.
My view is that BoyleSports is better judged by clarity than size. The sportsbook offer is OK, but route-dependent. The casino offer is simple if you already plan to play slots, but less attractive if you’re only staking to unlock spins. This is a bookmaker’s promotion set, not a casino bonus machine.
Payments, withdrawals and KYC
The BoyleSports cashier is solid by UK bookmaker standards. The listed deposit methods include Visa debit cards, Mastercard, Skrill, Neteller, PayPal, PaySafe, Google Pay, Apple Pay, bank transfer and cash deposit via a BoyleSports retail shop.
The minimum deposit is £5, and the maximum deposit is £10,000, though payment provider limits and any account deposit limits can still reduce what you can actually put in. That’s a sensible mainstream range, and the retail cash deposit option is the detail that marks BoyleSports out from online-only brands.
The minimum withdrawal is £10 across payment methods. BoyleSports also uses a closed-loop policy, so withdrawals normally go back through the route used to fund the account. That’s standard, but it’s still worth remembering if you use more than one payment method or deposit in a shop and then expect the online cashier to behave like a pure app account.
KYC is normal UKGC territory. BoyleSports requests documents where needed, including evidence of payment methods such as bank statements or card copies in some cases. The sensible move is the usual one: keep your name, address and payment details consistent before you start moving money around.
Why BoyleSports still feels like a betting shop online
BoyleSports feels more like a shop bookmaker than a casino group with a sports tab. That’s a compliment, mostly. The site pushes football, racing, accumulators, odds, promotions and customer service routes in a way that still feels rooted in bookmaking rather than pure app design.
The brand’s West Ham United partnership gives it more UK visibility than it used to have, but its deeper personality remains Irish retail bookmaking. The shop locator, Fon-A-Bet route, retail opening hours and cash deposit support all reinforce the same point. BoyleSports wants to be seen as a real bookmaker with shops, staff and phone support, not just another place to go for online betting.
The gaming side isn’t thin, though. BoyleSports Games covers slots, jackpot slots, Megaways titles, Slingo, instant-win games, live casino, and exclusive games. Top slots on the site include Big Bass Bonanza, Big Bass Bonanza 1000, Book of Dead, Legacy of Dead and Big Bass Floats My Boat, with providers including Pragmatic Play, NetEnt and Play’n GO.
That gives BoyleSports a better product spread than a simple sportsbook, but sport still leads the brand. The casino, bingo, poker and games routes are useful rooms off the main corridor. The rest of the building is still all about sports betting.
Support and complaints
BoyleSports is stronger than many online operators in terms of contact options. You get a webform, email, 24/7 live chat and phone support. That’s a strong setup. A bookmaker with shops and phone lines should be easier to reach than a faceless casino app, and BoyleSports lives up to that expectation.
Support route: Webform, live chat, email and phone
Email: care@boylesports.com
UK phone: 0800 220 066
Ireland phone: 1800 220 066
International phone: +353 42 604 1800
The complaints route is also properly mapped out. Formal complaints can go through email, live chat, phone, Resolver or post. BoyleSports aims to resolve complaints within 7 working days, but complex cases can take up to 8 weeks. The staged process uses acknowledgement by email and several internal review stages.
For betting and gaming transaction disputes, BoyleSports names IBAS as its ADR provider. That’s the correct kind of endpoint for a UK-facing bookmaker.
What I like, and what I don’t
What I like
- BoyleSports has real bookmaker substance, with shops, phone support, racing, football and a proper retail heritage.
- The UKGC record is clean, with no regulatory actions showing on account 39469.
- The product routes are easy to understand once you stop treating them as separate sister sites.
- The cashier includes mainstream online methods plus cash deposits through retail shops.
- Support is much better signposted than at many online-only brands, especially with 24/7 phone and live chat.
What I don’t
- There are no genuine separate sister brands, so the list here may disappoint anyone expecting a network.
- The welcome offers are route-dependent, which makes them less clean than they first appear.
- The casino proposition is OK, but the sportsbook still does most of the heavy lifting.
My final verdict on BoyleSports and its product brands
BoyleSports doesn’t have a sister site story in the usual sense, and that’s not a failing. It’s a bookmaker with a shop estate, a strong Irish identity and a set of online product wings rather than a pile of separate casino brands. If you want another Boyle route, choose the product: BoyleCasino for slots and live casino, BoyleBingo for bingo, BoylePoker for cards and BoyleVegas for the casino-room feel. If you want a different bookmaker altogether, you’re no longer looking for BoyleSports sister sites. You’re choosing between rivals such as Betfred, BetVictor, Unibet and Hollywoodbets. BoyleSports itself is strongest when judged as a bookmaker first and a network second.
FAQs about BoyleSports sister sites
Does BoyleSports have sister sites?
Not in the usual separate brand sense. The top connected names are BoyleCasino, BoyleBingo, BoyleGames, BoylePoker and BoyleVegas, which are better treated as product routes.
Who operates BoyleSports in Britain?
The UK Gambling Commission online licence is held by Boylesports Enterprise under UKGC account 39469.
Is BoyleSports legal for UK players?
Yes. BoyleSports is licensed for Britain by the UK Gambling Commission.
Does BoyleSports have betting shops?
Yes. BoyleSports has betting shops across Ireland and the UK, and its help pages include retail shop information and a shop locator.
What’s the BoyleSports sports welcome offer?
It depends on the route used to join. The UK route says deposit £10 and place a £10 bet at odds of 2.0 or bigger to get a £20 free bet balance.
What’s the BoyleSports casino welcome offer?
BoyleSports Games promotes up to 100 free spins, usually tiered by same-day slot staking at £20, £50 or £100, with the exact terms shown on the offer page.
How do I contact BoyleSports support?
You can use live chat, webform, email care@boylesports.com, or phone 0800 220 066 from the UK.