Launched as a hosted, turnkey sportsbook platform sold under three yearly subscription tiers with no hidden fees, Sports-book-software.com targets buyers who want to run a betting operation without building the technology from scratch. That covers a wide span of operators, from someone testing a startup idea to an established company adding sports betting to an existing brand. Because the platform is fully managed, the operator avoids the infrastructure and integration headaches that usually swallow the first six months of a project like this.

What sets Sports-book-software.com apart from a plain sportsbook vendor is the casino software bundled alongside the betting engine. The site frames this as a cross-sell opportunity, and the framing makes commercial sense: an operator who already has players placing bets can point them at slots and table games without signing a second contract or wiring up a second provider. Whether the casino module is deep or a stripped-down add-on is not something the public pages settle clearly, but having it under one roof is a genuine practical advantage for a small team that does not want to juggle vendors.

The risk and compliance section is described in more concrete terms than expected. Sports-book-software.com lists a KYC module, end-user document collection, browsing-pattern reports, activity and balance history, and flagging for suspicious activity. For anyone running a regulated gambling product, those are not optional extras; they are the difference between passing an audit and losing a license, so seeing them named individually counts for something. The specificity suggests the company has at least thought through what a regulator and a payments partner will ask for.

The retail and mobile angle

There is a physical-shop offering too, which is less common among software pitched primarily at online operators. Sports-book-software.com includes touchscreen POS systems for full betting operations and support for mobile agents, the kind of setup a brick-and-mortar betting shop or a roaming agent network would need. This is where the platform starts to look less like a single web product and more like a stack meant to run both an online site and a counter at once.

The mobile-agent piece is worth pausing on. In a lot of markets, retail betting still moves through people walking around with handheld terminals, and software that handles that flow rather than only a slick web app is addressing a market the bigger online-only platforms often ignore. It is a sign the company knows who actually buys this kind of software in regions where retail betting is the dominant channel.

Licensing, pricing, and what the site does not show

The licensing question is handled honestly. The "Get Started" section spells out that Sports-book-software.com does not supply a gambling license itself but offers guidance on obtaining one. That is the correct and responsible position (no software vendor can hand you a regulatory license), but it does mean a buyer still carries the slow, expensive part of the process. The licensing advice on the site is a starting map, not a finished route.

Pricing is presented as a low annual flat fee across the three tiers, with the no-hidden-fees promise repeated throughout. Flat annual pricing is genuinely useful for budgeting a venture where revenue is unpredictable in the early months, and it removes the per-bet or revenue-share cuts that some competitors quietly bake in. The exact figures are not displayed publicly, so real comparison shopping happens once a prospect is talking directly to Sports-book-software.com.

On the question of who stands behind Sports-book-software.com, the public footprint is where information gets sparse. There is a "Get Started" page and a "Features and Benefits" page that both reference support, but no phone number, email, physical address, or business hours appeared on the landing pages reviewed. Contact options seem to live deeper in the site rather than up front, which adds friction for a buyer who wants to size up the company before agreeing to a sales conversation. For a B2B product where the relationship runs for years, a visible contact route on the first screen would build trust faster.

Outside the company's own pages, third-party coverage of Sports-book-software.com is essentially absent. A search turned up the site's own material and generic industry roundups, but no independent reviews, ratings, or named customer references that mention Sports-book-software.com directly. That absence is common for niche B2B platforms, which tend to sell through direct contact and referrals instead of collecting public ratings, so the gap alone is not damning. It does mean a prospect cannot lean on third-party verdicts and has to judge the product through a demo and direct questions instead.

Taken together, Sports-book-software.com presents a coherent stack: hosted sportsbook, casino, risk and KYC tooling, and retail POS, all under one annual fee with upfront honesty about the licensing it cannot provide. The casino bundle and the retail and mobile-agent support are the parts that distinguish Sports-book-software.com from a plain online-only sportsbook engine. A serious buyer would want to push on the part the site keeps quietest: who runs the company, where they are based, and what existing operators say about how the platform holds up once it is live and taking real money.