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You are here: Home / * PRESS / Business / How mobile networks influence sports betting participation

How mobile networks influence sports betting participation

January 8, 2026 By GISuser

 

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Mobile phones have changed the way many people follow sports in Africa. A growing number of services now run through mobile data rather than desktop computers or retail shops. One example is betway malawi, which allows adults to follow football fixtures and place online wagers through their phones. For those who work with mapping, spatial analysis, or network data, the rise of mobile betting touches on familiar topics: coverage gaps, device access and how geography shapes digital habits.

Mobile coverage and phone access in Southern Africa

Over the past decade, African countries have expanded their mobile networks faster than most other forms of infrastructure. The GSMA reported that roughly 416 million people in Africa use mobile internet, while around three-quarters of the population remain offline. This split is important. It shows that digital services are common but not evenly distributed.

Malawi fits within this picture. Helgi Library estimated mobile phone penetration at about 61.1 percent of the population in 2023. That does not mean every person in Malawi has a smartphone or reliable data. It simply shows that a large share of the population owns some type of mobile device. Many people buy data in small packages that last for a day or a week, which suits quick tasks such as checking live scores, reading football news, or placing a small wager during match time.

This growth has increased access to online services in general. It has also created differences based on geography, income and device type. These differences can be mapped and studied, which makes them relevant to GIS and data specialists.

Geography shapes digital betting habits

Mobile sports betting tends to be most active in areas with better coverage and easier access to power and mobile money agents. In Malawi, this usually means larger towns and cities. Rural areas can face weak signals, long power outages, or fewer places to cash in and out through mobile money. All of these factors reduce the frequency of online activity.

Terrain also matters. Hills, distance from cellular towers and low population density can weaken signals. When coverage is unreliable, people are more likely to rely on radio commentary, word-of-mouth scores, or retail betting shops instead of digital services.

These patterns can be seen in many Southern African countries. Mapping coverage layers against population density, tower locations and mobile money agent networks helps explain why digital adoption looks stronger in some districts than others. What makes this interesting from a GIS perspective is that betting is not only tied to income or interest in sports. It is tied to the physical geography of infrastructure.

Live sports increase dependence on steady connections

Football is the main driver for sports betting in the region. Premier League matches, Champions League fixtures and key domestic games all draw attention. When matches are underway, many adults like to check live scores and changing odds. This creates a need for reliable data signals rather than spotty reception.

Sports betting during live matches can be disrupted by slow connections. Pages may take longer to load and odds may not refresh smoothly. During busy evening hours, mobile networks can slow down if too many people are using data at the same time. This problem is not limited to betting. Streaming, social media and messaging traffic all share the same bandwidth.

Applications used for live wagering are therefore designed to run on modest data speeds and entry-level smartphones. This reflects a practical approach in regions where top-end devices are less common and data is expensive. The ability to work on low bandwidth has turned mobile phones into the main access point for adult sports betting across much of Africa.

Market figures and network effects

Online gambling has become more visible in many African countries. EvenBet Gaming put the value of the African online gambling market at about 1.85 billion US dollars in 2024 and mentioned a possible rise to around 2.36 billion US dollars by 2028. The spread of internet-ready phones and mobile money has played a part in this.

Sports betting sites pay attention to where their traffic comes from. They look at device types, signal strength and data usage. Pages are often kept light because many people go online with low data packs or older phones. In cities with stronger mobile networks, more live features are used during football matches. In places with weaker networks, the experience is slower and less focused on live updates.

Several African countries require online betting companies to meet licensing and age checks. These rules differ by country. As a result, more betting now happens online instead of through street vendors or informal setups.

What this looks like in practice

In Malawi, mobile networks influence how people follow sports and place bets. Cities and larger towns have steadier signals and more mobile money agents. During big football fixtures, online betting activity rises in these areas. Outside the cities, many adults still follow games on the radio or check results later because connections are weaker and data is expensive.

For people who work with mapping or data, this pattern lines up with mobile tower locations, payment access and basic phone ownership. It shows how betting follows the shape of the network rather than being evenly spread across the country.

As mobile coverage improves and becomes more consistent, the same shift seen in cities may appear in smaller towns. The pattern already exists in other mobile services such as payments, news and messaging.

Filed Under: Business

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