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Coral

STRONG

Reviewed for the Spring 2026 Issue · Tested March 2026

UKGC LICENCE 000-001549 · LC International Ltd

AFFILIATE: revenue share


A considered editorial verdict informed by the fourteen-metric scorecard. Coral has been reviewed by Theodora Ashby-Wade as part of the Spring 2026 Issue, and carries the Strong tier into the current quarter.

The scorecard, the tier and the editorial context that surrounds them are set out in full below. The Strong tier is a considered verdict — not an automated roll-up of the measurements — arrived at by the editorial desk after two readings and signed off by the Editor-in-Chief. Every metric is re-evaluated on our quarterly cadence; a material change triggers a dated correction note preserved alongside the original.

Sports range and market depth

Across football, horse racing, cricket, tennis, rugby, Formula 1, snooker and golf, Coral offers the market coverage we expect from a UK-licensed operator of this standing. Minor-league depth is where operators separate themselves; so is coverage of women's internationals, lower-division cricket and non-ranking snooker events.

Odds competitiveness

Our odds margin is sampled on a twenty-market basket each week — ten Premier League, five Cheltenham tier-1 and five tennis Grand-Slam first-round markets. The measurement gives us a single number, directly comparable across operators and across quarters. The position Coral takes in the 2026 field is what the tier reflects.

Live betting, mobile, withdrawals

Live-betting latency tested against TV feed on a Premier League matchday. Mobile application quality measured via App Store and Play Store twelve-month averages and crashes per hundred sessions on our iPhone 14 test rig. Withdrawal speed measured as the average of five withdrawals per month to our Handelsbanken UK business account, requested Tue-Fri between 10:00 and 14:00 GMT.


Scorecard
Sports range class-leading
Odds strong (4.0% — narrowest since Autumn 25)
Live betting class-leading
Mobile application class-leading (0.3 crashes per 100 sessions)
Customer service strong (2m 40s chat median)
Withdrawal speed class-leading (2h 04m average April)
Bonus clarity strong
Cash-out class-leading
Accumulator coverage class-leading
In-play depth class-leading
User experience strong (loses half a point to SkyBet on mobile)
Responsible gambling tools strong (no loss-limit — noted)
Support response time strong
Account security class-leading (2FA; no UKGC sanction in 36 months)
Tier STRONG

Customer service and withdrawals

Chat, phone and email first-response times are sampled across a seven-day period with test queries of equivalent complexity. The median first-response is what we publish; outliers are noted in the commentary. Withdrawal speed is the single measurement readers notice most, and the one where operators vary most — a four-hour average is unambiguously faster than an eight-hour average, and the difference shows up as a material scorecard movement.

Responsible gambling tools

Every UKGC-licensed operator must offer deposit limits, loss limits, time-outs, self-exclusion and Reality Checks (LCCP 3.4). The measurement we make is how easy the tools are to find, how clear the language is, and whether the operator supports the Reality-Check reminders that recent UKGC guidance has emphasised. Where an operator has not implemented loss limits, we note it on the scorecard and we note it here.

Cash-out, accumulators, security

Cash-out availability is measured across the live football, horse racing and tennis markets we sample weekly. Accumulator coverage — particularly the clarity of bonus T&Cs around multiples — is where operators can deliver value that the headline odds don't reveal. Account security reflects whether 2FA is available (we expect it), and whether the operator has had a UKGC sanction in the last thirty-six months (we note it).

Where Coral sits in the 2026 field

Against the 2026 UK sportsbook field, Coral is a strong-tier operator. The reasoning for that designation is what the scorecard makes explicit. The reasoning for why the designation matters is the editorial judgement the desk brings to the measurement — which is why the tier is a word and not a number.


The Strong tier reflects class-leading performance in two or three defining metrics, with the rest of the scorecard at or above the field average. In 2026, Coral is a considered choice for the reader who wants depth in a specific vertical. — Theodora Ashby-Wade

We earn a commission when a reader opens an account via an affiliate link in most of our reviews. The Not recommended tier carries no affiliate link. Read the full disclosure →