Parimatch from a New Zealand Perspective : A Real Kiwi Review
Parimatch New Zealand : What New Zealanders Should Know
Look, here’s the context — I’m not a professional gambler. I’m simply an ordinary graphic designer living in Auckland who occasionally does a flutter from time to time. Primarily rugby, sometimes cricket, admittedly — the occasional casino game when relaxed.
Back in March, a colleague mentioned Parimatch. “Give it a crack,” he said. So I tried it. Here’s what happened.
Week One: First Steps using Parimatch account
That Monday, morning tea time, I’m at my desk sipping my coffee and pulling up their website. Initial thoughts: clean design. Not overwhelming like some betting sites that feel like a pokies lounge threw up on your screen.
Creating My Account
Needed:
- Email (used my personal Gmail)
- Cell number (NZ number obviously)
- Security password
- Currency choice (NZD — ta very much)
- Date of birth (for age verification)
Duration: 4 minutes. The email showed up right away. Activated account, job done.
Critical detail: They didn’t immediately demand my ID. That came later, when I requested a payout — more on that.
Going Mobile: Parimatch mobile using Samsung
I own an S22. Certainly not cutting-edge, though works fine.
Download Process
Now here’s it gets somewhat unusual. No app on Google Play. Reason? Google’s policies about betting locally.
Solution: Get the installation file straight from Parimatch app. Seems sketchy, I understand. But it’s totally normal for gambling platforms.
Process:
- Visited Parimatch website on my phone
- Found the ” Download App ” link
- My phone warned me about “unknown sources” — permitted installation
- Installed (105 MB)
- Opened it up
Entire process: 6 minutes.
App Performance
The good stuff:
- Quick load times — games open in 3-4 seconds (including on mobile data)
- In-play updates smoothly (important for rugby matches)
- Fingerprint login (usually)
- Power usage is acceptable (unlike some apps that murder your battery)
Issues:
- Notifications are excessive — you’ll get promotions at random times
- Occasional crashes (about once per week)
- Screen rotation doesn’t work well
Available Markets for Kiwis via online Parimatch?
Here’s the important part. Since should you not be able to wager on your preferred sports, what’s the point?
The Rugby (Obviously)
Being from NZ, this is the dealbreaker. Good news: they’ve got it covered.
| Super Rugby Pacific | Comprehensive | Offered |
| NPC | Good | Partial |
| Test Matches | Very good | Available |
| Six Nations | Comprehensive | Available |
Real example: NZ vs South Africa, last month. Available markets:
- Winner
- Winning margin
- Points total
- First try
- Half-time / full-time
- Each team total tries
Lines were fair — checked them versus TAB NZ and Parimatch was typically slightly better.
Other Sports
The cricket: Excellent coverage (especially international matches). Domestic T20? Hit and miss.
The horses: Surprisingly good. Kiwi racing covered well. Australian racing also.
Football: Premier League, UCL, major European leagues — comprehensive. A-League? Minimal coverage.
Pokies and Tables: Do I Use It?
Truth time: I’m really not a serious casino player. But some Fridays, after work drinks, I’ve given it a go.
Slot Selection
Advertised: “3500+ games”. Actually: I’ve played maybe 20. My picks I actually enjoyed:
| Big Bass Bonanza | Pragmatic Play | Profited $180 on $50 deposit |
| Book of Dead | Play’n GO | Dropped $75 pursuing free spins |
| Starburst | NetEnt | Broke even (steady) |
My strategy: Won’t deposit more than $100 in a session. When I’m up, I take profit. Sounds simple, works for me.
Deposits and Withdrawals: The Real Deal
This bit is critical. As you can have the best platform, but if you can’t access funds, what’s the point?
Putting Money In
Available methods for New Zealanders:
- Credit / debit cards (Visa, Mastercard, also POLi)
- Bank deposit ( 1-2 days)
- Cryptocurrency ( if that’s your thing)
Not available: The Kiwi payment methods like bank transfers operating fast.
Minimum deposit: $20 NZD. Appears acceptable.
My approach: Visa debit. Credit shows in 2 minutes. No experienced problems.
Taking Money Out
This is where it got tricky.
First withdrawal (I won $340 betting on a rugby accumulator):
- Requested withdrawal: Tuesday morning, 10am
- Received message stating I needed to confirm ID
- Submitted driver’s license and a current utility bill
- Approved: 48 hours later
- Money hit my account: Friday
Total time: 72 hours. Not instant, though acceptable first time.
Next cashout ($ 220 from slots):
Initiated: Monday afternoon, 3pm. Funds showed: Tuesday, 11am. Significantly quicker.
What People Ask That Came Up
Legality Question in New Zealand?
Complicated. Parimatch operates under offshore licensing (from Curacao). Not illegal for us to access overseas operators, however such sites aren’t governed under Department of Internal Affairs.
In practice: You can play, but should issues occur, Kiwi safeguards can’t protect you.
TAB Comparison with TAB NZ?
| Odds | Usually better | Standard |
| Markets | Greater variety | Limited |
| Oversight | International | DIA regulated |
| Payout speed | Days | Faster |
| Pokies | Offered | No |
My Honest Verdict After Six Months
The good:
- Superior prices compared to TAB (mainly rugby markets)
- Good mobile experience
- Good selection betting options
- NZD support (no conversion fees)
What I don’t like:
- Withdrawal times (mainly first time)
- Not NZ regulated
- Few local deposit methods
- Promotion conditions are demanding
Would I recommend it?
For those seasoned punting online and seek superior prices than TAB — definitely. However accept the regulatory position.
When starting out to gambling and prefer the safety of NZ regulation — stay with TAB or maybe wait for locally licensed alternatives.
Personally? I use Parimatch and TAB. TAB NZ for convenience and local racing. Parimatch for bigger multi bets where better odds count.
Stay safe, establish boundaries, and don’t bet more than you can afford to risk. Cheers!