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AccuratePredict Unveils Africa’s First Free Bet-Slip Converter for Punters
Football-data company, AccuratePredict, has launched what it calls the first free bet-code converter for Nigeria and the wider African betting market.
The browser-based tool also integrated into the firm’s Android app allows bettors to paste a booking code from one sportsbook and instantly generate a fresh code that works seamlessly on another platform.
For punters who manage multiple betting accounts, the service aims to eliminate the hassle of manually rebuilding accumulators or single-match multiples just to secure better odds.
“Copy-and-paste betting is painful and prone to mistakes,” AccuratePredict marketing consultant, Olufemi Osunyingbo, said in a telephone interview. “If fans can shop for shoes across several e-commerce sites with one click, they should be able to do the same with their bet slips.”
The process is simple: users paste an existing booking code into a text field, select their preferred bookmaker, and let the system do the rest. An algorithm automatically maps each market to its closest equivalent on the destination site, checks live odds, and flags any discrepancies before issuing a new code.
The engine relies on an internal catalogue of more than 12,000 market identifiers, backed by an “odds reconciliation” layer that pulls real-time data through API feeds. According to company tests involving 500 Nigerian users, the prototype reduced the time needed to rebuild a five-leg accumulator from nearly five minutes to under five seconds. Test users also reported an average 7% boost in potential payouts by switching bookies at the right moment.
The tool also integrates AccuratePredict’s proprietary AI match predictions, which the firm claims achieved 91% accuracy on win-draw-win markets during the 2024/25 season.
The converter is already live on AccuratePredict’s website and in version 4.2 of its Android app, while an iOS release is expected before the december transfer window. Mr. Osunyingbo confirmed the service will remain free for now, adding that the company has “no current plans” to roll out a paid tier.







