Ranked on odds value, market depth, payout speed and NZ-relevant coverage. Every book was funded and tested with real money.
Netball is one of New Zealand's most-played and most-watched sports, and by a distance the most popular women's team sport in the country. Weekend club courts from Kaitaia to Invercargill are full, the Silver Ferns pull huge free-to-air audiences, and the ANZ Premiership is back on TVNZ for 2026. Yet when it comes to betting, netball is the market almost nobody serves properly. Most sportsbooks that price rugby to a dozen markets barely acknowledge the Silver Ferns exist.
That gap is exactly why netball is worth a look. When a bookmaker pays a sport little attention, its traders spend less time sharpening the lines — so a Kiwi punter who actually understands the shooting circle, franchise form and trans-Tasman rivalries can occasionally find value that simply isn't there in a heavily-modelled market like Super Rugby or the NRL. This page maps the full netball calendar you can bet on, explains every market in plain terms, walks through worked NZD examples, and points you to the books in our lineup most likely to price it.
There is a lot to follow across a New Zealand netball year:
New to sports wagering in general? Start with our best sports betting sites NZ guide, then come back here for the netball detail.
The Silver Ferns are the beating heart of netball betting in New Zealand. They are one of only a handful of nations to have won the Netball World Cup, and every marquee fixture — a World Cup knockout, a Constellation Cup decider, a Taini Jamison test — is a natural betting occasion. When markets exist for NZ netball at all, they almost always exist for the Silver Ferns first.
No rivalry defines the sport like New Zealand versus the Australian Diamonds. The two nations have traded the world number-one ranking back and forth for decades, and their meetings are typically decided by a handful of goals. The showpiece is the Constellation Cup, a four-test series played across both countries each year — recent editions have gone down to the final quarter and even extra time. For a bettor, a tight, evenly-matched four-test series is ideal: it produces meaningful head-to-head, handicap and series-outright markets rather than the lopsided prices you get when a top side thrashes a minnow.
Back New Zealand or Australia to win the four-test Constellation Cup outright before it starts. Home advantage and squad availability move this price.
Each of the four tests is priced on its own. The venue matters — the home leg of a series can flip a narrow favourite.
Ferns–Diamonds tests are usually close, so margin bands (1–5 goals, 6–10 goals) often pay better than a straight head-to-head.
Because the two teams are so closely matched, blowouts are rare and the handicap line tends to sit low — often inside a goal or two on neutral turf. That makes reading team news, injuries and recent form far more important than it is in a mismatch.
Netball is a fast, high-scoring game — competitive matches routinely finish in the 50s and 60s per side, so a combined total can sit anywhere from the high 80s to well over 130. That single fact shapes every market: lines and totals are built on big numbers, which gives handicaps and over/unders far more room to move than in low-scoring codes. Here's what you'll see when a book prices netball.
Pick the winner. Netball has no draws in normal play, so it's a clean two-way market with no "draw" option to price around.
A goal start levels a mismatch — e.g. Silver Ferns -8.5. They must win by 9+ for the bet to land. The underdog at +8.5 can lose by up to 8 and still win your bet.
Bet on the combined goals, e.g. over/under 114.5. Pace and shooting accuracy drive this — two clinical shooting circles push it over.
Winner of Q1, or the highest-scoring quarter of the match. Sides often start fast or finish strong, so quarter form is a market of its own.
Back a result inside a range — 1–5, 6–10, 11–15 goals. Higher odds than a straight head-to-head because you're predicting how comfortably, not just who.
Predict the leader at the main break and at the final whistle. Useful when a side is a notorious slow or fast starter.
Player props appear at the wider books around big events: top goal-scorer, most goals by a named shooter, or a shooter to score over a set number. Because a netball team's scoring is concentrated in one or two shooters, these props are more predictable than, say, a rugby anytime try-scorer — which cuts both ways on value. For a refresher on how the underlying bet types work across all sports, our rugby betting guide explains handicaps and totals in a lower-scoring context.
The quickest way to understand netball's big-number markets is to run the maths. All odds below are illustrative decimal odds and returns are shown in NZD, including your stake.
Example 1 — Handicap. The Silver Ferns host a lower-ranked touring side and are priced at -8.5 on the goal line at odds of 1.90. You stake NZ$50. For the bet to win, the Ferns must win by 9 goals or more.
Example 2 — Total goals over/under. An ANZ Premiership clash between two strong shooting sides has a total set at over/under 116.5. You back the over at odds of 1.85 with a NZ$30 stake.
Notice how the winner of the match is irrelevant to the total — a 60–58 nail-biter and a 62–56 comfortable win both clear 116.5. That independence from the result is exactly why totals are a favourite for punters who can read pace and shooting form but don't want to pick a side.
The ANZ Premiership is New Zealand's elite domestic league and the most consistent source of bettable netball on the calendar. Six franchises contest it, running from around April to July, with a home-and-away regular season followed by finals. It's back on free-to-air TVNZ for 2026, which keeps interest — and betting appetite — high right through winter.
| Franchise | Region / base | Betting note |
|---|---|---|
| Northern Mystics | Auckland | Big population base and deep shooting stocks; usually near the top of outright markets. |
| Northern Stars | North Shore, Auckland | Can be streaky — good value in margin and quarter markets when in form. |
| Waikato Bay of Plenty Magic | Hamilton / BOP | Traditionally strong; watch mid-court combinations settling early season. |
| Central Pulse | Wellington | Multiple-title pedigree; a benchmark side traders respect, so lines are tighter. |
| Mainland Tactix | Christchurch | Reigning champions after their maiden 2025 title; strong home-court record. |
| Southern Steel | Invercargill / Dunedin | Long travel legs and a passionate southern crowd both feed into form. |
The most common ANZ Premiership markets are match head-to-head, the goal-line handicap, total goals and the championship outright (the price to lift the title, available all season and updated after each round). Because there are only six teams in a two-round competition, form lines are easy to follow — you'll have seen every side play every other side by the time finals arrive. TAB prices the league domestically; where you want a wider spread of markets, our TAB alternatives guide covers the offshore options.
Here's the honest truth the odds-feed sites won't tell you: netball coverage is thin everywhere. Compared with rugby or league, far fewer books price it, markets are shallower, and lines can appear late and disappear fast. That makes shopping around more important for netball than for almost any other sport — the difference between books on a Silver Ferns head-to-head can be substantial simply because fewer traders are competing to sharpen the price.
From our tested lineup, the widest-market operators are the ones most likely to have netball up at all. 22bet and Goldenbet carried the broadest women's-sport and netball coverage, particularly around Silver Ferns and Constellation Cup fixtures. Gambiva lists netball among its niche sports, while Rabona and BillyBets pick up the marquee internationals but tend to run shallower on the ANZ Premiership.
| Site | Netball coverage | Best for | Market depth |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22bet | Widest | Silver Ferns, Constellation Cup, outrights | Broadest range of netball markets |
| Goldenbet | Wide | Big internationals, bet-builder combos | Strong on marquee fixtures |
| Gambiva | Moderate | Niche-sport listings incl. netball | Core markets around events |
| Rabona | Selective | Marquee Silver Ferns tests | Head-to-head and line mainly |
| BillyBets | Selective | World Cup / Constellation Cup | Shallower on domestic league |
Coverage improves around major events and can change season to season, so we flag netball availability in each review as it develops. For the full rankings and how each book scored on odds value, payout speed and market depth, see our best sports betting sites NZ guide.
Netball rewards the punter who watches the detail, because so much of a team's output is concentrated in a small number of players and positions. These are the angles that move netball results more than the raw ranking suggests.
A side's scoring lives or dies with one or two goal shooters. Lose a first-choice shooter and the total — and the handicap — can swing by double figures. Always check the team sheet before betting.
A packed home arena genuinely lifts a netball side. In a tight trans-Tasman or franchise fixture, home advantage can be the difference between covering a narrow line and not.
Southern legs and trans-Tasman trips stack fatigue. A team on its second away match in a week, or fresh off a long flight, is worth a second look on the underdog line.
Beyond those, weigh form in the shooting circle — shooting accuracy percentages tell you far more than the win/loss column. A team winning ugly with a 70% shooting rate is a poor over bet; two accurate circles firing at 85%+ push totals up fast. Watch mid-court connections early in an ANZ season too, when new combinations are still settling. And treat outright prices as a season-long project: because the ANZ Premiership is only six teams over two rounds, the title market firms up quickly, so the value is often in getting on a rising side early. Above all, only stake what you can afford to lose, and set a budget before the first whistle.
In New Zealand, the TAB holds the legal monopoly on domestic sports and race betting. The law was tightened by the Racing Industry Amendment Act 2025, which received Royal Assent on 27 June 2025. The key point for punters: the Act places the legal liability on the operator, not the player. Offshore bookmakers can no longer lawfully take bets from New Zealand residents or advertise into the country — but using an offshore site is not an offence for an individual Kiwi punter.
Two practical consequences follow. First, geo-blocking is not mandated by the Act, so some offshore books remain reachable — but availability is shrinking as operators reassess the NZ market, which is another reason netball markets can appear and vanish. Second, for recreational punters, winnings are tax-free: casual betting is not treated as taxable income in New Zealand.
None of this is financial or legal advice, and the landscape is still settling. If you want the domestic-recourse comfort of a locally-regulated book, TAB is the compliant choice; if you're weighing the alternatives, read our TAB alternatives and sports betting guides, and see our rugby betting page for how the same rules apply across codes.
Play it safe. Netball betting should add to the enjoyment of a great Kiwi sport, never take away from it. If it stops feeling like fun, free confidential 24/7 support is available from Gambling Helpline NZ on 0800 654 655, or text 8006. Set a budget, treat any losses as the cost of entertainment, and only ever bet what you can comfortably afford. You must be 18+ to bet.
"He waka eke noa" — we are all in this together.
If gambling has stopped feeling like fun, free confidential 24/7 support is one call away. Gambling Helpline NZ — 0800 654 655 · Text 8006 · safergambling.org.nz
Pasifika whānau: Mapu Maia 0800 21 21 22. Asian whānau: Asian Family Services 0800 862 342. Multi-venue self-exclusion: multivenueexclusion.org.nz.