The Battle of the Tipsters Review

Battle of the Tipsters brings two of Betfans tipsters together for a head to head tip off.

These are held each Saturday with neither tipster being allowed to use their selections from their standard tipping service. The winner gets to compete the next week but perhaps most importantly, gets paid. This means that the selections by their very nature must be pushed to be profitable. There are essentially three different ways that Battle of the Tipsters can go. There can be two profitable tipsters, one profitable tipsters or both tipsters lose out. This means that on paper there is a 2 in 3 chance of a profitable outcome but the results don’t necessarily reflect this.

 

What is the investment vs. the rate of return?

Betfan have made Battle of the Tipsters available for a weekly fee of £10 (plus VAT if you live within the EU). Although there is no mention of a money back guarantee this is pretty standard practice for a subscription based service. As it is subscription based you can usually cancel your subscription at any time. In terms of the rate of return, Battle of the Tipsters has produced a profit of 74.71 points since January 2013. Based off of £10 stakes this would mean a profit of £747.10.

Does the product provide value for money?

For reasons I shall outline below I don’t believe that Battle of the Tipsters does provide value for money.

Conclusion

There are a number of complaints that I have with Battle of the Tipsters not least of which is that the product just isn’t profitable enough. Assuming you are an EU resident and working on the fact that Battle of the Tipsters has operated for 13 months means that you would have spent £672 on subscription fees (56 weeks at £12 each). This would ultimately mean a profit of £75 for the period or £5.77 per month. Compare the costs involved with a more profitable tipster service and you would expect 10 times that amount and that wouldn’t be an unreasonable expectation. Really the whole of Battle of the Tipsters set up seems to be geared more at having a bit of fun rather than a legitimately profitable product. This is the main reason that I would look to avoid it and would instead look at a more focused tipster service.

 
 

 

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