Sportradar finds increase in suspicious betting in North and Central America
Sportradar’s latest global integrity report found an increase in suspicious wagering activity in North and Central America despite a worldwide decline.
The sports data and content giant’s annual Integrity in Action 2025: Global Analysis & Trends report provides an outlook on how monitoring enforcement is leveraged to detect match-fixing and suspicious wagering activity around the world.
A slight decline overall
Sportradar used its Universal Fraud Detection System to monitor more than 1 million events across 70 sports in real time last year. It was used to monitor some of the largest sporting events in 2025, including the FIFA Club World Cup and the UEFA Women’s European Championships.
Sportradar collaborated with more than 300 gaming operator partners to detect 1,116 suspicious games and matches throughout 2025. That constituted roughly a 1% decline compared to 2024. The suspicious activity took place in 94 countries and led to a total of 125 sanctions, a 24% year-over-year uptick…