One-line verdict

Balanced platform with average but dependable performance.

Score Out of 10

Verdict summary

BOTB is the largest and most established UK prize competition operator, with a publicly listed parent company (Winvia) and over 20 years of operating history. The platform delivers high-value prizes weekly, with strong winner verification and a long track record of payouts. Entry prices are higher than mass-market operators but reflect the premium prize tier. The single most credible operator in the UK market.

Pros

  • Publicly Listed Parent Company

    BOTB is owned by Winvia Group, providing financial transparency and shareholder oversight that no other UK competition operator can match.

  • 20+ years of history

    Founded in 1999, BOTB has the longest operating history of any major UK competition operator, with thousands of documented winners.

  • High-Value Weekly Prizes

    Cars, houses, watches, holidays — BOTB runs multiple weekly draws with prizes typically valued from £30,000 to £4 million.

  • Strong Winner Verification

    Live weekly draw streams with announced winners, complete with phone-call surprise reveals documented on social media.

Cons

  • Higher Entry Prices

    Most BOTB competitions start at £1-£3 per ticket — higher than instant-win operators offering 1p entries.

  • Limited Free Entry Visibility

    Free entry route exists per UK law but is less prominently displayed than at some smaller operators.

  • Older Brand Aesthetic

    Platform design feels dated compared to newer operators, though functionality remains strong.

Main review content

If you’ve been on a UK motorway in the last five years, you’ve probably seen a BOTB billboard. Houses, supercars, mansions worth more than most people’s lifetime earnings — all handed over to ordinary people on filmed phone calls. It’s now one of the most recognisable brands in UK competitions, and after spending a few weeks digging into how they actually operate, I think the reputation is mostly earned.

The thing that sets BOTB apart from every other operator on this list is corporate structure. They’re owned by Winvia Group, which is publicly listed on the London Stock Exchange. That means audited annual accounts, shareholder oversight, and a level of financial transparency you won’t find at any privately-held competition operator. When I’m assessing whether an operator will actually pay out a £4 million house prize, the fact that I can pull up Winvia’s financial accounts matters more than any number of Trustpilot reviews.

They’ve been at this a long time. BOTB started in 1999, when most of their current competitors didn’t exist. Twenty-five years of operating means thousands of documented winners and a long-enough track record to weather multiple economic cycles, regulatory changes, and consumer trends. Newer operators might run great competitions today, but BOTB has shown it can keep doing this through bad markets.

The prize structure is what most people know them for. Weekly Dream Car competitions for things like Lamborghinis, Ferraris, and the occasional bonkers McLaren. Lifestyle competitions for watches, cash, and holidays. And the headline-grabbers — house competitions worth millions. The Atiya Ahmed Devon house win in 2024 made every major UK paper. That kind of mainstream media coverage of winner handovers gives BOTB verification advantages most operators can’t match.

What people complain about — and you see this in the negative Trustpilot reviews — is mostly price. Entries typically start at £1-£3 per ticket, which is genuinely more expensive than instant-win operators offering 1p tickets. The argument back is that you’re entering for prizes worth £100,000 to £4 million, not phone cases. Personally I think the pricing is fair for the prize tier, but you should know going in that this isn’t a budget operator.

The site itself feels a bit dated. The design is functional and works fine on mobile, but it doesn’t have the modern polish of Aspire or Pristine. If you’re someone who judges operators on UX, BOTB will feel a bit early-2010s. If you only care that the entry process is reliable and winners are paid, none of that matters.

One thing I’d note: the free entry route exists but isn’t as prominently displayed as at some smaller operators. It’s there in the terms and you can use it, but BOTB doesn’t put it in your face the way Elite Competitions or Aspire do. Worth knowing if free entries are how you’d prefer to participate.

Bottom line: if you only enter one UK competition operator, BOTB is the safest possible choice from a “will this still exist in five years and pay out winners” perspective. It’s also probably the most expensive way to participate. That trade-off is the whole story.

Quick facts table

Founded1999
HeadquartersSW London
Parent CompanyWinvia Group (LSE-listed)
Trustpilot Rating4.5 stars
Trustpilot Reviews50,000+
Prize FocusCars, Houses, Lifestyle
Typical Entry Price£1-£3
Free Entry RouteYes (postal)
Mobile OptimisedYes

FAQs

Is BOTB legitimate?
Yes. They've been running since 1999, they're part of Winvia Group which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, and they've got 50,000+ Trustpilot reviews averaging 4.5 stars. The PLC ownership means audited accounts and shareholder oversight, which is something no privately-held UK competition operator can offer.,
How much does it cost to enter BOTB competitions?
Most competitions start at £1-£3 per ticket, with luxury car and house competitions sometimes higher. The free postal entry route is also available if you'd prefer not to pay.,
What kind of prizes does BOTB offer?
Three main categories: Dream Car competitions (luxury and supercars), Lifestyle (cash, watches, holidays), and House competitions. Most prizes run from £30,000 up to about £4 million.,
Can I take cash instead of a car or house if I win?
Yes, BOTB routinely offers cash alternatives. Most winners take the prize, but you can ask for the cash equivalent if you'd rather have the money than the asset.,
How will I know if i've won
BOTB famously calls winners live on camera, then films the reaction and shares it on social media. You'll also get direct contact via phone and email within 48 hours of the draw.

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