English

The #1 rating for bookmaker arbitrage scanners in the world

All information is free

Surebet scanner overview SafeArbs

Number of scanned BM
24
Prematch
Calculator
9 /10
Scan quality: 9
Scanning speed: 7
Operational safety: 10
Price: 10

 

All tariffs provide full access to all scanner features and differ only in price

  •  Daily -- $2
  •  Weekly -- $7
  •  Monthly -- $15
  •  Half Year -- $70
  •  Annual -- $120
  •  Forever -- $1000 with a daily increase of $3

 

 

SafeArbs entered the market at the end of February 2026 and from its very first days took a rather unusual position, positioning itself as a potential leader in sports arbitrage. In contrast to scanners that compete in speed, the number of signals, and additional features, this service has moved in the direction of enhancing safety.

Here, the emphasis is not on generating the maximum flow of opportunities at any cost, but rather on an attempt to select more cautious situations that are potentially less harmful to the arbitrage bettor.

This is precisely what makes SafeArbs interesting. In theory, almost any scanner wants to appear smart, fast, and profitable. In practice, however, many services simply overwhelm the user with a huge number of betting options, among which there are both good choices and ones that are frankly toxic for a bettor's account. SafeArbs offers a different logic: not to chase after every opportunity, but to work more selectively.

It should be noted right away: the project is very young. It is still a long way from achieving the status of the old industry heavyweights, if only in terms of its time in the niche. But precisely as a new product with a clear philosophy, SafeArbs makes a very good impression.

 

The History of SafeArbs

 

According to information from the team, the service was launched at the end of February 2026. The project's developers are not public figures, but they emphasize that the team is international and has long been working within the bookmaker arbitrage market. Verifying such a claim directly is difficult, as is the case with almost any similar service where the creators do not seek publicity. However, the product itself truly does not look like a random assembly, but rather like a scanner built by people who understand where the real problems lie for arbitrage bettors.

SafeArbs operates only in a web format. There is no separate app at the moment. An Android version is in the plans, but not in the immediate future. However, a mobile version of the site already exists, and it is not a formal adaptation just for show, but a fully functional interface. For the niche of arbitrage scanners, this is an important point, because even in 2026, not all such services are equally comfortable to use on a phone.

Another thing that immediately sets SafeArbs apart from competitors is its international nature. The interface is available in 14 languages right away.

 

Free Surebets

 

SafeArbs has a nice feature: access to surebets up to 1% is open for free, even without registration. This decision immediately changes the first impression of the service.

Usually, scanners follow a more common pattern. First, they force the user to register, then they show a nice interface but hide some data, and only then do they push for payment. Here, the model is different: you can view the basic arbitrage situations right away.

This is a good move not only from a marketing perspective, but also from a trust perspective. A user can see the service's very principle of operation even before purchasing. For a new product, this is especially important.

 

Bookmakers 

 

At the time of preparing this review, SafeArbs works with 24 bookmakers. The list includes both major international brands and individual regional versions of the same bookmakers. This is important because the same brand in different regions can offer different lines, and thus effectively act as a separate source of arbitrage opportunities.

In terms of the number of bookmakers, SafeArbs does not set any records. There are services that claim 100, 150, or 180+ bookmakers. But something else is more important here: SafeArbs is not trying to impress with a number for the sake of the number. Apparently, the team is consciously focusing not on maximizing the pool at any cost, but on a more manageable and higher-quality selection.

From a client's perspective, this can be interpreted in two ways. On one hand, 24 bookmakers is not the kind of figure that shocks the market. On the other hand, if the service is truly built around the idea of safety and pre-match selection, then this scale seems logical. A large number of sources in itself guarantees neither the quality of signals, nor ease of use, nor the longevity of accounts.

Plus, SafeArbs has a convenient filter by bookmaker, so a bettor can quickly assemble the desired combination of bookmakers for their accounts.

 

Sports and Markets

 

Formally, SafeArbs scans all the sports that are available with the connected bookmakers. In practice, however, the vast majority of surebets come from the most liquid areas. First and foremost, this is football. Hockey, boxing, rugby, basketball, and some other sports appear much less frequently.

In arbitrage, value lies not in the names of the sports themselves, but in the actual working markets. If the bulk of the betting options are formed in football and some top-tier competitions, it means the service is going where there is actually something to catch.

Interestingly, the sport is not indicated in the interface of a surebet card. The user sees the league, match, markets, bookmakers, profit, and safety index, but not the sport itself as a separate field. This is not an accident, but part of the product's overall logic. SafeArbs is not trying to turn itself into a "build-your-own mood board." The idea here is different: the service should help you make money, not entertain you with a set of filters. It's a debatable decision, but as long as it doesn't contradict common sense, why not?

This leads to another unusual thing: there is no filter by sport in SafeArbs. For some of the audience, this will be a controversial decision. In the market, many are used to manually selecting only football, only tennis, or only basketball. But SafeArbs has a different philosophy: if the system is already selecting situations, there's no need to further choke the output with your own preferences, especially when it comes to making money, not taste preferences.

In terms of markets, the service has wide coverage. All the main areas are supported: 1X2, handicaps, over/under, both teams to score, team totals, as well as markets for halves, quarters, and other parts of the match. Additionally, corners, cards, and fouls are scanned.
At the same time, SafeArbs consciously avoids certain high-risk areas. Specifically, the service does not scan statistical markets, although analysis of such areas is ongoing. The reason is clear: the probability of error there is higher, which would undermine the basic concept of safety. Following the same logic, Asian totals and handicaps with .25 values are excluded. For experienced bettors, these are not exotic but quite functional tools, but for a broad audience, such lines do indeed carry an increased risk of miscalculation or misunderstanding of the scenario. SafeArbs preferred not to complicate the user's life.

 

Types of Surebets

 

The SafeArbs team claims that at the time this article was prepared, the service scans over 600 types of surebets, and in the near future, the volume of analyzed combinations will exceed 1,000. It sounds ambitious, but not fantastic.
It is important to understand the difference between a marketing figure and real-world practice. If a service says "1000+", that does not mean that a user will see thousands of bright, high-yield, and equally convenient opportunities every day. That is not how the market works. But if we are talking specifically about the diversity of arbitrage combination types, including different markets and outcome combinations, then such a claim seems plausible.

SafeArbs already supports both two-way and three-way surebets. There are plans to expand to multi-way structures, up to seven-outcome ones. For now, these are just plans, not a current feature, and it is important not to confuse the two.
It is also worth noting separately that the service is currently focused strictly on classic surebets. There are no value bets, no middles, and no incomplete surebets in the public part of the product yet.

 

Speed of SafeArbs

 

SafeArbs updates its feed approximately once every 10 minutes. The speed depends on the day of the week and the overall density of the sports calendar. This is not a record-breaking indicator in the market, and there is no point in pretending that this is an ultra-fast monster scanner.
Compared to services that operate in live mode and update data every few seconds, this pace seems slow. But that is not what SafeArbs is about. It does not work in live mode and is focused solely on pre-match. In this model, the logic is different: less racing, less stress, and more of an attempt to select more sensible situations.

If you look at this from a client's perspective, an honest assessment would be this. For those accustomed to live scanners, the speed of SafeArbs will seem modest. For those who consciously work in pre-match and want a calmer mode, a 10-minute update looks like a workable compromise.
Moreover, this is precisely where the service's philosophy shows. SafeArbs is not trying to compete on the "who fires faster" field. It is trying to win in the "who allows you to work longer without unnecessary noise" category.

 

Safety Index

 

The main feature of SafeArbs is the safety index. Almost the entire product logic of the service is built around it.

Each surebet receives a rating on a scale from 1 to 100. The higher the value, the calmer the situation is supposed to be in terms of risks to the account. At the same time, the team itself does not hide an important point: the service guarantees nothing. A bookmaker can block, reduce, or restrict an account regardless. The safety index does not promise invulnerability, but merely tries to reduce the likelihood of unpleasant scenarios.

The evaluation algorithm itself is closed. Among the known factors, the team mentions the bookmaker itself, the time until the event starts, indirect signs of market overload, and the profit size of the surebet. The last point is particularly interesting. In practice, really large surebets often turn out to be either the result of a line error or a situation that is too noticeable for the bookmaker. So the very idea of lowering trust in overly high-yield opportunities seems reasonable.
In the interface, the index is displayed as a visual scale. In addition, you can filter the feed by it. There is also a separate section with the most cautious options, although here too it is worth remembering the same disclaimer: safe does not mean guaranteed safe.

 

Profitable Surebets on SafeArbs

 

This is where the most interesting part begins. The service team emphasizes that SafeArbs does not chase the highest percentages and tries to build the feed around calmer work. According to the administration, the median percentage of surebets on the service is approximately 0.28%, and the average is around 0.59%. The team also claims that surebets of 6%+ and sometimes even up to 20% do occur in the system.
Does this sound plausible? Overall, yes.

If we were looking at yet another scanner with aggressive marketing that promises "usually 3-5%, and often 10%+", it would look suspicious. In real pre-match arbitrage, the majority of working surebets are indeed at low yield values. Especially if the service is also trying to filter out the most toxic and dubious constructions. From this perspective, a median of 0.28% not only does not look strange, but on the contrary seems quite honest.

The flip side is that for an unprepared user, such figures might be disappointing. If someone comes into arbitrage looking for beautiful promises of "5% from every surebet," SafeArbs will quickly bring them back down to earth. Most of the market is more boring than advertising landing pages suggest.
On the other hand, this review would be dishonest if we stopped there. A low median does not mean the service is useless. Firstly, in arbitrage, even small percentages can be quite workable with a systematic approach. Secondly, larger opportunities do indeed occur. While testing paid access, we came across surebets in the range of 6%, so this level seems quite realistic. As for the stories about 20% surebets, they should be perceived precisely as rare peak cases, not as a typical picture of the feed.
In other words, SafeArbs does not look like a scanner for fans of constantly hunting for cosmic percentages. It is more about the long haul, discipline, and understanding that a live account is often more important than a beautiful figure in any single line.

 

Interface and Surebet Card

 

The SafeArbs interface leaves the impression of a fairly clean and polished product. This is not a case where the user is overwhelmed with a dozen side panels, pop-ups, and secondary tools.
The surebet card is laid out concisely. It displays the league, time until the event starts, match participants, profit percentage, safety index, number of outcomes, and the legs themselves, indicating the bookmakers, markets, odds, and calculated bet amounts. Below, the user sees the stake distribution and the final result for each outcome.

An important point: SafeArbs does not try to speed up the user's work through automatic redirects to bookmaker sites. Moreover, there are fundamentally no redirects to bookmakers here. There are also no affiliate links to bookmakers. This is a significant difference for the market. Many scanners are either tied to affiliate programs or at least use redirects that indirectly reveal the traffic source. SafeArbs has abandoned this.
This approach doesn't look very impressive from a marketing perspective, but it is logical in the context of the service's overall idea. The fewer unnecessary traces and external connections between the scanner and the bet, the better.

 

Surebet Calculator

 

The service has a separate surebet calculator. It is not embedded directly into the cards, and this was done deliberately. The calculator operates in two modes: either it helps distribute the stake to lock in a profit regardless of the outcome, or it allows you to consciously give an advantage to a selected leg and increase the income specifically for that desired outcome. This is a useful tool, especially considering that the minimum surebet percentage in SafeArbs can be zero. For some users, this might seem strange: why show zero-yield opportunities at all? But if there is a possibility to competently redistribute the stake and bet by giving an advantage to one of the outcomes, then this logic no longer looks absurd.

 

Filters

 

The set of filters in SafeArbs is not the most extensive, but it hits exactly the concept of the product. The user can filter the feed by bookmakers, number of outcomes, safety index, and profit size. This is enough for basic customization of the flow to fit one's own working style.

At the same time, some options familiar to many are missing here. For example, you cannot filter by sport. You cannot hide individual surebets from the feed. There are no notifications. Some will note this as a drawback and formally they would be right. But the question is different: was SafeArbs even trying to be a universal combine harvester? Apparently, no.

 

Tariffs and Prices

 

With the pricing model at SafeArbs, everything is quite simple. The user pays only for the access time. All functions are available in all tariffs without division into stripped-down and premium versions.
At the time of preparing the review, the following options are available:

  •  Daily -- $2
  •  Weekly -- $7
  •  Monthly -- $15
  •  Half Year -- $70
  •  Annual -- $120
  •  Forever -- $1000 with a daily increase of $3

The Forever tariff itself looks unusual. Formally, this is access for 100 years or until the service ceases operations. According to information on the tariffs page, its price will increase by approximately $3 per day, which turns this tariff into a separate marketing tool with an element of urgency. It is clear that the earlier you purchase it, the less it will cost you.

On one hand, it looks original. On the other hand, this solution always has an obvious question: how sustainable is such a model in the long term? For the client, this offer looks profitable. For the business, it is a bit more debatable. But that is no longer the user's problem, but rather the problem of the service creators.

It is important that in SafeArbs there is no subscription pause. The purchased time runs consecutively. For some of the audience, this will be a minus, especially if a person does not bet every day.

 

Is SafeArbs Suitable for Beginners

 

Yes, and this is precisely one of the strongest paradoxes of the service.

On one hand, SafeArbs was clearly built with the real problems of experienced arbitrageurs in mind: toxic surebets, account longevity, cautious pre-match, avoidance of risky markets. This is more the language of professional work. On the other hand, the interface itself and the pricing model make the service friendly for a beginner. A simple structure, clear filters, no overload of functions, free access to some surebets without registration, a very low entry price point — all this makes SafeArbs a decent starting point for those who are just getting acquainted with arbitrage.

Plus, the service has a detailed educational article. Yes, it is not a huge library of materials and not a whole academy, like some major services have. But there is a basic educational foundation.

 

Disadvantages of SafeArbs

 

The scanner's disadvantages need to be stated directly.

Firstly, the service only works in pre-match. For some of the audience, this is not just a feature, but a full-fledged limitation. If a user is used to live scanners, SafeArbs may seem too calm and even slow.

Secondly, the update speed of around 10 minutes does not look record-breaking. It is understandable for the chosen model, but there are significantly faster solutions on the market.

Thirdly, SafeArbs lacks some features that competitors have long considered standard: there are no notifications, no hiding individual surebets from the feed, and no tariff pause option.

Fourthly, support only works via email, and the stated response time is up to 24 hours. For a product in this niche, this may not always be comfortable, especially if the issue is urgent.

Finally, the project is still very young. This means that its main ideas look promising, but it is still better to finally evaluate them over the long haul. Interesting newcomers with a bright concept have appeared in the arbitrage scanner market more than once, only to later lack the time, scale, or sustainability.

 

Advantages of SafeArbs

 

With all the reservations, the service has a set of truly strong points.

Firstly, it has a clear philosophy. This is a product that is consciously built around a more cautious operating model.

Secondly, the safety index looks like a rare and useful attempt to look at a surebet not only through profit, but also through risk.

Thirdly, SafeArbs consciously refuses certain things that could bring more noise, but would not necessarily bring more benefit: statistical markets, Asian lines, bookmaker affiliate links, direct redirects to bookmaker sites.

Fourthly, the service has a very strong international component: 14 languages is a serious argument.

Fifthly, the pricing model is simple and transparent. The user buys only time, rather than figuring out a multi-level grid of restrictions.

 

Conclusion

 

SafeArbs is one of the most curious new surebet scanners on the market in 2026. Not because it is the fastest. Not because it has the most bookmakers. And not because it promises mountains of gold.
It is interesting for another reason. This is a rare example of a service that tries to sell the user not a dream of infinitely high-yield surebets, but a more mature idea: in arbitrage, it is important not only to find a profitable opportunity, but also not to burn out your operation too soon.
If you need an aggressive flow of signals, a hunt for second-long distortions, and constant work at a high pace, there are other tools. But if you are looking for a pre-match scanner that tries to shift the emphasis from bare profitability to more careful work and account survival, SafeArbs at the very least deserves very close attention.

 

Frequently Asked Questions about SafeArbs

 

Does SafeArbs work in live?
 No. The service is focused only on pre-match, and at the moment live mode is not even stated as a near-term development plan.

 

How many bookmakers are connected to SafeArbs?
 At the time of preparing the review, the service works with 24 bookmakers, including separate regional versions of some brands.

 

Can I try SafeArbs for free?
 Yes. Surebets with a yield of up to 1% are available for free and without registration.

 

Does SafeArbs have a mobile version?
 Yes. The service has a full-fledged mobile version of the site. There is no separate app yet.

 

Does SafeArbs have notifications or automatic redirects to bookmaker sites?
 No. There are no notifications in the current version. There are also no automatic redirects or affiliate links to bookmakers.

 

Interface screenshots

Feedbacks of scanner SafeArbs

A position of administration of the project is that there can't be any substance of the matter which is impossible to solve. So share your opinion, enter into the debate. We are grateful for all feedbacks!

Leave your feedback

Estimating

Pay attention that your questuin will be published after approval by the website administration