Written by
Lucas Peps
Edited by
Rob Cudmore
Updated 7 hours ago
10 min read
The point of this page isn’t to sell you a fantasy story about camel racing betting just to push you into signing up somewhere.
Camel racing is a real sport with real calendars, but when it comes to online betting, the situation is still messy. Between regulations, limited coverage, and the fact that a lot of what you’ll see online is actually virtual racing, it’s easy to find misleading claims.
The honest answer: you can’t legally bet on real-world camel racing online. That doesn’t leave you with nothing though, and further down we cover the one option that is actually available today (virtual camel racing). First, if a bookmaker lists camel racing in the next couple of months, it’ll most likely come from one of the big “niche-friendly” sportsbooks. A few examples include:
Or, it could appear on a smaller/local-facing brand, for example:
There’s also a third lane: niche sports prediction / exchange-style platforms that can experiment faster:
Right now, though, betting on real-world camel races is rarely offered online, and when it does appear it’s usually market-by-market and jurisdiction-dependent. In practice, the first camel racing markets most people will see online tends to be virtual camel racing under “Virtual Sports,” not official race-day cards. There are also some offline bookmakers, but they tend to keep a low profile.
Since real race-day betting isn’t offered, the one option you’ll realistically find today is virtual camel racing. It sits under a sportsbook’s “Virtual Sports” tab, runs on a software random number generator, and pays out on fixed odds. It’s available around the clock and doesn’t depend on a real race calendar. Treat it as a simulated product, not a bet on an actual event.
Where online betting is legal for you, the niche-friendly books most likely to carry virtual camel or animal racing are the same big names:
If your local options are thin, two other groups tend to run deep virtual sports catalogues worth checking: crypto bookmakers and Asian bookmakers, both of which often list virtual racing alongside their main sports markets. Whatever you pick, confirm online betting is legal where you actually are before depositing.
Camel racing is still a heritage sport, but in the Gulf it’s clearly being pushed into a more professional, media-ready direction. I wouldn’t call it “global” yet, but I do think it’s moving beyond pure tradition.
It’s still cultural at the core, but it’s being built like a modern sport on top of that.
It’s a tricky question because for people in the Gulf, the problem usually isn’t technology, it’s legality.
My take is that prediction markets don’t really solve it for Gulf residents or tourists, because in most GCC countries they’ll still be viewed as gambling if you’re staking money on a sporting outcome. For example, Qatar’s penal code explicitly criminalizes gambling, with specific articles defining it and setting penalties. Oman’s penal law does the same. Saudi Arabia also goes after gambling-related activity online, including the promotion of gambling content under its Anti-Cyber Crime Law.
For tourists, the key point is simple: the law follows where you are, not what passport you hold. So if you’re physically in Qatar or Saudi, a prediction market doesn’t become a legal “workaround” just because it has a different label.
The one place to watch is the UAE. It’s moving toward a licensed, regulated commercial gaming framework through the federal GCGRA, which explicitly includes areas like internet gaming and sports wagering under a licensing regime, and warns that unlicensed operators are illegal. UAE criminal law still defines and penalizes gambling, so the practical “legal path” is going to be through licensed offerings, not offshore-style access. If a licensed UAE operator ever decided to list camel racing, that’s the closest thing to a realistic solution inside the region. But, it would depend on licensing, data, and whether anyone actually wants to offer those markets.
Even outside the Gulf, prediction markets are not a stable category right now. Regulators are actively fighting over whether sports-style prediction contracts are basically sports betting in disguise, the Nevada vs Kalshi case is a good example of how messy that gets.
| Country | Camel Racing | Online Gambling | Camel Racing Betting |
|---|---|---|---|
| Saudi Arabia | Legal | Prohibited | Not legal |
| UAE | Legal | Licensed only (restricted) | Only possible if a GCGRA licensed sportsbook lists it |
| Qatar | Legal | Prohibited | Not legal |
| Kuwait | Legal | Prohibited | Not legal |
| Bahrain | Legal | Prohibited | Not legal |
Quick explanation (2026 snapshot)
Camel racing is a legal, organized sport across these countries. The blocker is gambling, not racing.
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain treat gambling as illegal under criminal law in practice, so there is no legal, regulated way to bet on camel racing there.
The UAE is the exception: it now has a federal regulator (GCGRA) licensing commercial gaming activities, including internet gaming and sports wagering. Anything outside that licensing framework is illegal. So camel racing betting is not currently available, but UAE is the only region on this list where a legal path can exist if a licensed operator chooses to offer those markets.
Heads up: the 2026 Gulf season ran from December 2025 through April 2026 and has now wrapped. The next season follows the same cool-season cycle, so expect the major festivals again from roughly December 2026 through April 2027. Exact dates and daily race cards are confirmed closer to the time, and we refresh the table below once organisers publish the new calendar. The 2026 dates are kept here as a reliable guide to when each event usually lands.
| Dates (2026) | Event | Where | What it is |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 1–3 (festival started Dec 1, 2025) | King Abdulaziz Camel Festival | Al-Sayahid (Riyadh region), Saudi Arabia | Mega camel festival that includes camel races plus other competitions. |
| Jan 3–22 (season started Oct 27, 2025) | Al Dhafra Festival (Camel Mazayna Season finale) | Al Dhafra region, Abu Dhabi, UAE | Primarily camel beauty (mazayna) + heritage comps; major “camel season” tentpole. |
| Jan 11–22 | Dubai Crown Prince Camel Racing Festival | Al Marmoom Racetrack (DCRC), Dubai, UAE | One of the biggest pure racing festivals in Dubai. |
| Jan 11–Feb 10 | Qatar Camel Festival (“Jazilat Al-Atta”) | Al Mazayen area, Labseer/Al Shahaniya, Qatar | Big month-long camel festival (more heritage/competition than pure racing). |
| From Jan 23 (about 10 days) | Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Camel Festival | Janadriyah Square/track area, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | Major festival with racing and other camel competitions; huge prize pool. |
| Ends Feb 12 (11-day racing festival) | HH the Father Amir Purebred Arabian Camel Racing Festival | Al Shahaniya & Lobsair, Qatar | Confirmed 11-day camel racing festival concluding Feb 12. |
| Apr 2–14 | Al Marmoom Heritage Festival | Dubai Camel Racing Club, UAE | Often treated as a season climax at Al Marmoom (heritage village + major racing program). |
Quick note: camel racing is mostly a cool-season sport in the Gulf, so the “big calendar” clusters from December to April. Dates and daily race cards can shift late.
Not in the way people mean it when they say “league” (one table, one season, one champion, like football). Camel racing is closer to a circuit: big race tracks and major festivals run their own seasons and flagship meetings, mainly in the Gulf. There are governing bodies and organisers, but there isn’t one single global league structure everyone follows.
Yes, but it’s a betting product trend, not a sporting trend. When “camel racing” appears online, it’s often under Virtual Sports (simulated races generated by software). It’s popular with bookmakers because it’s easy to offer 24/7 and doesn’t require the same official data feeds and infrastructure as real races.
It depends entirely on where you are. Camel racing itself is legal and organised in the Gulf, but gambling laws are the main blocker. In much of the region, betting is prohibited or tightly restricted, so real-world camel race betting is not widely offered as a regulated product. Always treat this as jurisdiction-specific, because what’s legal in one country can be illegal in the next.
The biggest, most organised scene is in the Gulf, especially the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia. That’s where you find the most high-profile tracks, festivals, and prize money. Camel racing also exists in other regions (for example parts of South Asia, North/East Africa, and Australia), but the “center of gravity” for modern professional-style racing is the GCC.
A robot jockey is a small lightweight device strapped to the camel that replaces a human rider. It’s typically controlled remotely by the camel’s team during races and can include a small whip mechanism and voice cues. It became the standard in top Gulf racing venues as the sport modernised and tightened welfare and safety expectations.