Mojabet won’t test your patience when getting started. When you go to the website, the “Register” button is right at the top and the moment you press it, it immediately asks for your phone number. There are no extra forms, no extra screens explaining what’s next, or checklists telling you how to use the platform. You can browse through all the games and markets within a minute of starting the sign-up. That’s until you hit the verification wall. I’ll cover that as well. Let’s get started.
There isn’t really a choice here. Using your phone number is the only option, with the country code already prefilled to save you a second. Email isn’t required, nor are time-consuming details like your address, etc. The network operator dropdown sits right under the phone field. There are two options – MTN and Airtel. It defaults to Airtel for me. For the rest, here are the steps.
Step-by-Step Registration Flow
Mojabet won’t annoy you with personal details like:
Nothing blocks you from starting fast. However, all those details will come into play sooner or later. Account verification is not an option with regulated operators like Mojabet and you will have to deal with it like all of us.
Mojabet doesn’t hint at verification at any point – it just wants to get you into the action. You finish registering, you’re already clicking around, odds are loading, games open, and it feels like the account is fully yours. Then you open the account menu, tap Withdraw without even entering an amount, and the tone flips. Mentions of verification, identity checks, and possible delays. That’s the first time Mojabet makes it clear that registration was only the front door.
Up to that point, the site only needed a phone number to let you place bets. Once money is meant to leave the system, they need to know who it’s going back to. The withdrawal screen is where ownership matters — whether the mobile money account matches the name on the profile, whether the person tapping the button is the same person who registered. Nothing here is about browsing or betting anymore. It’s about accountability.
The wording leans heavily on compliance for a reason. Mojabet is licensed locally and has to account for where funds come from and where they go. That’s why verification sits behind withdrawals instead of blocking signup. Let people in quickly, then slow things down only when there’s a payout involved. It’s not hidden, exactly, but it’s not introduced gently either. You only see it once you cross that line, and by then you’re already invested enough to deal with it.
The verification process is standard, so expect Mojabet to require the usual suspects to verify you:
Nothing on the registration screen mentions payment ownership, third-party accounts, or names needing to line up. You only run into it once payments are part of the picture. Buried in the rules, the wording turns sharp: deposits and withdrawals must be made from an account in your own name. Not a relative’s wallet. Not a friend’s number. Not a shared SIM. If the sender details don’t match the account holder, things stop. Withdrawals get held. Winnings can be locked while they check.
By the time all of this clicks, you’re usually already past registration. Your account already exists, and bets have been placed. Verification only becomes “a thing” when you try to move money the other way and the site starts asking questions it didn’t care about earlier. At that point, you’re not deciding whether to sign up anymore – you’re just checking whether everything lines up well enough to get paid.
Things that actually matter once you’re past the signup screen:
Most of this only becomes obvious after registering and it can feel like a trap. If you go in prepared, you will save time and you will save frustration, so be smart about it.