This page lists the cookies we set, why, and how long they stick around. It pairs with our privacy policy — the privacy policy explains what data we collect; this page explains the cookie mechanics.
A cookie is a small text file a website asks your browser to store. The next time you visit, the browser sends the cookie back, so the site can recognise you, remember a preference, or measure how the page is used. Cookies can't read files off your device — they only contain what the site originally wrote into them.
Required for the site to function — your consent choice, session continuity, and basic security. These cannot be switched off.
Google Analytics 4 and the Google Tag Manager dataLayer record which pages you visit, how long you stay and which links you click. We use this in aggregate to fix bugs and make the site faster.
Affiliate attribution cookies record that you clicked a sportsbook link from our site, so operators can credit us if you go on to sign up. They don't profile you, and they don't follow you across unrelated sites.
Stores your favourite teams and display preferences in your browser's localStorage so the site remembers them on your next visit. This data never leaves your device.
| Name | Purpose | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| f24_consent | Stores your cookie consent choice. | 12 months |
| _ga | Google Analytics — distinguishes unique visitors. | 2 years |
| _ga_* | Google Analytics 4 — session state per property. | 2 years |
| _gid | Google Analytics — distinguishes users within a day. | 24 hours |
| f24_aff | Affiliate click attribution for our partners. | 30 days |
| f24_fav (localStorage) | Your favourite teams and leagues. | Until cleared |
You can change your consent choice at any time by clearing this site's data in your browser — the consent banner will reappear on your next visit and you can pick again. You can also block or delete cookies through your browser settings (Chrome, Safari, Firefox and Edge all expose this under Settings → Privacy). Note that blocking strictly necessary cookies will break parts of the site.
Some pages embed content from outside services, which set their own cookies under their own policies: