Two Types of Sports Bettor

There's a clean split in how serious bettors approach tracking.

The first type wants an app to handle everything. They're happy to let Pikkit or Betstamp own their data, build their dashboards inside the platform, and trust the app's analytics. That's fine — those tools exist and they work for that audience.

The second type already lives in spreadsheets. They've built their own models. They have multi-year win/loss history in a Google Sheet they've been maintaining since 2021. They want their own formulas, their own filters, their own views. They're not looking for a new dashboard — they just want their data in their spreadsheet, without spending half an hour on data entry every time they have a busy slate.

This page is for the second type. If you're shopping for a way to track sports bets and you already know the answer is a spreadsheet, read on.

Why Spreadsheet Bettors Are Different

Bettors who gravitate toward spreadsheets tend to share a few traits:

The problem is that none of the mainstream bet trackers were built with this person in mind. They were built to be the destination — not a feeder into your existing workflow.

Your Options, Ranked Honestly

Option 1: Manual Spreadsheet (Google Sheets or Excel)

The original and still widely used approach. You open your sheet, add a row, type in the sportsbook, sport, selection, market, odds, stake, and date — then repeat for every bet.

What it costs in time: A careful manual entry takes 3-5 minutes per bet. At 50 bets per month, that's 2.5-4 hours of data entry. At 100 bets per month, you're looking at 5-8 hours — the equivalent of a part-time side job that produces nothing except the data you already have.

The error problem: Manual entry introduces transcription errors. Odds entered as -115 instead of -150. Stake mistyped. Selection field copied from the wrong row. These errors quietly corrupt your analysis. You don't find out until you're wondering why your P&L doesn't match your sportsbook balance.

When it makes sense: If you place 10-20 bets per month, manual entry is completely manageable. Twenty minutes of data entry a month is a reasonable trade for full control and zero cost. Below that threshold, build the spreadsheet yourself and don't overcomplicate it.

Option 2: Pikkit or Betstamp CSV Exports

Both Pikkit and Betstamp offer some form of data export. In theory, you could use one of these apps to capture your bets and then periodically export to CSV and import into your spreadsheet.

In practice, this is clunky:

This approach adds steps and friction without removing the fundamental problem. You're still doing manual work, just at the import stage instead of the entry stage.

Option 3: S2S Bets (Screenshot → Spreadsheet)

S2S Bets takes a completely different approach. Instead of connecting to your sportsbook account via API (which most offshore books don't support anyway), it reads the bet information directly from a screenshot of your bet slip.

The workflow: place a bet, take a screenshot, open S2S Bets, and the bet details are read and added as a new row in your Google Sheets or Excel file. No typing. No CSV imports. No reformatting. The row shows up in your spreadsheet in seconds.

For high-volume spreadsheet bettors, this is the most significant time saving available. The data goes directly where you want it, in the format you've already built, with no intermediate steps.

S2S Bets is currently in free beta, and because it's screenshot-based, it works with every sportsbook — including all offshore books that API-based trackers can't touch.

The key distinction: S2S Bets doesn't try to be your dashboard. It just puts your data in your spreadsheet. What you do with it from there is entirely up to you.

What to Look for in a Spreadsheet-Friendly Bet Tracker

Not all "spreadsheet integration" is created equal. Before choosing a tool, ask these questions:

Full Comparison: Bet Tracker Options for Spreadsheet Users

Feature Manual Spreadsheet Pikkit Betstamp S2S Bets
Native Google Sheets output Yes (you build it) No — CSV only No — CSV only Yes — writes directly
Native Excel output Yes (you build it) No No Yes — writes directly
Offshore sportsbook support Yes Very limited No Yes — all books
Manual entry required Yes — every bet Partial — some books auto-sync Partial — US books only No — screenshot only
Setup time Moderate (build your own sheet) Fast (app-based) Fast (app-based) Fast — connect your sheet once
Data ownership Full App-owned primarily App-owned primarily Full — your sheet, your data
Cost Free Freemium / paid tiers Freemium / paid tiers Free beta
Works without account linking Yes No No (for auto-sync) Yes — screenshot-based

Our Recommendation

For most spreadsheet bettors placing more than 20-30 bets per month, S2S Bets is the clear choice. The time saving is substantial — 5-8 hours per month at 100 bets drops to near zero — and the data ends up exactly where you want it: in your own spreadsheet, in your own format, available forever.

The Google Sheets bet tracker integration means your existing sheet keeps working exactly as you've built it. S2S Bets just adds rows. Your formulas, filters, and pivot tables continue working without any modification.

If you use Excel instead of Google Sheets, the Excel bet tracker integration works the same way.

If you only bet occasionally — 10-20 bets a month — a manual spreadsheet is still a perfectly valid choice. The time investment is manageable, the cost is zero, and you maintain complete control without depending on any third-party tool. Just be honest about whether your volume will grow. Most serious bettors find it does.

For more on building and maintaining a tracking system, see our full guide library and the overview on how to track sports bets effectively.

Try S2S Bets Free

Screenshot any bet slip. We put it in your spreadsheet automatically.

Join the Free Beta →

No credit card. Works with all sportsbooks including offshore.

Frequently Asked Questions