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Pmu Malin > Blog > Turf > Burkina Faso Turf
burkina faso turf
Turf

Burkina Faso Turf

JESSICA DEABREU
Last updated: June 18, 2026 5:49 am
By JESSICA DEABREU 12 Min Read
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If you typed “Burkina Faso turf” into Google, you’ve probably landed on two very different kinds of pages: a handful of confused articles about artificial grass for sports fields, and a pile of betting blogs promising guaranteed Tiercé combinations. Neither one actually answers the question. Burkina Faso turf is shorthand for PMU’B, the horse racing betting system run by LONAB, the country’s national lottery. This guide walks through exactly how it works, what each bet type means, and how to avoid the prediction scams that flood this space.

Contents
What Does “Burkina Faso Turf” Actually Mean?A Short History: How LONAB Brought French Racing to Burkina FasoWhy There’s No Racetrack in Burkina FasoPart of a Bigger Regional NetworkHow PMU’s Betting Works, Step by StepWhere You Can Place a BetReading the Journal HippiqueFilling Out a Betting SlipThe Main PMU’B Bet Types, ComparedTurf Glossary: Words You’ll Hear Every DayWhere to Check Real Results and Collect WinningsHow to Spot a Fake “VIP Pronostic” ScamIs Turf Betting Legal in Burkina Faso, and How Do You Play Responsibly?Frequently Asked QuestionsIs there real horse racing inside Burkina Faso?What’s the difference between Tiercé, Quarté, and 4+1?Can I bet on PMU’B online?How long do I have to collect winnings?Is LONAB government-run?

What Does “Burkina Faso Turf” Actually Mean?

Burkina Faso turf refers to PMU’B (Pari Mutuel Urbain Burkina), the horse racing betting game operated by LONAB. Bettors in Burkina Faso wager on races that take place in France, not on local races, since the country has no domestic racetrack. “Turf” is simply the French word for horse racing and the betting culture built around it.

That distinction matters because most of what ranks for this term either misunderstands “turf” entirely or treats it as a daily lottery-style tip sheet. It’s neither. It’s a regulated pool betting product that’s been running in Burkina Faso since 1990, and it’s connected to a much bigger network across French-speaking West Africa.

A Short History: How LONAB Brought French Racing to Burkina Faso

LONAB, the Loterie Nationale Burkinabè, launched PMU’B on May 1, 1990. Decades later, it’s still the lottery’s flagship product by revenue, built around the slogan “la fortune en fin de course,” roughly “fortune at the finish line.” Winners can take home anywhere from a few thousand to several hundred million CFA francs, depending on the bet and the rollover.

Why There’s No Racetrack in Burkina Faso

Running an actual racing circuit means breeding programs, licensed jockeys, veterinary infrastructure, and a steady supply of horses. That’s expensive to build from nothing. It made more sense for LONAB to plug into France’s existing racing calendar, organized by France Galop and Le Trot, and sell betting slips on those races locally. Burkinabè punters bet on races run at French tracks like Vincennes and Deauville, with a roughly two-hour time difference to work around when placing late bets.

Part of a Bigger Regional Network

Burkina Faso isn’t alone in this setup. The same model runs across Francophone Africa: LONACI in Côte d’Ivoire, LONASE in Senegal, PMU Mali, LONAGUI in Guinea, and LONATO in Togo all operate their own version of the same French-race betting pool. If you’ve seen those names mixed in with “Burkina Faso turf” content online, that’s why. They’re siblings, not competitors.

How PMU’s Betting Works, Step by Step

Where You Can Place a Bet

Bets are placed in person at LONAB points of sale across the country, including Ouagadougou, Bobo-Dioulasso, Koudougou, Fada N’Gourma, and Dori. As of 2026, LONAB has not rolled out direct online betting through lonab.bf, so don’t trust any third-party site claiming otherwise. Check lonab.bf yourself before assuming that’s changed.

Reading the Journal Hippique

The journal hippique is the daily race card. It lists the participants (horses entered), their numbers, jockey or driver, recent form, and the cote, which is the odds set by how much money the betting pool puts on each horse. LONAB publishes it as a free daily PDF through its programme page, and it’s also printed at points of sale. Read it before you bet, not after.

Filling Out a Betting Slip

  • Choose your variant: Tiercé, Quarté, or 4+1.
  • Pick horses by their race number, not their name.
  • Decide on a combination: simple (a fixed small set of horses) or complète (every possible order within your chosen horses).
  • Choose champ total (the full field) or champ réduit (a smaller, cheaper subset of runners).
  • Check the slip before you walk away from the counter, and keep it until the official results are published.

The Main PMU’B Bet Types, Compared

Three formats run on different days of the week, and each asks you to predict a different slice of the finish order.

Bet Type Race Days What You Predict Difficulty
Tiercé Wednesday, Saturday Top 3 finishers Moderate
Quarté Monday, Tuesday, Thursday Top 4 finishers Harder
4+1 Friday, Sunday, last Tuesday of the month Top 4 finishers plus one extra pick Hardest, biggest rollovers

You’ll also hear the word “quinté” thrown around constantly. That’s the name of the day’s feature race in France itself, a field of up to 18 to 20 runners where the French PMU asks bettors to pick the top 5. Locally, the term often gets used loosely for whatever the day’s headline race is, even when you’re betting on it through a Tiercé or Quarté slip rather than a true Quinté+ format.

Turf Glossary: Words You’ll Hear Every Day

  • Partant: a horse entered in the race.
  • Cote: the odds, set by how much money the pool puts on each horse.
  • Favori: the horse carrying the most money, the “favorite.”
  • Tocard: a long shot, rarely backed by bettors.
  • Forme: a horse’s recent results and condition.
  • Ordre: getting the exact finishing order right.
  • Désordre: picking the right horses, wrong order, which pays less than ordre.
  • Couplé: picking two horses with no order required.
  • ECD: Espace Course en Direct, LONAB’s live race coverage space.
  • Rapport: the payout per stake unit once a race settles.

Where to Check Real Results and Collect Winnings

Official results come from a handful of verified channels: the LONAB head office and its regional representations, the voice server at 3036, and the LONAB.bf website, PMU’B clubs, and the local hippique press. Winning tickets become payable the day after the race, but only at LONAB cash counters, and only for seven days. After that, the ticket expires and the money is gone, so don’t sit on a winning slip.

How to Spot a Fake “VIP Pronostic” Scam

A legitimate prediction source never guarantees a winning combination. If a page promises a result that’s “rentable à 100%,” only accepts payment through WhatsApp, or won’t say who actually runs it, treat that as a warning sign rather than a shortcut to easy money.

Watch for these patterns before you trust, or pay for, anyone’s “VIP” picks:

  • Language like “guaranteed” or “100% rentable,” which no genuine handicapper can honestly promise on a pool bet.
  • Contact through WhatsApp or Telegram only, with no named business or physical address behind it.
  • No public, checkable track record against LONAB’s actual published results.
  • An upfront subscription fee with no refund policy if the picks miss.
  • Urgency tactics: “offer ends today,” “subscribe now or miss tomorrow’s lock.”
  • Pages stuffed with dozens of unrelated keywords for other countries’ lotteries, LONACI, PMU Mali, LONASE, and so on, which is a sign of a content farm rather than a real handicapping service.

PMU’B is mutual pool betting. Every payout depends on how the entire pool bet that race, not on a fixed formula someone discovered. Treat any tip as one opinion to weigh against the cote and form yourself, not as inside information.

Is Turf Betting Legal in Burkina Faso, and How Do You Play Responsibly?

PMU’B is run directly by LONAB, the state lottery, which makes it a legal, regulated activity in Burkina Faso. Regulated doesn’t mean risk-free, though. Pool betting means the payout depends on the crowd, not a fixed return, and the house edge is built into every bet.

Set a budget before you go to the counter, and treat it as the cap, not a starting point. Think of turf betting as entertainment, not income. Avoid chasing a loss by raising your next stake. If betting starts feeling compulsive, or it’s straining your money or your relationships, talk to someone you trust or a professional about it directly rather than trying to bet your way out.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there real horse racing inside Burkina Faso?

No. Burkina Faso has no domestic racetrack. All PMU’B races take place in France, mainly at venues like Vincennes and Deauville. Burkinabè bettors wager on those races through LONAB outlets, not on any local event.

What’s the difference between Tiercé, Quarté, and 4+1?

Tiercé asks you to find the top 3 finishers, Quarté the top 4, and 4+1 the top 4 plus a fifth pick. Each runs on different days, and difficulty rises with the number of horses you have to nail, which is why 4+1 carries the largest rollover jackpots.

Can I bet on PMU’B online?

As of 2026, LONAB has not launched direct online betting through lonab.bf. Bets are placed in person at LONAB points of sale across the country. Always check lonab.bf directly before assuming that’s changed, rather than trusting a third-party blog.

How long do I have to collect winnings?

Winning tickets are payable starting the day after the race, but only for seven days, and only at LONAB cash counters or representations. After that window closes, the ticket is void, so cash in promptly and double-check your slip before you leave the counter.

Is LONAB government-run?

Yes. LONAB, the Loterie Nationale Burkinabè, is Burkina Faso’s national lottery, and PMU’B has been its leading betting product since 1990.

Burkina Faso turf isn’t complicated once you see it for what it actually is: a regulated link to French horse racing, run through LONAB. Learn the bet types, read the journal hippique before you bet, and treat any “guaranteed” tip with exactly the skepticism it deserves.

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