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Playing US-style bingo instead? Use the 75-ball bingo caller or the 30-ball speed bingo caller.

How 90-ball bingo works

90-ball bingo is the version played across the UK, Ireland, and Australia. A ticket has three rows and nine columns. Each row carries five numbers and four blanks, so every full ticket shows 15 numbers. Column one holds 1–9, column two 10–19, on up to column nine, which holds 80–90. The caller draws balls from 1 to 90.

Most 90-ball games pay out three prizes in a single game: one line (any single completed row on a ticket), two lines (any two completed rows on the same ticket), and full house (all 15 numbers on a ticket). The caller traditionally opens with “Eyes down” to tell players a game is starting.

Where 90-ball bingo is played

  • Clubs and community halls. Project the flashboard, set Auto Call to a relaxed pace, and run a multi-prize game on one laptop.
  • Charity and fundraiser nights. A free replacement for renting a mechanical cage — pair this caller with printed tickets and keep overheads at zero.
  • Care homes and senior centres. Turn on the recorded voice, project on a large screen, and call at a steady pace while walking the room.
  • Family and pub games. Use Bingo Lingo for the full traditional-call experience without needing a caller who has every nickname memorised.

Hear all 90 traditional bingo calls

Tap any number to hear its traditional British call read aloud — “Legs eleven”, “Two little ducks, twenty-two”, “Two fat ladies, eighty-eight”. Every clip is a real recorded voice, not a robotic browser voice, and you can switch them on inside the caller above with Bingo Lingo. For the full list with origins and meanings, see the complete guide to bingo calls.

Running a 90-ball game with this caller

  1. The caller above is already set to 90-ball — the flashboard shows numbers 1 to 90.
  2. Press Auto Call to draw automatically, or click the ball to draw each number by hand.
  3. Open the options to turn on Bingo Lingo for spoken traditional calls.
  4. Click Fullscreen so the whole room can read the called numbers.
  5. When someone calls one line, two lines, or full house, pause and check their ticket against the flashboard.

Frequently asked questions

How does 90-ball bingo work?
A ticket is three rows by nine columns: each row has five numbers and four blanks (15 numbers per ticket). Columns hold 1–9, 10–19, … 80–90. Numbers are drawn 1–90, and games usually pay one line, two lines, and full house.
Is this caller free?
Yes — no ads, no signup, no download. It runs in any browser and projects fullscreen for a hall or club.
Does it call the traditional bingo calls out loud?
Yes. Turn on Bingo Lingo and every number is announced with its traditional call in a recorded voice — “Legs eleven”, “Two fat ladies, eighty-eight”, and so on for all 90. You can also play any single call from the list above.
Can I print 90-ball tickets here?
The Print Cards button prints 75-ball number cards. For 90-ball, use printed or shop-bought tickets with this caller — or create custom themed cards for a non-number game.
What’s the difference between 90-ball and 75-ball bingo?
90-ball (UK/Australia): 3×9 ticket, numbers 1–90, one-line / two-line / full-house. 75-ball (US): 5×5 card with B-I-N-G-O columns and a free centre, pattern wins. There’s also a 30-ball speed caller for fast 3×3 rounds.

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