What licences do offshore casinos hold? In practice, the sites GB players reach when they leave the UKGC-regulated market are running under one of three regimes: Curaçao eGaming, Anjouan Gaming, or the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA). The UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) is the fourth name you'll see quoted, but UKGC-licensed brands aren't 'offshore' from a GB player's point of view — they're the domestic standard everyone else is measured against.
Each of those regulators sets a very different bar for player protection. Below I'll walk through what each licence actually means, how to verify one, and which offers the strongest safety net if a dispute goes wrong.
What licences do offshore casinos hold, and what each one means
Across the operators I've reviewed — BetPanda, Cryptorino, Lucki.Casino, Kaasino, Gxmble, MyStake, Winstler, 1Red, Seven.Casino, Donbet, Goldenbet, Freshbet, TenoBet, MadCasino and SpinTime — the licence in the footer is almost always one of the following:
- UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) — the strictest of the four. Mandatory GAMSTOP integration, affordability checks, deposit limits, advertising rules, and access to the Independent Betting Adjudication Service (IBAS) for disputes.
- Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) — the strongest of the genuinely 'offshore' options for a GB player. Segregated player funds, a formal complaints process, and a regulator that does suspend licences in practice.
- Curaçao eGaming — the most common licence behind crypto-friendly casinos. Recently restructured under the Curaçao Gaming Authority (CGA), it's lighter-touch on player protection and complaint resolution is patchier.
- Anjouan Gaming — issued from the Comoros. Cheap and quick for operators to obtain, with minimal day-to-day oversight. Treat it as the lowest tier.
None of these offshore licences include GAMSTOP. If you've self-excluded in the UK, an offshore site won't block you — that's on you to manage.
Does a casino need a licence — and what is an 'offshore' casino anyway?
Yes. Any operator taking real-money bets needs a licence from somewhere; running unlicensed is illegal in every serious jurisdiction. An 'offshore casino', from a GB perspective, simply means a site that isn't licensed by the UKGC. It may still be perfectly legal where it's based — it just isn't regulated by the UK.
That distinction matters because UK consumer protections (GAMSTOP, the Gambling Commission's complaint route, ASA advertising rules) don't apply offshore. You're relying on whatever the issuing regulator enforces.
How to check a casino licence properly
The footer claim isn't proof. Verify it yourself in two minutes:
- Scroll to the casino's footer and click the licence seal — a real one links through to the regulator's register, not a static image.
- Search the operator's company name on the regulator's public licensee list (UKGC, MGA, CGA, or Anjouan).
- Cross-check that the company name on the licence matches the company named in the casino's Terms and Conditions. Mismatches are a red flag.
- Confirm the licence is 'active', not 'suspended' or 'revoked'.
If the seal doesn't click through, or the licensee name doesn't match the T&Cs, walk away. That single check rules out a fair share of dodgy sites.
Which licence offers the strongest player protection
Ranked on what actually happens when something goes wrong: UKGC > MGA > Curaçao > Anjouan. UKGC and MGA both run formal complaint procedures and will lean on operators; Curaçao has improved post-reform but enforcement is inconsistent; Anjouan, in my experience, is effectively a paperwork exercise.
Payment method doesn't change that hierarchy. Whether you're depositing in BTC, ETH, USDT, LTC, XRP, DOGE, BNB, or via Visa, Skrill or Neteller, the licence is what determines your recourse — not the rails the money rode in on. Crypto deposits in particular have no chargeback option, so the regulator behind the site is doing all the heavy lifting if a withdrawal stalls.
If you want a shortlist of offshore sites I've actually tested against these criteria, see my ranked offshore casinos for GB players guide.
UK gambling licence costs and adjacent questions
A few related things I get asked a lot:
- UK gambling licence cost — application and annual fees are tiered by operator size and gambling type; the UKGC publishes the current schedule. A full online casino licence runs into tens of thousands of pounds annually for any operator of meaningful size, on top of compliance overhead.
- Opening a casino in the UK — beyond the licence, you're looking at premises, software certification, AML systems and staff training. It is not a cheap business to start, which is partly why the offshore market exists.
- Licence duration — UKGC operating licences don't 'expire' on a fixed term; they remain in force while annual fees and compliance are met. MGA licences typically run for 5 years and are renewable.
- Raffles and bingo — small private raffles and members' bingo are often exempt, but anything public or commercial usually needs a licence or a registered lottery. Check the Gambling Commission's guidance for your specific setup.
- Easiest country to get a licence — Anjouan and Curaçao are the quickest and cheapest, which is exactly why they dominate the offshore market and why you should scrutinise sites holding only those licences.
Gambling is for adults aged 18+ only and should always be treated as entertainment, not a way to make money. If your play stops feeling fun, set deposit limits, take a break, or reach out to GamCare (0808 8020 133) or BeGambleAware for free, confidential support.
For the sites that clear these checks, see our ranked list of best uk non gamstop casinos.
If gambling stops feeling like fun
Gambling is for adults aged 18+ only and should always be treated as entertainment, not a way to make money. If your play stops feeling fun, set deposit limits, take a break, or reach out to GamCare (0808 8020 133) or BeGambleAware for free, confidential support.