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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
		<link>https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85/</link>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
 </p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
		<link>https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-2/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-3/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-3/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-4/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-4/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-5/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
 </p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-5/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
		<link>https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-6/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
<p data-end="11688" data-start="11665">
 false advertising, </p>
<p data-end="11706" data-start="11691">
 Youth exposure </p>
<p data-end="11740" data-start="11709">
 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
<p data-end="11956" data-start="11742">
 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
<p data-end="12149" data-start="11958">
 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
<p data-end="12331" data-start="12207">
 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="12462" data-start="12349">
 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
<p data-end="12547" data-start="12465">
 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
<p data-end="12628" data-start="12550">
 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="12749" data-start="12648">
 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
<p data-end="12830" data-start="12752">
 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
<p data-end="13006" data-start="12864">
 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
<p data-end="13075" data-start="13009">
 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="13226" data-start="13101">
 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
<p data-end="13344" data-start="13229">
 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
<p data-end="13398" data-start="13347">
 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13535" data-start="13419">
 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
<p data-end="13628" data-start="13538">
 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
<p data-end="13698" data-start="13631">
 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
<p data-end="13835" data-start="13719">
 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
<p data-end="14003" data-start="13838">
 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
<p data-end="14084" data-start="14006">
 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
<p data-end="14227" data-start="14170">
 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
<p data-end="14268" data-start="14232">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14318" data-start="14274">
 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
<p data-end="14365" data-start="14323">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14419" data-start="14371">
 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
<p data-end="14454" data-start="14424">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14654" data-start="14460">
 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
<p data-end="14691" data-start="14659">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14739" data-start="14697">
 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
<p data-end="14782" data-start="14744">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14839" data-start="14788">
 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
<p data-end="14870" data-start="14844">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="14965" data-start="14876">
 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
<p data-end="15176" data-start="15036">
 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
<p data-end="15194" data-start="15178">
 What can you do? </p>
<p data-end="15288" data-start="15197">
 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
<p data-end="15336" data-start="15291">
 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
<p data-end="15393" data-start="15339">
 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
<p data-end="15544" data-start="15452">
 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
<p data-end="15572" data-start="15547">
 limits (deposit/session), </p>
<p data-end="15585" data-start="15575">
 time-outs, </p>
<p data-end="15614" data-start="15588">
 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
<p data-end="15646" data-start="15617">
 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
<p data-end="15788" data-start="15648">
 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
<p data-end="16042" data-start="15814">
 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
<p data-end="16277" data-start="16044">
  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
<p data-end="16406" data-start="16279">
 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
<p data-end="16628" data-start="16408">
 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
<p data-end="16877" data-start="16630">
 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
<p data-end="17027" data-start="16879">
 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
</h1>
<p>
 </p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-6/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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		<title>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</title>
		<link>https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-7/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2026 20:30:28 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+) Important: It is commonplace for gamblers to be 18and over in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is educational and doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos and does not promote gambling. It focuses on the [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-7/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1> European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</h1>
<p data-end="446" data-start="119">
 <strong>Important:</strong> It is commonplace for gamblers to be <strong>18and over</strong> in Europe (specific rules for age and gambling can differ by country). It is <strong>educational</strong> and <strong>doesn&#8217;t recommend casinos</strong> and does <strong>not promote gambling</strong>. It focuses on <strong>the reality of regulatory regulation</strong>, <strong>how to assess legitimacy</strong>, <strong>consumer protection</strong> and <strong>reduce risk</strong>. </p>
<h3>
 What is the reason &#8220;European casino sites&#8221; is a thorny word </h3>
<p data-end="875" data-start="812">
 &#8220;European online casinos&#8221; looks like a massive market. It&#8217;s just not. </p>
<p data-end="1227" data-start="877">
 Europe is an amalgamation of <strong>gambling laws and frameworks across the nation</strong>. The EU itself has repeatedly pointed in the past that gaming within EU countries is characterised by <strong>numerous regulatory frameworks</strong> and questions regarding the cross-border nature of gambling usually come from national laws and how they fit with EU statutes and court decisions. </p>
<p data-end="1336" data-start="1229">
 When a website says it is &#8220;licensed by Europe,&#8221; the key issue is not &#8220;is it European?&#8221; but: </p>
<p data-end="1372" data-start="1340">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>Which regulator licensed it?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1436" data-start="1375">
 <strong>Can it be legally permitted to serve players in</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>your country?</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1509" data-start="1439">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What protections for players as well as payment rules apply under that rules?</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="1626" data-start="1511">
 This is so because the same operator can act in different ways depending on the kind of market they have been licensed to operate for. </p>
<h2>
 How European regulation works (the &#8220;models&#8221; they&#8217;ll get to) </h2>
<p data-end="1762" data-start="1701">
 Through Europe In Europe, you&#8217;ll typically see these market models in Europe: </p>
<h3>
 1) Ring-fenced national license (common) </h3>
<p data-end="2039" data-start="1811">
 A country requires operators to hold the <strong>licence local</strong> so that they can provide services to residents. Unlicensed companies could be blocked, fined, or otherwise restricted. Regulators typically enforce advertising regulations and compliance obligations. </p>
<h3>
 2) Frameworks mixed or in development </h3>
<p data-end="2234" data-start="2077">
 Certain markets are changing: new laws, changes to the advertising regulations, extending or restricting the categories of products, a change to requirement for deposit limits. </p>
<h3>
 3) &#8220;Hub&#8221; licensing, which is utilized by operators (with cautions) </h3>
<p data-end="2742" data-start="2292">
 Certain operators are licensed in countries that are widely used in Europe&#8217;s remote gaming industry (for instance, Malta). According to the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) provides information on when a B2C Gaming Service License is required for providing remote gaming services out of Malta through the Maltese company that is a legal entity. <br /> However, even a &#8220;hub&#8221; licencing <strong>does not automatically</strong> indicate that the operator is legally compliant throughout Europe &#8212; the local laws still matters. </p>
<h2>
 The idea behind it is that a licence is not only a marketing symbol &#8212; it&#8217;s a target for verification </h2>
<p data-end="2868" data-start="2831">
 A legitimate operator should offer: </p>
<p data-end="2893" data-start="2871">
 The <strong>name of the regulator</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2928" data-start="2896">
 a <strong>license number or reference</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="2969" data-start="2931">
 the <strong>company&#8217;s name as a licensed entity</strong> (company) </p>
<p data-end="3049" data-start="2972">
 The <strong>the licensed domain(s)</strong> (important: licence may apply to specific domains) </p>
<p data-end="3137" data-start="3051">
 And you should be in a position to verify this information with regulatory resources from an official source. </p>
<p data-end="3260" data-start="3139">
 If websites only display the generic &#8220;licensed&#8221; logo but with no regulation name or license referent, treat it as an indication of a red flag. </p>
<h2>
 Key European regulators and what their standards imply (examples) </h2>
<p data-end="3479" data-start="3337">
 Below are some of the most highly-respected regulators and what makes people are interested in these regulators. This isn&#8217;t a list of ranking it&#8217;s just a way to understand what you may observe. </p>
<h3>
 United Kingdom: UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) </h3>
<p data-end="3955" data-start="3531">
 The UKGC publishes &#8220;Remote gambling and software technical standards (RTS)&#8221; &#8212; technical standards and security requirements of licensed operators for remote betting as well as gambling software companies. The UKGC RTS page reveals that it is up-to-date and includes &#8220;Last updated: the 29th of January in 2026.&#8221; <br /> The UKGC also has a page providing information on upcoming RTS changes. </p>
<p data-end="4154" data-start="3957">
 <strong>Meaning of HTML0 for the consumer:</strong> UK licensed products tend to be accompanied by clear technical and security requirements as well as a formal compliance oversight (though the exact requirements depend on the product and operator). </p>
<h3>
 Malta: Malta Gaming Authority (MGA) </h3>
<p data-end="4420" data-start="4196">
 The MGA explains that a B2C Gaming Service Licence is required whenever a Maltese or EU/EEA-based entity provides gaming services &#8220;from Malta&#8221; to a Maltese person, or through an Maltese lawful entity. </p>
<p data-end="4614" data-start="4422">
 <strong>Practical meaning as a consumer:</strong> &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; is a verified claim (when true) However, it doesn&#8217;t guarantee whether the provider is authorised to serve <strong>your</strong> country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden: Spelinspektionen (Swedish Gambling Authority) </h3>
<p data-end="4906" data-start="4674">
 Spelinspektionen&#8217;s website focuses on areas like responsible gambling and illegal gambling enforcement, as well as Anti-money-laundering expectations (including registration and identification verification). </p>
<p data-end="5111" data-start="4908">
 <strong>Practical implications for players:</strong> If a service seeks Swedish gamblers, Swedish licensing is typically the primary compliance signalas is the fact that Sweden explicitly emphasizes responsible gaming and AML control. </p>
<h3>
 France: ANJ (Autorite Nationale des Jeux) </h3>
<p data-end="5644" data-start="5159">
 ANJ provides a description of its role in to protect players, by ensuring that authorized operators comply with their obligations, and fighting illegal websites and money laundering. <br /> France will an excellent case study of why &#8220;Europe&#8221; isn&#8217;t uniform: reporting in the business press points out that in France <strong>online betting on sports lottery, poker and sports betting are legal</strong> as well as <strong>online gambling games are not</strong> (casino games are tied to land-based venues). </p>
<p data-end="5782" data-start="5646">
 <strong>Meaning for consumers:</strong> A site being &#8220;European&#8221; does not mean it&#8217;s an online casino option that is legal in every European country. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands: Kansspelautoriteit (KSA) </h3>
<p data-end="6154" data-start="5826">
 The Netherlands introduced a remote gambling licensing system through its Remote Gambling Act (often referenced as coming into effect in 2021). <br /> There is also a report on licensing rules that will be changed effective <strong>1. January, 2026</strong> (for applications). </p>
<p data-end="6313" data-start="6156">
 <strong>The practical meaning and implications for customers</strong> laws in the country may evolve, and enforcement practices can be tighter. It&#8217;s worth making sure you are aware of the current guidelines for regulators within your country. </p>
<h3>
 Spain: DGOJ (Direccion General de Ordenacion del Juego) </h3>
<p data-end="6785" data-start="6375">
 Spanish online gambling is regulated by the Spanish Gambling Act (Law 13/2011) and is supervised by the DGOJ according to the way it is described in compliance summaries. <br /> Spain additionally has materials for self-regulation in the industry, like the gambling advertising code of conduct (Autocontrol) that outline how to conduct advertising in a manner which are applicable across the nation. </p>
<p data-end="6960" data-start="6787">
 <strong>Meanings that consumers can understand:</strong> limits on sales and compliance expectations vary sharply by country &#8220;allowed promotions&#8221; in one place can be illegal in another. </p>
<h2>
 A practical legitimacy checklist for<br />
  any<br />
 “European online casino” website </h2>
<p data-end="7081" data-start="7047">
 This can be used as a safety first filter. </p>
<h3>
 Identification and licensing </h3>
<p data-end="7163" data-start="7112">
 <strong>Regulator named</strong> <a href="https://thecloakanddagger.co.uk/">online casinos europe</a> (not simply &#8220;licensed as licensed in Europe&#8221;) </p>
<p data-end="7220" data-start="7166">
 <strong>Number of licence reference</strong> as well as <strong>legal entity&#8217;s name</strong>
</p>
<p data-end="7318" data-start="7223">
 The domain you&#8217;re currently on is part of the licence (if the regulator releases domain lists) </p>
<h3>
 Transparency </h3>
<p data-end="7389" data-start="7339">
 Complete company information, support channels, and terms </p>
<p data-end="7442" data-start="7392">
 Deposit/withdrawal policies and procedures, as well as verification </p>
<p data-end="7468" data-start="7445">
 Clear complaint process </p>
<h3>
 Consumer protection signals </h3>
<p data-end="7589" data-start="7504">
 Alternate gate as well as identity verification (timing differs, however all genuine operators do have a process) </p>
<p data-end="7677" data-start="7592">
 Deposit limits / spending restrictions or time-out options (availability is dependent on the program) </p>
<p data-end="7712" data-start="7680">
 Responsible gambling information </p>
<h3>
 Hygiene and security </h3>
<p data-end="7805" data-start="7737">
 HTTPS, no weird redirects and no &#8220;download our app&#8221; through random URLs </p>
<p data-end="7852" data-start="7808">
 You are not required to grant remote access to your device </p>
<p data-end="7936" data-start="7855">
 There&#8217;s no pressure to pay &#8220;verification fee&#8221; or send funds to personal accounts/wallets </p>
<p data-end="7998" data-start="7938">
 If a website does not meet two or more of these, you should consider it high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 The single most important operational concept is KYC/AML and &#8220;account matching&#8221; </h2>
<p data-end="8168" data-start="8087">
 Across regulated markets, you are likely to see verifying requirements driven by </p>
<p data-end="8181" data-start="8171">
 age checks </p>
<p data-end="8211" data-start="8184">
 identity verification (KYC) </p>
<p data-end="8241" data-start="8214">
 anti-money-laundering (AML) </p>
<p data-end="8406" data-start="8243">
 Regulators such as Sweden&#8217;s Spelinspektionen explicitly refer to identity verification as well as AML as part of their main areas of focus. </p>
<p data-end="8459" data-start="8408">
 <strong><br />
  <strong>What this means in plain English (consumer side):</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
<p data-end="8511" data-start="8462">
 It is possible that withdrawals will be subject to confirmation. </p>
<p data-end="8586" data-start="8514">
 Remember that your payment methods names and details need to match the one on your account. </p>
<p data-end="8656" data-start="8589">
 Be prepared for the possibility that unusual or big transactions may require additional scrutiny. </p>
<p data-end="8739" data-start="8658">
 It&#8217;s not &#8220;a casino that&#8217;s causing trouble&#8221; it&#8217;s part regulated financial controls. </p>
<h2>
 Payments across Europe are a common sight and what&#8217;s not, and what is important to know </h2>
<p data-end="8910" data-start="8817">
 European payment preferences vary heavily by country, yet the basic categories are essentially the same </p>
<p data-end="8925" data-start="8914">
 Debit cards </p>
<p data-end="8941" data-start="8928">
 Transfers to banks </p>
<p data-end="8953" data-start="8944">
 E-wallets </p>
<p data-end="8999" data-start="8956">
 Local bank methods (country-specific rails) </p>
<p data-end="9035" data-start="9002">
 Mobile billing (often with low limits) </p>
<p data-end="9076" data-start="9037">
 A neutral payment &#8220;risk/fuss&#8221; snapshot: </p>
<table data-end="9538" data-start="9078">
<tr data-end="9172" data-start="9078">
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Railway payment</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Typical deposit speed</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common withdrawal friction</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
<td>
<p>
     <strong><br />
      <strong>Common consumer risks</strong><br />
     </strong>
    </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9274" data-start="9193">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9206" data-start="9193">
<p>
     Debit card     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9213" data-start="9206">
<p>
     Fast     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9222" data-start="9213">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9274" data-start="9222">
<p>
     Bank blocks, confusion about refunds/chargebacks     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9367" data-start="9275">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9291" data-start="9275">
<p>
     Transfers to banks     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9300" data-start="9291">
<p>
     Slower     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9314" data-start="9300">
<p>
     Medium-High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9367" data-start="9314">
<p>
     Processing delays, wrong details/reference issues     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9447" data-start="9368">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9379" data-start="9368">
<p>
     E-wallet     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9393" data-start="9379">
<p>
     Fast-Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9402" data-start="9393">
<p>
     Medium     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9447" data-start="9402">
<p>
     Fees for providers, verification of accounts holds     </p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr data-end="9538" data-start="9448">
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9465" data-start="9448">
<p>
     Mobile billing     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9488" data-start="9465">
<p>
     Fast (small amounts)     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="sm" data-end="9495" data-start="9488">
<p>
     High     </p>
</td>
<td data-col-size="md" data-end="9538" data-start="9495">
<p>
     Low limits, disputes can be complicated     </p>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p data-end="9625" data-start="9540">
 It&#8217;s not a suggestion to apply any technique, it&#8217;s an option to be able to see where difficulties will occur. </p>
<h3>
 Currency traps (very typical in cross-border Europe) </h3>
<p data-end="9760" data-start="9683">
 If you deposit in one currency, but your bank account has to be in another currency, you could get: </p>
<p data-end="9790" data-start="9763">
 spreads, or fees for conversion </p>
<p data-end="9816" data-start="9793">
 Confusing final totals </p>
<p data-end="9895" data-start="9819">
 or &#8220;double conversion&#8221; in the event that multiple intermediaries are involved. </p>
<p data-end="10024" data-start="9897">
 <strong>Safety tip:</strong> keep currency consistent whenever you can (e.g., EUR-EUR or GBP-GBP) and go through the confirmation screen thoroughly. </p>
<h2>
 &#8220;Europe-wide&#8221; legal fact: access to cross-borders is not guaranteed </h2>
<p data-end="10202" data-start="10102">
 A major misconception is &#8220;If that license was issued by the EU country, it has to be safe everywhere within the EU.&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="10400" data-start="10204">
 EU institutions explicitly acknowledge the fact that regulation of online gambling is specific to Member States, and the interaction with EU law is shaped by the law of case. </p>
<p data-end="10534" data-start="10402">
 <strong>Practical advice:</strong> legality is often determined by the player&#8217;s country and if the company is licensed for the market in which it operates. </p>
<p data-end="10560" data-start="10536">
 This is why you can look up: </p>
<p data-end="10611" data-start="10563">
 certain countries that allow certain products on the internet, </p>
<p data-end="10647" data-start="10614">
 other countries restricting them, </p>
<p data-end="10730" data-start="10650">
 and enforcement tools, such as block sites with no licenses or limiting advertising. </p>
<h2>
 Scam-related patterns that cluster around &#8220;European online casino&#8221; searches </h2>
<p data-end="10912" data-start="10809">
 Because &#8220;European online casino&#8221; will be used as a general phrase and a magnet for broad claims. Common scam patterns: </p>
<h3>
 Fake &#8220;licence&#8221; claims </h3>
<p data-end="10985" data-start="10942">
 &#8220;Licensed with the EU&#8221; Europe&#8221; without any regulatory name </p>
<p data-end="11067" data-start="10988">
 &#8220;Curacao/Anjouan/Offshore&#8221; claims presented as if they were European regulators </p>
<p data-end="11117" data-start="11070">
 regulatory logos that don&#8217;t have a link to verification </p>
<h3>
 Fake customer service </h3>
<p data-end="11183" data-start="11147">
 &#8220;Support&#8221; only via Telegram/WhatsApp </p>
<p data-end="11279" data-start="11186">
 employees who ask for OTP codes or passwords, remote access, or crypto transfer to wallets of personal accounts </p>
<h3>
 Exortion withdrawal </h3>
<p data-end="11345" data-start="11308">
 &#8220;Pay a fee for unlocking your withdrawal&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11382" data-start="11348">
 &#8220;Pay taxes first&#8221; for the release of funds </p>
<p data-end="11423" data-start="11385">
 &#8220;Send the deposit to verify the account&#8221; </p>
<p data-end="11533" data-start="11425">
 For consumers who are regulated in their financial transactions &#8220;pay to unlock your payday&#8221; is a common fraud signal. It is a high-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Advertising and youth exposure: the reason Europe is tightening its rules </h2>
<p data-end="11662" data-start="11607">
 Over Europe Policymakers and regulators focus on: </p>
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 false advertising, </p>
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 Youth exposure </p>
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 aggressive incentive marketing. </p>
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 For example, France has been reporting as well as debating issues related to harmful marketing and illegal offerings (and not forgetting that certain products aren&#8217;t legal online within France). </p>
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 <strong>Takeaway for consumers:</strong> if a site&#8217;s primary goal is &#8220;fast cash,&#8221; luxury lifestyle imagery or techniques that use pressure, it&#8217;s a warning signalregardless of the location it claims to be licensed. </p>
<h2>
 Country snapshots (high-level non-exhaustive) </h2>
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 Below is a concise &#8220;what changes by country&#8221; overview. Always be sure to read the most recent official regulations guidelines for your place of business. </p>
<h3>
 UK (UKGC) </h3>
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 High-tech security standards (RTS) for remote operators </p>
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 Ongoing RTS Updates and change of schedules </p>
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 Practical: Expect a structured compliance and also expect verification requirements. </p>
<h3>
 Malta (MGA) </h3>
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 The licensing structure for remote gaming services defined by MGA </p>
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 Practical: a common licensing hub that doesn&#8217;t affect the legality in the player&#8217;s home country. </p>
<h3>
 Sweden (Spelinspektionen) </h3>
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 A public emphasis on responsible gambling in the United States, enforcement of illegal gaming, The AML program and identification verification </p>
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 Practical: If a site wants to be a target for Sweden, Swedish licensing is vital. </p>
<h3>
 Netherlands (KSA) </h3>
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 Remote Gambling Act enabling licensing is frequently cited in the regulatory overviews </p>
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 License application rules to be changed effective 1 January 2026 have been confirmed </p>
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 Practical: a changing framework and active oversight. </p>
<h3>
 Spain (DGOJ) </h3>
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 Spanish Gambling Act and DGOJ oversight are cited in compliance summaries. </p>
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 Advertising codes are in existence and are country-specific </p>
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 Practical: Compliance with national with advertising and compliance rules may be strict. </p>
<h3>
 France (ANJ) </h3>
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 ANJ establishes its mission as defending players and fighting illicit gambling </p>
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 Online casino games are not generally legal in France; legal online offerings are narrower (sports betting/poker/lotteries) </p>
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 Concise: &#8220;European casino&#8221; marketing could be misleading for French residents. </p>
<h2>
 A &#8220;verify before you trust&#8221; walkthrough (safe real-world, practical, non-promotional) </h2>
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 If you&#8217;re looking for a repeatable method of confirming legitimacy: </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find who is the legal entity responsible for operating the site.</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 It should be mentioned in Terms &amp; Conditions and footer. </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Find the regulator&#8217;s name and license reference</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 It&#8217;s not just &#8220;licensed.&#8221; Check for a name-brand regulator. </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Verify official sources</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 Utilize the official website and contact information of the regulator where possible (e.g., UKGC pages for standards; ANJ and Spelinspektionen provide official information on institutions). </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Check the domain consistency</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 Most scams utilize &#8220;look-alike&#8221; domains. </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Read withdrawal/verification terms</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 You&#8217;re looking for a clear set of rules but not flimsy promises. </p>
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 <strong><br />
  <strong>Examine for scam languages</strong><br />
 </strong>
</p>
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 &#8220;Pay fee to unlock payout&#8221; &#8220;instant VIP unlock,&#8221; &#8220;support only via Telegram&#8221; High-risk. </p>
<h2>
 Data protection and privacy across Europe (quick reality lookup) </h2>
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 Europe has strong data protection regulations (GDPR) However, GDPR compliance does not provide a assurance. A shady site can copy-paste a privacy policy. </p>
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 What can you do? </p>
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 do not upload sensitive information unless you&#8217;ve verified your license and domain legitimacy. </p>
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 Use strong passwords as well as 2FA if it is available. </p>
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 Be on the lookout for phishing attempts on the basis of &#8220;verification.&#8221; </p>
<h2>
 Responsible gambling: the &#8220;do nothing to harm&#8221; method </h2>
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 Even if gambling is legalized, it could be harmful for some players. The majority of regulated markets encourage: </p>
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 limits (deposit/session), </p>
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 time-outs, </p>
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 self-exclusion mechanisms, </p>
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 as well as safer-gambling and gaming messaging. </p>
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 If you&#8217;re under 18 The most secure policy is simple: <strong>don&#8217;t gamble</strong> -as well as don&#8217;t share financial methods or identity documents online gambling sites. </p>
<h2>
 FAQ (expanded) </h2>
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 <strong>Do you have a common EU-wide online casino licence?</strong> <br /> No. The EU recognizes the fact that online gambling regulations vary across Member States and shaped by cases and national frameworks. </p>
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  Does &#8220;MGA licensed&#8221; means that it is legal across every European jurisdiction? <br /> Not automatically. MGA is a licensed entity that provides gaming services in Malta but the legality for player countries is not always the same. </p>
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 <strong>How do I recognize the fake licence claim easily?</strong> <br /> No regulator name + no licence reference without a verifiable source (high risk). </p>
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 <strong>What is the reason that withdrawals typically require ID checks?</strong> <br /> Because controlled operators must meet identity verification and AML expectations (regulators explicitly refer to these controls). </p>
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 <strong>Is &#8220;European online casino&#8221; legal in France?</strong><br /> France&#8217;s regulated online offer is narrower; industry reporting notes that online casino games are not legal in France (sports betting/poker/lotteries are). </p>
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 <strong>What&#8217;s your most frequent payment error that crosses borders?</strong> <br /> Currency conversion is a surprise and often leads to confusion &#8220;deposit method and withdrawal methods.&#8221; </p>
</p>
<h1>
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<p>
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<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro/european-online-casinos-licensing-regulation-85-7/">European Online Casinos: Licensing Regulation, Player Security and Payments, as well as Major Differences across Europe (18+)</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://proiectarebucatarii.ro">Proiectare Bucatarii</a>.</p>
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