How to Check Whether an Online Casino Is UKGC Licensed

The Gambling Commission register check that separates a brand-side claim from a confirmed UK licence, applied with the same caveats this cluster uses for Xtraspin.
The short answer for a UK online casino licence check
For Great Britain, remote gambling services aimed at consumers need an appropriate Gambling Commission licence. Before relying on a casino’s bonus table, badge or review score, match the legal operator, the trading name, the domain and the licence activity against the official UKGC public register. A familiar brand word, an affiliate badge or a non-UK licence reference does not establish Commission authorisation.
For Xtraspin, the result of that workflow on the sources used here is a non-finding: no current Commission register entry has been verified, and no UKGC licence claim is made for the brand. The Xtraspin restricted-country clause names the United Kingdom for deposit and real-money play purposes, which is the controlling fact in the operator’s own document.Why a UKGC check matters
The Gambling Commission regulates gambling businesses offering gambling in Great Britain. Its licensing guidance is that businesses providing remote gambling facilities to consumers in Great Britain need a Commission licence, including where the business is based abroad. The Licence Conditions and Codes of Practice (LCCP) then set the rules a licensee must meet to hold and keep a Commission licence.
UK licence wording therefore needs to be precise. “Licensed” on its own is not enough. A reader needs to know who holds the licence, what activity it covers, whether it is remote, and whether the domain or trading name connects to that licensee. For online casino games, the relevant UKGC category is a remote casino operating licence, which covers casino games offered through a website, mobile phone, TV or other online service — including slots and table games.
A five-step register workflow
- Open the current brand terms. Note the legal operator name, any trading names, payment-service entities and any restricted-country wording. For Xtraspin, the terms restricted countries page sets out the country clause that controls this site’s brand coverage.
- Open the UKGC public register. The official register supports searches by business name, trading name, domain name and account number. Each field is a different search route and a different chance to find a real match — a brand word that almost matches a licensee may still belong to a different company.
- Confirm activity and type. A claim about an online casino should connect to a remote casino operating licence, not only a non-remote activity, a software-only activity or a different gambling product such as betting or bingo.
- Match the domain. A licensee can own several websites and trading names. A near-identical brand word is not enough if the website domain you are checking is not on the licensee’s record.
- Check dates and status. The register can show licence changes, suspensions and revocations. A screenshot from an old review is weaker evidence than the current register page itself.
Common licence-claim shortcuts and what to do instead
| Shortcut claim | Why it is weak | Stronger check |
|---|---|---|
| “UK friendly” | Marketing language with no defined regulatory meaning. | Match the domain and legal operator in the UKGC public register. |
| “Licensed offshore” | A non-UK licence is not Commission authorisation for Great Britain consumers. | Look for a Commission licence that explicitly covers remote casino activity. |
| Affiliate badge or review score | Badges can be out of date, copied between sites or based on commercial criteria. | Confirm directly against current register data and current operator terms. |
| Bonus page with GBP examples | Currency examples are presentation, not proof of UK eligibility or payment support. | Check the restricted-country clause, payment terms and Commission status separately. |
The Xtraspin result of this workflow
Applied to Xtraspin, the workflow produces a careful non-result. The brand terms identify IntellogixSoft B.V. as the operator with a Curaçao registration and a Curaçao Gaming Authority licence reference. No matching current entry has been verified in the UKGC public register on the sources used here, and the brand’s own restricted-country wording names the United Kingdom. The cautious editorial position therefore is that no UKGC licence claim is made for Xtraspin, and no opposite claim is made from an incomplete register search either.
If a future page produces a positive Commission claim for the brand, the evidence should be fresh, official and traceable to the correct legal entity, trading name and domain. If a future page makes a negative claim, it should equally show how the register was searched and on what date. Both directions need the same standard of evidence before they can be relied on for a UK reader.
Offshore licence references in operator terms
International casino terms frequently reference licences outside the UK. Those references describe the operator’s general regulatory home and can be relevant to its compliance position elsewhere, but they do not answer the Commission question. The UK question is whether gambling facilities are being offered to Great Britain consumers under appropriate UKGC licensing, and that question is only settled by the public register.
The same distinction carries through to payments, bonuses and account language. A clause can sit in general terms without being safe to publish as a UK-player option. The payment-method checks page sets out why UK payment rules — including the Commission’s credit-card restriction for online casino, bingo and betting — should be verified separately from operator marketing copy.
Documentation that a useful register check produces
A licence check that can be relied on later normally leaves a small set of records behind: the official terms URL with a date, the exact operator name and any payment-service company named in the terms, the domain searched in the public register, the matched licence activity, type and status, and any mismatch between review-page claims and the official source. This is the same documentation that allows two checks made by different people to agree, and it is the reason a confident review tone alone is not a substitute for evidence.
The broader UK online casino rules page sits next to this one because licence, consumer-protection and safer-gambling context are most useful when they are read together rather than as separate boxes.
Time sensitivity of licence checks
Licence checks are time-sensitive because operators can change ownership, domains, trading names and permissions. A review that was accurate at publication can become incomplete later, especially if it copied a badge without recording the official account number or licence activity. Dating each check against the source used keeps the picture coherent, and pages that quote a licence label without showing how it connects to the website under discussion should be treated as leads rather than as evidence.
FAQ
Related checks
- Xtraspin UK guide
- Xtraspin legal status
- official terms caveat
- UK online casino rules
- payment-method checks
Editorial information only. This site does not operate a casino, process bets or verify licences for third parties.
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Written by the editors at Xtraspin UK Guide.