July rebrand: repositioned from software provider to technology and growth partner, with a new Chief AI Officer role created alongside the CTO.
The iGaming B2B Directory
127 vendors across casino platforms, game aggregation, and payments. Each one has a full review with a scored breakdown and the commercial terms vendors usually keep for the sales call.
Where the directory stands today
Every number on this board comes from the review data at build time. The chart shows how the overall scores are spread across the directory.
What's in the B2B Directory
8 categories are live today, split into 25 sections. Here's what each one covers, so you start in the right place.
The core system a casino runs on: player accounts, wallet, bonus engine, back office. Every other vendor plugs into it. The main choice is the launch model, white label or turnkey.
Open the hubOne integration that adds thousands of games from hundreds of studios, on a single contract and a single invoice. Aggregators charge a share of game GGR.
Open the hubCompanies that move player money: deposits, payouts, and the compliance work around both. A router, an acquirer, and a crypto gateway solve different problems, so we review six segments separately.
Open the hubThe stack a betting operation runs on: the platform, the trading and risk desk, and the data feeds that price every market. Platforms and data vendors solve different problems, so we rank them under separate weight sets.
Open the hubThe compliance stack regulators demand: who a player is, whether they are old enough, where they are betting from, and who is laundering money. Three segments with different buyers and different registers to check.
Open the hubWhat each gaming license actually costs and requires, from the regulators' own fee schedules, plus a vetted catalog of firms that run the application. The one niche where most of what ranks in search is written by the sellers.
Open the hubThe platform an operator's partner program runs on: tracking, commission math, affiliate payouts, and fraud screens. Enterprise platforms quote privately while self-serve trackers publish metered prices, so we rank the two separately.
Open the hubThe growth stack operators hire: SEO retainers, paid user acquisition, and full-service PR. No licenses exist here, so we grade the evidence instead: registries, organizer pages, client-side confirmations, and our own measurement of each SEO agency's rankings.
Open the hubHow much does it cost to launch an online casino?
What you pay up front, and what you keep paying after launch. Figures verified July 2026.
A white-label casino on a rented license starts around $10,000–30,000 in setup fees plus a revenue share to the provider. Running on your own license costs more: about $24,000 a year on Anjouan, roughly $57,000 in year one in Curaçao, or around $50,000 in Malta before advisors and staff.
Setup is the smaller half. The lasting costs are cuts and payroll: 5–15% of game GGR to the aggregator, 2.5–5% of every payment to the processor, 20–45% of NGR to affiliates, KYC at $0.55–5 per check, and a compliance officer at $61,500–115,000 a year. The license names that person, so the seat can't stay empty.
License and legal
from ≈ $24k a year offshore, ≈ $50k+ regulatedPlatform
from $10k rented, from ≈ $11k ownedGame content
5–15% of game GGRPayments
2.5–5% per transaction, plus the reservePlayer acquisition
$50–400 per FTD or 20–45% of NGRCompliance and team
from $0.55 per check, plus payrollBrowse by market
Pick where you operate and see how much of the directory is tagged live, licensed, or certified there, and which categories run deepest in that market.
United States
Supplier licensing runs state by state, so coverage here counts states, never the whole country.
United Kingdom
Two public registers, UKGC for gambling and FCA for the money side. We click both.
Malta
The industry's licensing hub: MGA B2B paper anchors most European stacks.
Offshore (Curaçao & Anjouan)
Where the rented-license white labels live. Most run on Curaçao paper, and Anjouan has become the cheaper fast lane.
Brazil
Regulated federally since January 2025. SPA licensing and Pix rails reshaped every vendor roster.
Romania
ONJN Class II is the entry ticket, and plenty of offshore-first vendors hold it.
Ontario (Canada)
iGaming Ontario runs its own supplier regime, separate from the rest of Canada.
Sweden
Spelinspektionen hands out licenses and fines alike, and both end up in the track records.
Spain
DGOJ-licensed suppliers only, under some of Europe's tightest advertising rules.
Latest on the record
Dated milestones pulled straight from the reviews, newest first: licenses, launches, incidents, deals.
Licensed in South Africa, with AGLC conditional approval in Alberta ahead of the province's July launch. NASPL membership. Cashpoint (Merkur Bets) omnichannel turnkey win in Denmark and a betOcean content deal in New Jersey.
Sweden SGA license (February), Tonybet live in Ontario (February), Games Global and kwiff deals, game round replays via API (July).
The deal closes March 2 and PaymentIQ becomes a standalone company: the main site moves from paymentiq.io to paymentiq.com and relaunches vertical-neutral, with ten open roles across Bitola and Hoofddorp by July.
Catalog reaches 600 connectors and 1,337 routes, and automated reconciliation ships. The iGaming Cashier and standalone fraud product remain "coming soon" (July).
FY2024 consolidated accounts filed (January 7). Best Multi-Platform Payments Solution won at the Crypto Expo Europe Awards in Bucharest (March 2). Winbet Bulgaria PR (June 26). BetGoodwin signs an 8-year renewal (July 3).
Irish Payment Institution authorization lands (April 9), three senior hires for North America and Europe follow (May 12), and the company crosses the July 1 MiCA grandfathering cutoff fully authorized.
Mauritius FSC licenses B2binpay Mauritius LTD across four classes, VASP plus M, O, and R (all dated April 24, announced May 13). The Terms updated June 26 keep the US, UK, and EU on the do-not-market list as Italy's MiCA transition closes July 1 with no B2BINPAY authorization.
Before you sign: five checks that catch real problems
We run these five on every review, and each one has caught something real.
- Open the register yourself.
Every license claim has a public register behind it: FCA, MGA, BCB, US state lists. If the number is not there, you are reading a claim.
How we run register checks - Ask for the date on every number.
Game counts, connector totals, and approval-rate claims change within months. An undated figure tells you nothing about today.
Dated figures in the aggregator ranking - Establish who holds the money.
Orchestrators never touch funds. PSPs and white labels do. Custody decides who you chase when payouts stop.
The payments stack, role by role - Read the exit before the entry.
Data ownership, migration support, and revenue-share tails set the cost of leaving. Negotiate the export while they still want your signature.
Exit terms in the white label guide - Pin the numbers into the contract.
A catalog count is a snapshot, not a promise. The PSPs, games, or markets you need belong in the agreement, not in a pitch deck.
Connector counts and named platforms
How these reviews are built
What regulators publish is only the floor. A lot of what's in the reviews came from people who signed the actual deals.
License numbers checked in the FCA, MGA, BCB, UKGC and US state registers, plus regulator fee schedules, certification lists, and company filings.
Partnerkin has covered this industry since 2014, and people talk to us. Setup fees, revenue shares, and contract terms in the reviews often come from sales decks, private quotes, and operators who signed the deals.
Game counts, fees, and connector totals change fast. Each figure carries the date we checked it, and every review shows its last verification pass.
Every category scores six dimensions. The weights, the set averages, and the leader on each dimension are published on the category's methodology page.
Frequently asked
How the directory works, who writes it, and who pays for what.
What is the Partnerkin iGaming B2B Directory?+
An independent catalog of 127 iGaming B2B vendors across casino platforms, game aggregation, and payments. Every listing is a full review with a scored breakdown, the commercial terms we could confirm, and licensing checked against the public registers.
How are vendors scored?+
Every category scores six dimensions, and the weights are public: platforms lean on the tech core and content, payment providers on licensing and coverage, with separate weights for each payment segment. Scores only compare vendors inside the same category, so a platform's 7.8 and a PSP's 7.5 are on different scales.
Can vendors pay for a better score or position?+
No. Sponsor and placement slots exist and are always labeled. They buy visibility on this page and nothing else: review scores, category rankings, and the text of the reviews are not part of any deal.
How do you verify license claims?+
We look the license number up in the register itself: FCA, MGA, BCB, UKGC, US state gaming lists. Confirmed entries are dated inside each review. When we can't find a claim, the review says so. One vendor's claimed authorization was missing from the regulator's own database, and that is on its review page.
How fresh is the data?+
Each review shows its last verification date, and individual figures carry the date they were checked. The newest verification pass across the directory is Jul 2026.
How much does it cost to launch an online casino?+
A white-label brand starts around $10,000-30,000 in setup plus a revenue share. On your own license, budget about $24,000 a year on Anjouan, roughly $57,000 in year one in Curaçao, or around $50,000 in Malta, then the running cuts: 5-15% of game GGR to the aggregator and 2.5-5% of every payment to the processor. The budget table on this page breaks it down line by line, with figures verified July 2026.
Which markets does the directory cover?+
Every review answers the US and UK questions explicitly, because those are the hardest gates: who holds state licenses or a UKGC account, and who has no route in. Beyond that, coverage runs across regulated Europe, Brazil and wider LatAm, and the offshore and crypto segment, with per-market boards inside the category guides.
Is Partnerkin affiliated with any of the listed vendors?+
No. Partnerkin doesn't own, operate, or invest in any company in the directory, and no vendor has a say in what its review says. The only commercial relationship is the labeled ad slots.
