The sports-first full-stack pick: an in-house sportsbook, a big casino hub, poker, retail, and the Spring platform, with the broadest regulated-market licensing in this set. Casino comes second to sports in its DNA, and there are unresolved player-complaint reports worth checking.
Read moreBest White Label Casino Solutions in 2026
A white label casino runs on the provider's license, infrastructure, and payment accounts: you bring the brand and the marketing, they bring everything else. It is the fastest and cheapest way to launch, and the model where the fine print (whose license, who holds the funds, who owns the players, what leaving costs) decides everything.
We compare the 7 platforms in our directory that actually sell white label in 2026, on the same verified dataset as the main directory, with this page zoomed into the questions the model raises. Since Curaçao's reform killed the classic sublicense, the first of those questions is legal: what umbrella are you actually renting?
Our verdict, in brief
BetConstruct and Slotegrator lead the member set on platform strength, with opposite white-label shapes: BetConstruct is the full-stack route with an in-house sportsbook and an estimated revenue share around 30%, Slotegrator the aggregation-first route with NDA-only terms and a hard exit. White Hat Gaming is the premium play nobody else can copy: a white label that inherits a UKGC, MGA, Ontario, and multi-state US footprint. Soft2Bet rents a 10-market EU umbrella that comes with a network history your compliance team must read. SoftGamings is the structural winner on exit terms: the only member where the player database stays yours. NuxGame and GR8 Tech are the speed plays, days-to-weeks, offshore-first.
White label casino providers, ranked
7Ranked by Partnerkin Platform Score, the same weighted score as the main directory, filtered to the platforms that sell white label. Cards show the white-label terms. Every card links to the full, sourced review.
A game-aggregation-first B2B supplier that gets SMB and mid-market casinos live fast and cheap. APIgrator is the anchor, 40,000+ certified games from 180+ studios behind one contract, with turnkey, white-label, crypto, and Telegram builds assembled around it and Moneygrator covering the cashier. The regulatory ceiling is real: an Anjouan B2B license, a Romanian ONJN Class 2, and Lithuania and Georgia certifications, but no UK, Malta, or US route, so hard-regulated launches are out. Estimated setup money (€25k-50k turnkey, 20-40% revenue share) sits well below the enterprise tier, which is exactly the trade its buyers are making.
Read moreThe regulated-markets specialist: a proprietary PAM and white-label platform with rare licensing reach (UKGC, MGA, and all 7 US iGaming states), plus a Travelling Wallet for multi-state play. Premium, selective, and built for compliant operators. Cheap or crypto-friendly launches are a poor fit.
Read moreA gamification-led turnkey and white-label platform with a regulated-market license stack across the EU and Ontario and a fast 4-to-6-week launch. But it also runs its own competing B2C brands, and a chain of those brands sits behind serious non-payment complaints, so do your own due diligence before you sign.
Read moreThe sports-first pick with operator pedigree: an in-house sportsbook built for serious load, a crypto turnkey, and the Parimatch Tech engineering bench behind it. Best for betting-led brands in LatAm, Africa, and SEA, with parent-group due diligence as the catch.
Read moreA fast, cheap way for smaller operators to launch a casino, strongest in crypto and Telegram. The aggregator is large and the API-first build is quick, but the company is young, the client list isn't verifiable, and the sportsbook is a bought-in third-party feed.
Read moreA flexible mid-market platform and aggregator: white label, turnkey, and self-service casinos with strong banking and licensing help, aimed at small and growing operators well below the enterprise tier. The trade-offs are no in-house game studio and on-request pricing.
Read moreWhich one fits your launch
White label buyers differ mostly by two things: which markets the umbrella must cover, and how much of the business they plan to own later. Five profiles below, each with its shortlist and the thing to pin down before signing.
First launch, offshore market test
Live in weeks on someone else's license, minimal upfront, learn the business.
Days-to-four-weeks launches at the lowest circulating setup range in the set ($10–30k, estimate), under its Curaçao and Anjouan umbrella, with crypto and Telegram casino variants ready-made.
About three weeks to live on the Light White Label, with Parimatch-heritage engineering underneath and an MGA recognition notice plus Peru behind the umbrella.
Check first: NuxGame is young (2018) with no publicly verifiable operator clients. GR8 Tech's parent history calls for beneficial-ownership diligence. Both hold your funds at provider level.
Regulated markets without your own licenses
UK, EU, or North American access on the provider's paper, the expensive kind of umbrella.
The only white label here that inherits a UKGC + MGA + Ontario + multi-state US footprint, with managed services and the Travelling Wallet underneath. This is the setup behind Bally Bet-grade deployments.
Ten regulated markets on the provider's own paper (MGA, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Greece, Romania, Ireland, Spain, Ontario, Mexico) with gamification baked in.
Check first: Premium pricing at WHG plus a 2021 UKGC £1.3M settlement on its record. At Soft2Bet, read the Investigate Europe network history and the exact entity you would operate under before signing.
Full-stack brand with sports at the core
A white label where the provider builds and trades its own sportsbook instead of reselling a feed.
The whole Spring stack under the WL wrapper (in-house sportsbook with its own trading desk, casino, retail), live in two to four weeks, with a published turnkey path (€10–15k setup, ~10% revenue share) to graduate to.
Check first: The WL revenue share runs around 30% to the provider (estimate), funds and license sit with BetConstruct, and Trustpilot carries player complaints about unlicensed casinos on its software.
Planning the exit from day one
A white label that leaves the door open: your players, a migration path, no hostage terms.
The only member where the operator owns the player database even on white label, with a documented WL-to-turnkey migration path. The circulating setup estimate is €15–60k, though the vendor itself quotes per deal.
Check first: The front end runs on end-of-life AngularJS and one operator engagement reported slow turnkey delivery. Scope the tech before betting the brand on it.
Building to own it long-term
If the plan is your own license and full margin, white label is the wrong first step.
Check first: The decision math: white label trades 15–40% of revenue for skipping the license. Once projected GGR makes that share bigger than a license's cost and wait, turnkey wins, and migrating later is the exit most WL contracts restrict.
The license you're actually renting
The classic answer, "you operate under the provider's Curaçao sublicense," died with Curaçao's LOK reform: legacy sublicenses expired in January 2025 and the Orange Seal transition ended October 15, 2025. What exists in 2026 is three different umbrellas: skins on a provider's direct Curaçao license, Anjouan dual B2B+B2C structures, and regulated umbrellas proper (MGA, UKGC, US states). Most pages selling white label still describe the dead model. Here is what each provider actually rents out, from the inherited-markets cells in our reviews.
The premium end of the model: launch under a UKGC and MGA license holder with a live multi-state US footprint and managed services. Master license and funds sit with WHG. Pricing is hybrid (revenue share and/or managed fee), quoted per deal.
Ten regulated markets on the provider's own licenses, pure revenue share. The caveat is the 2025 investigative record: 140+ sites traced to the network with 114 blacklisted across the EU. The licenses are real and so is the reporting. Check the exact operating entity.
A rare mix: the fast offshore wrapper and tier-1 European paper from one provider, with the full Spring stack underneath. WL revenue share runs around 30% to the provider (estimate). The published turnkey path is the graduation route.
The Light White Label runs under GR8 Tech's MGA recognition notice, no operator license needed: a lean European umbrella from a 2023-vintage supplier with Parimatch-era engineering.
Runs brands under its own Curaçao license granted under the new LOK regime (June 2024) with MGA available, one of the few members whose offshore umbrella is explicitly post-reform paper rather than legacy.
The classic 2026 offshore white label: Curaçao and Anjouan umbrellas, days-to-weeks launches, crypto-forward. Anjouan is the post-LOK beneficiary. A WL seller there needs dual B2B+B2C licenses, which is the structure NuxGame's model implies.
Slotegrator's own materials still describe the white label as running under its Curaçao sublicense (the vehicle the LOK ended), so the first diligence question is which direct-license structure the brand actually sits in now. The legal, tax, and admin side is handled. Every commercial number sits behind an NDA, and the review flags the exit as hard: players, money, and brand live inside their entity.
The name missing from this board on purpose: SOFTSWISS no longer merchandises a white label product. Its own knowledge base steers buyers to turnkey and hedges on the model's future, even though listicles updated in 2026 still sell its WL. Inherited-market lists come from each review's dated inherited-markets record.
The offshore rulebook that rewrote white label
Curaçao's LOK reform is the reason half the white-label copy on the internet is now legally wrong. The dates below are verified against the reform record. If a seller's pitch contradicts them, the pitch is older than the law.
What died
2024–2025The LOK entered into force on December 24, 2024. Legacy sublicenses (the vehicle the entire classic white-label model ran on) expired in January 2025, with the last master licenses wound down by the end of that month.
The transitional Orange Seal regime that kept old structures breathing closed on October 15, 2025. Since then there is no such thing as a Curaçao sublicense to launch under.
What replaced it
CGA directDirect B2C and B2B licenses from the Curaçao Gaming Authority only, with a physical-presence requirement in force since January 1, 2026. The running cost is roughly €47,000 a year plus the application fee.
White label on Curaçao paper now means operating as a skin on the provider's own direct license, which is why this page's license board asks whose direct license each seller actually holds.
The Anjouan route
~€22k · 4–6 weeksAnjouan is the reform's documented beneficiary: about €22,000 in year one, no GGR tax, licenses granted in four to six weeks.
The key structural detail for buyers: an Anjouan licensee selling white label must hold both B2B and B2C licenses. That dual structure is the new legal skeleton of offshore WL, and NuxGame's model is the example of it in this set.
What it means when you're buying
The testAsk every seller one question: which of the three structures (skin on direct CGA, Anjouan dual, or a regulated license) does my brand legally sit in, and show me the license it rides on.
A sales page still offering "operation under our Curaçao sublicense" in 2026 is describing a product that no longer exists. Regulated umbrellas (MGA, UKGC, US state paper) were never touched by the reform.
Verified against the Curaçao reform record and Anjouan license guides, July 2026. This is orientation. Confirm structures with counsel per market.
White label terms on the record
The market's numbers and its rankings never sit on one page: listicles carry no prices, cost articles carry no vendors, and the circulating figures trace to one consultancy post and a crowd of dev-shop farms. Below is what each named vendor's terms actually look like in our dataset: cell values where the vendor publishes, estimates labeled as estimates, and the ownership columns nobody else prints.
| Provider | Setup | Revenue share | Launch | Funds held by | Players | Exit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BetConstruct | On request | ~30% to provider (est.) | 2–4 weeks | Provider | Shared | Turnkey path published (€10–15k, ~10%) |
| Slotegrator | €25–50k (est.), NDA terms | 20–40% (est.) | ~4 weeks | Provider | Shared | Restricted |
| White Hat Gaming | On request (premium) | Hybrid: revshare and/or managed fee | 4–12 weeks | Provider | Shared | Direct-PAM path for license holders |
| Soft2Bet | On request | Pure revenue share | 4–6 weeks | Provider | Shared | Restricted |
| GR8 Tech | On request | Setup + revshare hybrid | ~3 weeks | Provider | Shared | Restricted (confirm data clause) |
| NuxGame | $10–30k (est.) | Revenue share | Days–4 weeks | Provider | Shared | Graduate-to-turnkey pitch |
| SoftGamings | €15–60k (est.), vendor quotes per deal | Revenue share, hybrid possible | ~6 weeks | Provider | Operator owns the DB | Open: WL→turnkey supported |
Estimates come from the reviews and are labeled. The only vendor-attributed WL price point in public circulation is SOFTSWISS's own knowledge base putting typical WL setup around €35,000 (December 2025), 3.5x the $10k floor the content farms repeat. Every deal on this board holds funds at provider level. White label works that way.
What's actually in the white-label box
Every WL page promises "everything included." The boxes differ more than the brochures admit: in content depth, in whether player support is on them or on you, and in what the site-building layer looks like. From the reviews' package blocks:
The deepest box in the set: a real full stack with the operator-facing chores (payments, hosting, player support) carried by the provider.
Smaller content library, heavier service layer: the managed-services menu is modular, so functions can move in-house as you grow.
The differentiator is MEGA switched on from day one: gamification as a retention layer most WL boxes simply don't have.
The banking help (merchant accounts pre-wired) is the part first-time operators end up caring about most, and the player database stays yours.
The widest aggregated catalog on this page plus the legal-and-admin layer done for you. The trade is NDA-only terms and the hard exit.
A deliberately lighter, faster SKU: less customization, more provider-carried infrastructure, with the crypto cashier available on the turnkey side.
The most launch-shaped box: templates going live in days, crypto and Telegram variants ready, and a published blog range for the price.
What is NOT in any box: your marketing, your KYB, market legality where you advertise, and exclusive content. All seven ship aggregated catalogs, so the games your competitor runs are the games you run.
The rent-or-buy arithmetic
Nobody in this market publishes the actual decision model, so here it is with the assumptions on the table: white label is rent (a revenue share), turnkey is buy (setup, monthly, and your own license). The crossover is pure arithmetic on your projected GGR.
The frame and the assumptions
Read firstIllustration inputs, mid-range for this page's members: WL at a 25% revenue share, turnkey at $10,000 a month platform cost with setup amortized, and an offshore license at roughly $4,000 a month (Curaçao direct ~€47k a year). Your quotes will differ. The shape of the math won't.
WL monthly cost = revenue share × GGR. Turnkey monthly cost ≈ platform monthly + license. The crossover sits where those lines meet: with these inputs, around $56,000 of monthly GGR.
Scenario: $30k GGR a month
WL winsWhite label: 25% × $30k = $7,500 a month, no license overhead, live in weeks.
Turnkey: ~$14,000 a month all-in before the setup fee earns back. At small scale the rent is cheap and the fixed costs are not. This is exactly the market-test case WL exists for.
Scenario: $100k GGR a month
The crossover zoneWhite label: $25,000 a month and rising with every good month. Turnkey: still ~$14,000.
The gap is already ~$11k a month in turnkey's favor, but a migration takes months and most WL contracts restrict it. This zone is where operators discover the exit clause they didn't negotiate.
Scenario: $300k GGR a month
Turnkey wins bigWhite label: $75,000 a month in rent. Turnkey: ~$14,000–20,000 even with enterprise-grade extras.
The difference funds a licensed entity several times over, every month. Operators who reach this scale on WL are paying for the launch decision they made two years earlier. That is the whole argument for negotiating the exit at signing.
The inputs are illustrative. Real revenue shares in this set run from about 10% (BetConstruct's turnkey-side figure) to 40% (top of Slotegrator's estimated range), and license costs vary by route. Redo the math with your own three numbers before choosing.
Who else is on the umbrella
On a white label you share a license, payment accounts, and a reputation with every other brand on the provider's paper. When a co-tenant misbehaves, the whole umbrella takes the hit, your cashier included. This is the diligence section the model's sellers never write.
Investigative reporting in 2025 traced 140+ gambling sites to the network, 114+ blacklisted across the EU, with court-ordered player refunds in Germany and Austria through offshore shells. No action against the B2B entity itself. The pattern is on record and the review prints it.
A £1.3M UKGC settlement (January 2021) for AML and social-responsibility failings on its UK-licensed brands: the shared-fate event this section exists for, resolved and on the public record.
Player-complaint reports allege unlicensed, scam-looking casinos running on its software with slow provider response. The reports are single-source (Trustpilot) and printed as such in the review.
No regulatory actions found. The noise is product-side (withdrawal-delay complaints from players of hosted brands, one soured turnkey engagement) rather than umbrella-level.
No regulatory actions or complaint patterns on record across 500+ launched projects, with the caveat that the commercial opacity extends to who its white-label tenants are.
Nothing against GR8 Tech itself. The Parimatch B2C parent lost its Ukrainian license in 2023, which is a beneficial-ownership diligence item rather than an umbrella event.
No complaints on record, and no publicly verifiable operator clients either. For a shared umbrella, that means your diligence has less to read than anywhere else on this board.
None of this is disqualifying by itself: regulated umbrellas attract enforcement precisely because they are real. The read is comparative. Know which kind of noise your umbrella carries before a co-tenant makes it yours.
The white-label set's recent record
Rebrands, license grants, AI pushes, and a US market entry: what the seven members actually did in the last three years, dated from their reviews.
Lena Yasir, ex-Pragmatic Play CCO, becomes CEO of BetConstruct AI in June. AI Live Casino and World Cup sportsbook promotions push ahead of the tournament.
Launched the Moneygrator AI Bot (February) and Casino Builder 2.0 (~10x faster).
Showcased platform and MEGA updates (MEGA Islands, MEGA11) at ICE Barcelona.
Brand refresh and continued expansion across LatAm, Africa, and SEA.
Rebrands its umbrella identity to 'BetConstruct AI' and launches an AI product line.
Obtained its own Anjouan B2B license (August) and rebranded. APIgrator passed 40,000 games, Olga Ivanchik appointed COO, +81% YoY GGR.
VIP Play (VIPZ) selected the PAM and Travelling Wallet for US expansion.
White Hat Studios ranked top-3 among US iGaming content suppliers by GGR in the January Eilers-Fantini report, then entered land-based casino floors through the Gaming Arts OMNI distribution deal in May.
MEGA wins an SBC innovation award. The company announced US entry via a Caesars market-access deal in New Jersey and launched the €50M Soft2Bet Invest fund.
MGA recognition notice granted. Oleksandr Feshchenko appointed CEO.
Won Best Platform Provider at the SiGMA Eurasia Awards.
Won EiGE Awards for Best Innovation in iGaming Technology and Best Marketing Campaign.
Secured a Romania ONJN Class II B2B license.
ENJOY expands distribution reach through a SoftGamings partnership (Gambling Insider). SoftGamings won Best Platform Provider at the SiGMA Central Europe Awards in Rome.
Releases SpringBuilder X, a mobile-first iGaming site builder.
Granted Certificate of Registration in Ontario (AGCO). Poliavich named SBC Leader of the Year.
Peru B2B supplier license granted by MINCETUR. Jugabet partnership in LatAm.
Achieved GLI-19 certification for regulated-market expansion.
Working with them, day to day
White label is a managed service by definition, so the service layer IS the product. All seven run 24/7 support with account managers. What differs is what they will put a number on:
24/7 across email, chat, and phone plus the Hoory AI assistant. WL launches quoted in weeks, no published SLA.
24/7 with Telegram as a first-class support channel and English/Russian/Spanish/Ukrainian coverage. A Georgian build went contract-to-live in five weeks.
Managed services are the product: licensing, compliance, and legal run through a dedicated LCR department, support in 8 languages, 4–6 week integrations.
200+ customer-support agents handling 150,000 chats a month across the network. Launch in 4–6 weeks, terms per deal.
The only member publishing a hard service number: average P1 incident response of 37 minutes. Sportsbook iFrame in ~1 week, Light WL in ~3.
24/7 via chat, WhatsApp, and Telegram with a personal launch manager. Template launches in days, full builds 2–8 weeks.
24/7 email and chat. Game-aggregator integrations take about a month, WL about six weeks, with mixed support-quality reports alongside praise for project managers.
No member publishes a contractual SLA for white-label operations. GR8 Tech's 37-minute P1 figure is vendor-stated. Everything else above is claim-level and dated in the reviews.
Our methodology
Members are ranked by the same Partnerkin Platform Score as the main directory, a weighted average of six criteria over the verified dataset. We deliberately do not invent a separate white-label score: the model changes what you buy and what to check (this page's boards), not how good the platform is. Averages and leaders below are recomputed across the seven white-label members only.
- 7
- platforms in this model
- 6
- weighted criteria
- BetConstruct
- set leader at 7.9
- July 2026
- last verified
The six criteria, recomputed over this set
Each criterion is scored 0–10 from the dataset, then weighted. Set averages and leaders below cover the white-label members only.
Platform & tech
The core operators build on: player account management, wallet topology, architecture, the integrations API, and whether it's proven at tier-1 scale or a lean modern stack.
Games & content
How deep and how owned the casino content is: a wide aggregated catalog, in-house studios, live casino, and the jackpot model. The difference between reselling everyone else's games and owning content nobody else can license.
Compliance & licensing
What gets you live in regulated markets: the B2B licenses the vendor holds, technical certifications, the markets it's already certified in, and the responsible-gaming and reporting tooling.
Payments
The cashier operators inherit: method types, the PSP orchestration layer that routes and cascades them, crypto acceptance, payout speed, and the local rails a market actually needs.
Support & onboarding
The service layer: availability, a dedicated account manager, language coverage, SLAs, and how much hand-holding you get from contract to launch.
Commercials & transparency
How honest and how flexible the deal is: published vs on-request pricing, the commercial model, setup and revenue share, contract length and lock-in, and who ends up holding the license.
What to weigh differently when the deal is white label
The score says how strong the platform is. These factors decide whether its white label is right for you.
Post-LOK, "the provider's license" means a skin on direct CGA paper, an Anjouan dual structure, or a real regulated license. Know which one you're renting.
Every WL deal on this page holds your funds at provider level. The questions are reserve terms, payout SLAs, and what the contract says when you leave.
You inherit the umbrella's reputation and its co-tenants. Put enforcement history and network reporting on the diligence checklist.
Revenue share is rent. Model the GGR level where 15–40% to the provider costs more than your own license, and check whether the contract lets you leave with the players.
Grade scale
Grades follow the site-wide scale: 8.0 and up excellent, 6.5 to 7.9 good, below 6.5 mixed. The overall is the weighted Partnerkin Platform Score shown on the main directory.
Confidence on every field
Commercial figures marked (est.) come from review research rather than rate cards. The only vendor-published numbers on this page are BetConstruct's turnkey-side €10–15k and SOFTSWISS's €35k knowledge-base benchmark. Inherited-market lists are cell data, dated per review.
What we don't do
- Placement isn't for sale. Providers can't pay to rank.
- We don't repeat content-farm price floors as facts. Estimates are labeled and attributed.
- We don't describe the dead Curaçao sublicense as a live product.
- We don't list a vendor as a WL seller when its own pages stopped selling it.
The other way to launch
White label is one of two roads. The other one puts the license, the players, and the margin on your side of the table.
Frequently asked
What white-label buyers ask in 2026, including the questions the sellers avoid.
What is a white label casino solution?+
A casino that runs on the provider's license, platform, payment accounts, and compliance staff, with your brand on the front. You pay a setup fee plus a share of revenue (the circulating range runs 15–40%), launch in days to weeks instead of months, and skip licensing entirely, because the license, the funds, and usually the players legally sit with the provider. It is the fastest route into the market and the least ownable: read the exit terms before the launch date.
Can I still launch under a provider's Curaçao license in 2026?+
Not the way the internet describes it. Curaçao's LOK reform ended the master-license/sublicense system: legacy sublicenses expired in January 2025 and the transitional Orange Seal regime closed on October 15, 2025. What exists now is brands operating as skins on a provider's direct Curaçao (CGA) license, Anjouan structures where the WL seller holds both B2B and B2C licenses, and regulated umbrellas like MGA, UKGC, or US state paper. Ask any WL seller which of those three they actually run. Most sales pages still describe the dead model.
How much does a white label casino cost?+
The attributed numbers: the estimates in our reviews put NuxGame around $10–30k, Slotegrator around €25–50k, and SoftGamings around €15–60k (every one of the three officially quotes per deal), and SOFTSWISS's own knowledge base, the only vendor-attributed benchmark in circulation, says WL setup typically starts around €35,000. On top sits the revenue share, roughly 15–40% depending on provider and inherited markets. The $10k content-farm floor buys the thinnest offshore wrapper. A regulated umbrella like White Hat Gaming's is a premium managed-fee product with no public price at all.
Who owns the players, the funds, and the domain?+
On every deal on this page the provider holds the funds. Player ownership is usually shared, with one exception worth knowing: SoftGamings states the operator owns the player database even on white label. Brand migration is restricted at most members, which makes the exit clause the most expensive paragraph in the contract. If owning the asset is the plan, negotiate database export, domain ownership, and a migration path in writing, or start from turnkey instead.
Is SOFTSWISS a white label provider?+
Not anymore, whatever the listicles say. SOFTSWISS's site sells turnkey ("your licence, our platform") and carries no white-label product page. Its own knowledge base hedges on whether the model survives the licensing shift and points buyers to turnkey. Lists updated as late as May 2026 still rank it as an active WL seller, which is a good test of whether a comparison page actually checks its vendors. Its platform remains in our turnkey guide, where it belongs.
White label or turnkey: how do I actually decide?+
Do the rent-versus-buy math. White label trades a revenue share (15–40%) for skipping the license cost and wait. Turnkey trades setup money and months for full margin and ownership. The crossover comes when projected GGR makes the share bigger than a license's all-in cost. For a Curaçao direct license the all-in runs roughly €47k a year plus a physical-presence requirement from 2026. For Anjouan, it is about €22k in year one. Below that GGR, or for a market test, white label wins. Above it, or if the brand is the asset, go turnkey, and remember most WL contracts make switching later expensive by design. The worked scenarios are in the rent-or-buy section above.
What does a white label casino solution include?+
The stable core across this set: the platform and back office, an aggregated game catalog (3,000 to 45,000+ titles depending on provider), pre-integrated payments, hosting, compliance handling, a bonus engine and CRM, and usually an affiliate system. BetConstruct, Soft2Bet, GR8 Tech, and White Hat Gaming include B2C player support. SoftGamings pre-wires merchant accounts. What no box includes: your marketing, your corporate KYB, legality in the markets you advertise in, and exclusive content. Every member ships aggregated catalogs, so the game lobby won't differentiate you. Brand and CRM will.
Do I need any license of my own for a white label casino?+
No gambling license. The provider's license covers operation. That is the whole point of the model. What you still need: a corporate entity that passes the provider's KYB, marketing compliance in every market you target (the umbrella's market list binds you: advertising into a market the license doesn't cover is your problem, not theirs), and payment-account KYC. "License-free" means the gambling permission is rented. The compliance work above stays yours. The umbrella board above shows exactly which markets each provider's paper actually covers.
Can I get a white label sportsbook in the same package?+
Yes, and the quality split matters more here than in casino. BetConstruct and GR8 Tech run their own books with in-house trading and the margin control that implies. Soft2Bet runs hybrid third-party trading, White Hat Gaming plugs in Kambi, and NuxGame rides an LSports feed with margin knobs on top. For a sports-led WL brand the shortlist is BetConstruct and GR8 Tech. For a casino brand adding a betting tab, any of the feeds do the job.
