What "non-GamStop" actually means
GamStop is the UK's national self-exclusion scheme. Every casino licensed by the UK Gambling Commission (UKGC) is required to connect to it, which lets a player block themselves from all UK-licensed gambling for six months, one year or five years in a single step. A "non-GamStop" casino is simply a site that is not connected to that database — because it is not licensed by the UKGC. These operators are licensed elsewhere, most commonly in Curaçao, and sometimes Anjouan or Malta.
This is the core distinction the rest of this guide unpacks: a non-GamStop site is not a different "type" of casino, it is a site that sits outside the UK regulatory perimeter. That single fact is what changes the consumer protections, the payment options and the risks.
Licensed (UKGC) vs grey-market: the real differences
UKGC-licensed sites operate under strict rules: a ban on credit-card deposits, mandatory affordability checks at defined deposit thresholds, compulsory GamStop integration, deposit-limit tools and access to independent dispute resolution. Offshore grey-market sites are bound by their own regulator's rules instead, which are generally lighter. The practical result is higher limits, looser verification and credit-card acceptance on the offshore side — but also the removal of the safeguards a UK licence guarantees.
The word "grey" is deliberate. Players in Great Britain are not committing an offence by visiting an offshore site, because UK gambling law targets operators and advertising rather than individuals. But the site itself is unlicensed for the UK market, and that is precisely why none of the UKGC consumer protections apply to it.
What you give up at a grey-market site
This is the part that matters most and is most often left out. At an offshore casino with no UK licence:
- No UK consumer protection. The UKGC cannot act on your behalf, and you cannot escalate a complaint to a UK regulator.
- No self-exclusion safety net. Because the site is not on GamStop, a self-exclusion you set up to protect yourself does not reach it. For anyone who excluded themselves for a reason, that is a serious risk rather than a feature.
- Harder disputes. Withdrawal disputes are resolved under the operator's home jurisdiction, often with no independent Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) body and no UK ombudsman to appeal to.
- Lighter verification cuts both ways. Faster sign-up also means weaker checks on fairness, fund segregation and responsible-gambling enforcement.
Why these sites exist and who looks for them
Demand has grown as UK rules have tightened: affordability checks from a low net-deposit threshold, the credit-card ban and mandatory GamStop have pushed some players to look outside the licensed market. Understanding that context is useful, but it does not change the trade-off above. A lighter-touch experience is bought by giving up the protections a UK licence is designed to provide.
How to tell which side a site is on
Check the licence in the footer. A genuine UKGC licence can be verified on the Gambling Commission's public register; a Curaçao, Anjouan or Malta licence means the site is outside the UK system. If a site accepts credit cards from UK players or advertises that it ignores GamStop, that is itself a clear signal it is not UK-licensed.