iGaming & CasinoMarch 5, 2026

iGaming Platform Comparison Guide

How to evaluate online casino and iGaming platform providers based on game selection, licensing, and technical capabilities.

What Makes a Good iGaming Platform

Launching an online casino or sportsbook requires a technology partner that handles game integration, payment processing, player management, and regulatory compliance. The platform you choose determines your operational ceiling.

Core Platform Components

Game aggregation: The platform should integrate with multiple game providers (Pragmatic Play, Evolution, NetEnt, etc.) through a single API. A good platform offers 5,000+ games from 50+ providers without requiring individual integrations. Payment processing: Support for fiat currencies (credit cards, bank transfers, e-wallets) and cryptocurrencies. Multi-currency support is essential for international operations. Look for fraud detection and KYC/AML compliance built in. Player management: CRM tools for segmentation, bonus management, VIP programs, and responsible gambling features (deposit limits, self-exclusion, reality checks). Regulatory compliance depends on these features. Back office: Real-time reporting, financial reconciliation, affiliate management, and content management. Operators need clear visibility into GGR, NGR, player acquisition costs, and bonus costs.

Licensing Considerations

Your platform must support the jurisdictions you target:

  • Curacao eGaming: Fastest and cheapest to obtain (~$20K + monthly fees). Acceptable for crypto-focused operations but lacks credibility with tier-1 payment processors.
  • Malta Gaming Authority (MGA): Gold standard for European operations. Expensive (~$50K+ setup) but opens access to regulated EU markets.
  • UK Gambling Commission (UKGC): Required for UK market. Strictest compliance requirements including source-of-funds checks.
  • Isle of Man: Strong reputation, particularly for sportsbook operations.
Your platform provider should have experience supporting operators in your target markets and be able to provide licensing guidance.

Technical Evaluation

Uptime and performance: The platform should guarantee 99.9%+ uptime. Downtime during peak hours directly costs revenue. Ask for historical uptime data. Scalability: Can the platform handle traffic spikes during major sporting events or promotions? Ask about concurrent user capacity and load testing results. API quality: If you're building a custom frontend, the API documentation and developer support matter enormously. Request API access during evaluation. Mobile support: Over 70% of iGaming revenue comes from mobile. Native apps, progressive web apps, and responsive design should all be supported.

Pricing Models

Platform providers typically charge:

  • Revenue share: 5-15% of GGR (Gross Gaming Revenue). Lower upfront cost, aligns incentives.
  • Fixed monthly fee: $5,000-50,000/month depending on features and traffic.
  • Hybrid: Fixed base fee plus a smaller revenue share percentage.
Game provider fees are separate: typically 10-15% of GGR per provider, though aggregated through the platform at potentially better rates.

Key Questions for Providers

  • How many operators currently run on your platform?
  • What jurisdictions are you licensed to support?
  • What's the average time from contract to launch?
  • Can I see your back-office demo with live data?
  • How do you handle player disputes and chargebacks?
  • What's your approach to responsible gambling compliance?
  • Market Entry Timeline

    Realistic timeline for launching an iGaming operation:

    • Month 1-2: Platform selection and contract negotiation
    • Month 2-4: Licensing application and documentation
    • Month 3-5: Platform configuration, branding, game selection
    • Month 4-6: Payment provider integration and KYC setup
    • Month 5-7: Testing, compliance review, soft launch
    • Month 6-12: Full launch and player acquisition
    Budget minimum $200K-500K for a basic launch, including licensing, platform fees, initial marketing, and operational reserves.