Licences on file
Every operator on this site is licensed by the UK Gambling Commission. The table below summarises the licence number on file, the type of activity covered, and a route to verify the listing on the public register. The register is the canonical source — if anything below has gone out of date, the register reflects it first.
| Operator | UKGC licence | Activity | Verify |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pub Casino | No. 38758 | Online casino | Open record |
| Midnite | No. 42647 | Sports betting + casino | Open record |
| MrQ | No. 60629 | Casino + bingo | Open record |
| LeoVegas | No. 39198 | Casino + live casino | Open record |
| BetMGM | No. 39198 | Sportsbook + casino | Open record |
Note on account 39198: the same UKGC licence covers both LeoVegas and BetMGM in the UK. Both consumer brands are operated by LeoVegas Gaming PLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of MGM Resorts International. The Entain/MGM joint venture you may have read about runs BetMGM in the United States, not in Great Britain.
How to read a register entry
The public register is a flat, browsable record. Each operator entry shows the legal name of the licensee, the licence categories that the company holds, the date the licence took effect, the operator's licensed domains, and any conditions or sanctions attached. Conditions are the part most readers skip and the part most worth reading — they record the regulatory disputes an operator has had and the remedies it agreed to.
Licence types in plain language
- Remote casino — the operator may offer online casino games to customers in Great Britain
- Remote betting (general) — covers fixed-odds sports betting on a remote platform
- Remote bingo — separate category, distinct from casino
- Live casino — sits within remote casino but with separate technical standards
- Software (host) — for game suppliers, not relevant to operators on this list
If a licence ever lapses
An operator without an active UKGC remote licence is legally barred from accepting wagers from customers in Great Britain. If you ever land on a brand that claims a UK licence and the public register doesn't list a matching entry, treat the claim as unverified. The register is the final word.