Is Curacao licensing actually worthless or just misunderstood?

the sports betting side is even worse - curacao books will limit you after a few winning weeks or just close your account. no explanation, no recourse
at least with UK bookies there's a process!
 
From Netherlands where we have our own strict licensing now. Before that, played Curacao casinos for 5+ years. Mixed bag:
  • - Never got scammed outright
  • - Had several withdrawal delays (longest was 3 weeks)
  • - One casino closed and kept my balance (€400)
  • - Others paid reliably for years
The license itself is meaningless. Casino's reputation and longevity matter more.
 
Last edited:
Been playing online since 2003. Seen it all. Curacao licensing peaked around 2015-2017 when they had a decent middle ground between flexibility and standards. Then it became a free-for-all as they issued unlimited sub-licenses.

New reforms might help but enforcement is key. Without real penalties for bad actors, nothing changes 🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️
 
The fundamental problem: Curacao profits from licensing fees. More casinos > more fees > more revenue for Curacao.
They have no incentive to reject applications or revoke licenses. The business model is broken from the start
 
Interesting range of opinions here seems for me the consensus is:
License itself provides minimal protection
Individual casino reputation matters more
Better than unlicensed, worse than premium jurisdictions
Useful for restricted markets
Recent reforms might help but jury's still out
 
i just assume any curacao casino might screw me so i never deposit a lot

has that mindset, never been disappointed lol
 
The fundamental problem: Curacao profits from licensing fees. More casinos > more fees > more revenue for Curacao.
They have no incentive to reject applications or revoke licenses. The business model is broken from the start
This is factually incorrect. Curacao has revoked licenses (Rabidi being a recent high-profile example) and does reject applications that don't meet requirements.
Whether enforcement is sufficient is debatable, but claiming they have "no incentive" ignores their stated goal of becoming a respected jurisdiction.
 
This is factually incorrect. Curacao has revoked licenses (Rabidi being a recent high-profile example) and does reject applications that don't meet requirements.
Whether enforcement is sufficient is debatable, but claiming they have "no incentive" ignores their stated goal of becoming a respected jurisdiction.
hehehe and ive got a stated goal of becoming a millionaire but that doesnt mean its happening
curacao has been "reforming" for a decade. wake me up when they actually enforce something
 
yall overthinking this - deposit, play, hopefully win, cash out
if casino pays you, cool. if not, move on
no license gonna save you if a casino wants to steal
This is unfortunately true in practice, though it shouldn't be. The purpose of licensing is supposed to be preventing theft in the first place through vetting and ongoing oversight. Curacao fails at prevention, which makes the license largely symbolic.
 
Real question - has anyone here successfully resolved a dispute through Curacao's official channels?

I've heard stories but never met someone who actually got money back by complaining to the authority.
 
Real question - has anyone here successfully resolved a dispute through Curacao's official channels?

I've heard stories but never met someone who actually got money back by complaining to the authority.
no because they dont respond to complaints. ive tried, others have tried, its a black hole
 
The new ADR requirements might change this but it's too early to tell. In theory, casinos now must work with certified ADR providers. In practice, most players don't know about this and casinos aren't advertising it.
 
Back
Top