When you receive your gaming licence, nobody hands you a calendar. There is no single document from any regulator that says here is what you owe, file, submit, and renew, and when. You are expected to know theThis is the calendar I wish someone had given me.
I added Nevis to the ICOS portfolio in early 2026 after reviewing the primary regulatory documents. The short version: it fills a genuine gap in the market between Anjouan and Curaçao, specifically for operators who need better banking and payment processor access than Anjouan provides but cannot
Compare the Anjouan, Curaçao, MGA and Nevis licenses by budget, timeline, banking and payment processing access and operational complexity.
There is a moment in most offshore operators' growth where the question shifts from "how do I get licensed cheaply" to "how do I get licensed properly." This article is for operators at exactly that stage.
If you are researching a Curaçao gaming licence in 2026 and the guide you are reading mentions sub-licences, master licence holders, or Antillephone, close the tab. That system ended in December 2024. The Curaçao gaming licence that exists now is a fundamentally different product
The most common question I get about Anjouan is some version of "what does it actually cost, all in, no surprises?" It is a reasonable question, and the fact that it is hard to answer from public sources is a real problem.
Most compliance consultancies operate on a custom scoping model. The client describes what they need, the consultant assesses the complexity, a proposal is written, and a fee is agreed. The stated justification is that every engagement is different...
Showing 12 of 7 total posts
Stay up to date with curated collection of our top stories.