What is Reporting in iGaming Compliance?

Reporting in iGaming compliance refers to the mandatory submission of financial, operational, and compliance data to a licensing authority or other competent authority, as required under the terms of a gaming license.

What reporting obligations do licensed operators face?

Every licensing jurisdiction imposes reporting obligations on the operators it licenses. The content and frequency differ, but the underlying principle is the same: regulators need a regular, structured view of how the business is operating to satisfy themselves that the license conditions are being met.

Typical reporting obligations include quarterly or annual financial statements; Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) under AML obligations; player activity reports; technical compliance reports; and ad hoc reports in response to specific regulatory requests. In Curaçao, LOK-licensed operators must file compliance reports with the CGA within defined timeframes. In Malta, MGA-licensed operators face detailed periodic reporting across financial, technical, and AML dimensions. In the Netherlands, KSA-licensed operators report on responsible gambling measures, player fund separation, and advertising compliance.

Late or inaccurate reporting is a regulatory breach — not a minor administrative failure. Regulators treat it as evidence that the operator is not in control of its business. That is a short route to a formal inquiry.

We manage regulatory reporting obligations for iGaming operators in Curaçao, Malta, and the Netherlands. 

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