Top iGaming Suppliers: Complete Directory of Casino & Sportsbook Providers
- Daniel Gunba

- Jan 5
- 4 min read

Top iGaming Suppliers: Complete Directory of Casino & Sportsbook Providers (2026)
Building or scaling an iGaming product depends on your supplier stack: game studios, aggregators, sportsbook engines, PAM, payments, KYC/AML, fraud tools, compliance, analytics, and affiliate platforms. This guide is a practical directory of iGaming suppliers with selection criteria, comparison checklists, and a short vendor map to help you choose faster.
Quick navigation
iGaming supplier categories (what you actually need)
How to choose iGaming suppliers (checklist)
Directory: popular iGaming suppliers by category
Comparison table template
FAQs
What are iGaming suppliers?
iGaming suppliers are B2B companies that provide the technology and services behind online casinos, sportsbooks, and betting platforms. Some suppliers deliver content (slots/live casino), while others provide infrastructure (platforms, payments, KYC, risk, compliance, CRM, analytics).
If you search for “igaming suppliers”, you’re usually looking for one of these outcomes:
a directory/list of providers,
recommended vendors by category,
a checklist to evaluate suppliers before signing.
This page covers all three.
iGaming supplier categories (the full stack)
1) Game content suppliers
Slot studios, live casino studios, instant games.
What to check
Licensed markets (US vs EU vs LatAm)
Game portfolio, volatility mix, RTP ranges
Localization & responsible gambling tools
Reporting & game performance dashboards
2) Aggregators / game hubs
One integration → access to many studios.
What to check
Coverage (how many studios, which top-tier)
Uptime & redundancy, monitoring
Commercials (rev share vs fixed fees)
Unified wallet / bonus handling
3) Sportsbook suppliers
Odds feed, trading, risk management, bet builder, pricing.
What to check
Latency, in-play stability
Risk controls, limits, market depth
Compliance features per jurisdiction
Trading support & managed services
4) Platform suppliers (PAM / turnkey / white label)
Player account management, wallets, bonus engine, back office, CMS.
What to check
Multi-brand/multi-jurisdiction support
Bonus engine depth and segmentation
APIs, data export, BI integrations
Migration support (from another PAM)
5) Payments suppliers
PSPs, acquiring, payouts, fraud-aware routing.
What to check
Approval rates by geo & payment method
Chargeback tooling and descriptors
Payout speed, reconciliation
iGaming risk appetite + licensing requirements
6) KYC / AML & compliance suppliers
Identity verification, document checks, AML screening, PEP/sanctions.
What to check
Pass rates and false positive rates
Coverage by country/document types
Workflow customization (levels, triggers)
Audit logs and compliance reporting
7) Fraud & risk suppliers
Device fingerprinting, bot protection, account takeover, bonus abuse detection.
What to check
Real-time scoring, rules engine
Chargeback prevention and dispute tooling
Integrations with PSP and KYC
Case management UI for risk team
8) Marketing, CRM & analytics suppliers
CDP, CRM automation, push/email/SMS, attribution, affiliate tracking.
What to check
Segmentation, journeys, real-time triggers
Attribution accuracy and anti-fraud
Data ownership & export
Compliance for messaging + consent
How to choose iGaming suppliers (practical checklist)
Use this checklist before you shortlist vendors:
Business fit
Which regulated markets are you targeting this year?
Do you need turnkey/white-label or a modular stack?
What’s your timeline: MVP in 8–12 weeks or longer build?
Commercials
Setup fees, monthly minimums, revenue share, per-transaction pricing
Term length, exit clauses, portability of data
Hidden costs: additional jurisdictions, extra brands, premium support
Tech & operations
API quality and documentation
SLA, uptime history, redundancy, incident response
Reporting: can you export raw events to your BI?
Compliance & security
Certifications, audit logs, retention policies
Responsible gambling tooling
KYB (your operator checks) and vendor due diligence
Support
Who supports go-live? Who supports weekends?
Do they have local expertise for your target market?
Directory: iGaming suppliers by category (starter list)
Below are examples of well-known iGaming suppliers and vendor types you’ll see in the market. Always validate current licensing/market availability directly with the vendor.
Casino & live game content (examples)
Evolution (live casino and game content)
Pragmatic Play (slots/live)
Playtech (content + platform solutions in some markets)
IGT (content + systems in various markets)
Games Global / Microgaming ecosystem (content portfolio via group brands)
Aggregators / game hubs (examples)
Content aggregators and distribution hubs (varies by region)
Operator platforms often include aggregation modules
Sportsbook suppliers (examples)
Kambi (sportsbook services in many markets)
Sportradar (data/odds services; product suite varies)
EveryMatrix (sportsbook/platform modules)
Platform suppliers (PAM / turnkey / white label) (examples)
EveryMatrix (modular platform)
BetConstruct (platform solutions)
SOFTSWISS (platform solutions)
Aspire Global / NeoGames ecosystem (platform offerings vary)
Payments (examples)
Paysafe (payments for gaming verticals)
Nuvei (PSP/acquiring options vary by market)
Worldpay (acquiring in many regions; iGaming availability depends on jurisdiction)
KYC / AML (examples)
Sumsub (KYC/AML tooling)
Onfido (identity verification; coverage varies)
Fraud & risk (examples)
SEON (fraud/risk tooling)
Device intelligence and anti-abuse vendors (varies)
Affiliate & marketing tech (examples)
Affiliate tracking platforms (multiple options)
CRM/CDP vendors with gaming use-cases (multiple options)
FAQs
What is the difference between iGaming suppliers and iGaming providers?
“Suppliers” usually refers to B2B vendors (platforms, content, payments, KYC). “Providers” can mean the same thing, but sometimes also refers to consumer-facing brands (operators). In this directory, we mean B2B suppliers.
Do I need an aggregator or direct integrations?
Aggregators reduce integration time and expand content faster. Direct integrations can improve commercials and control, but require more dev work. Many operators use a hybrid approach.
Which iGaming suppliers are best for the US?
It depends on your target state and licensing constraints. Start with vendors that can clearly demonstrate regulated market coverage, compliance tooling, and references in your jurisdiction.
What should I ask before signing a supplier contract?
Ask for SLA, uptime reporting, incident response process, exit clauses, data portability, security documentation, and a clear statement of market availability.
