South Korea (KR)

16 bookmakers serve South Korea: which actually pay out

Atlas tracks 16 brands that officially accept players from South Korea, under an unregulated market. Average trust score across the accepting brands is 61/100. Recent enforcement is surfaced below.

#1Top pickHighest Atlas Trust Score in South KoreaBet36589/100
KRW·South Korean won19+legal ageKCGP 1336Heavily restricted, state monopoly

Market at a glance

Brands officially accepting
16
Licensing system
Unregulated market
Average trust score
61/100
Top brand score
89/100

Trust-score distribution of top 10 brands

  • 80+ (5)
  • 60-79 (3)
  • 40-59 (2)
  • Under 40 (0)

Atlas tracks brands by their official accept-list and licence register. Many brands offering crypto deposits may also be reachable from South Korea grey-market without a local licence. Verify the brand's current terms before depositing.

Online betting in South Korea

South Korea is tracked in the SharkBetting Atlas with 16 bookmakers explicitly accepting players from the country. No domestic gambling regulator is currently tracked for this country, so brands typically operate from offshore jurisdictions. The average Trust Score across these brands is 61, in the upper half of the global distribution. Trust Score ranks the brands using six weighted components covering licensing, corporate transparency, security, reviews, threat intelligence, and operational longevity.

Three things to know before you pick a bookmaker in South Korea

Country pages on most affiliate sites stop at a flag and a list. The questions that actually matter to a player are: is it legal here, who oversees the brand, and what protections does that give me.

  • State-monopoly market

    South Korea's domestic licensing is structured around a state or quasi-state operator. Private brands are restricted or excluded from local marketing. Many residents bet with offshore brands as the practical workaround. Local-licence status and offshore-availability are very different signals here.

  • Monopoly inside, foreign outside

    Within the state operator's brand, consumer protection is high - the regulator and operator are essentially one entity. Outside it, with offshore brands, you depend on the operator's foreign licensee jurisdiction. There is no domestic dispute path against offshore operators.

  • Payments & tax

    Players in South Korea are responsible for declaring winnings on their personal tax return. Rates and thresholds vary - check the local tax-authority guidance. Local-bank gambling restrictions are common in South Korea; many bettors with offshore brands use e-wallets or crypto. Domestic payment methods generally only work with the state operator.

Top bookmakers serving South Korea

Top 10 brands ranked by Atlas Trust Score.

#1Top pick for South Korea

Bet365

Highest Atlas Trust Score among brands accepting players from South Korea.

Trust score

89/100

  1. 2

    Stake

    82/100
  2. 3

    William Hill

    82/100
  3. 4

    Unibet

    81/100
  4. 5

    Betway

    80/100
  5. 6

    32Red

    74/100
  6. 7

    Pinnacle

    74/100
  7. 8

    LeoVegas

    66/100
  8. 9

    BC.Game

    53/100
  9. 10

    188Bet

    41/100

The strip under each score is the brand's score DNA: licensing, corporate, security, reviews, threat intel and operations. Width is the model weight, colour is that component's score.

Not seeing your brand? Atlas tracks accept-lists from public regulator and operator sources. If a bookmaker you use is missing from South Korea or mis-listed, flag it for us and we will re-verify.

Betting from somewhere else?

Licensing, accepted brands and enforcement differ by market. Type your country to jump to its hub: 71 markets tracked.

Globally reachable via crypto

These brands operate without a local South Korea licence but are typically reachable from South Korea via crypto deposits. They are not on any official accept-list for the market, so Atlas does not rank them alongside locally-accepting brands. Verify the brand's current terms before depositing.

Crypto-deposit access varies by brand and changes without notice. Atlas tracks Trust Score from public-source signals; whether you can play from South Korea on any given day is the brand's decision, not ours.

Frequently asked questions

How many bookmakers serve South Korea?

16 bookmakers in the SharkBetting Atlas explicitly list South Korea as an accepted country, and 0 list it as blocked. The total Atlas covers 1806 brands across all jurisdictions, so the South Korea subset is 1 percent of our coverage. Country acceptance reflects operator declarations cross-checked against regulator data and licence schedules, not a legality finding for the player. Players in South Korea should always verify local law and any state, provincial, or municipal restrictions before depositing, since acceptance by an operator does not by itself authorise lawful play.

Which regulators license bookmakers in South Korea?

South Korea does not currently appear in our regulator coverage with a domestic gambling authority. Brands serving the market typically operate from offshore licences such as Curacao, Anjouan, Kahnawake, Comoros, or under hybrid B2B arrangements where the platform provider holds the licence and the front-end brand is a marketing skin. Check each brand profile for its licensing chain, the legal entity holding the licence, and the dispute-resolution route. Offshore regulators rarely offer the consumer recourse a Tier 1 regulator does.

Is online betting legal in South Korea?

Legality varies by jurisdiction and changes frequently, sometimes overnight in response to political events or court rulings. SharkBetting tracks operator-declared country acceptance against regulator data; we do not provide legal advice. Read the regulator hub at /regulators/ for the licensing regime in your country or state, check local government guidance and any state, provincial, or municipal layer of restriction, and consult a licensed professional if you are unsure. Some Atlas brands accept players from countries where private gambling is restricted, and using a brand from a restricted jurisdiction usually breaches both the operator's terms and local statutes.

How does the average Trust Score for South Korea compare globally?

The average Trust Score across the 16 brands serving South Korea is 61, against a global Atlas median that typically sits in the 45 to 55 band. That sits above the global average and is driven by the strong licensing presence in this market, particularly the 0 Tier 1 regulators we track for South Korea. Read the methodology page for component-by-component detail on how each score is composed.

Where can I see the top-ranked bookmakers for South Korea?

South Korea does not currently have a published curated best-bookmakers list, so refer to the inline top 10 below ranked by Trust Score. Country lists only build when at least 10 qualifying brands accept players from the market and pass the Atlas inclusion floor; the next monthly refresh may add South Korea to the curated index. The country hub focuses on regulators, recent enforcement, and signal counts; once published, the best-bookmaker list will focus on ranked operators with sourced blurbs.

What does it mean if a brand blocks South Korea?

Operators block specific countries to comply with their licence terms (Tier 1 regulators such as the UKGC, MGA, and ADM routinely require geofencing of unlicensed markets) or to manage payment-fraud and chargeback risk in jurisdictions with weak banking infrastructure. Blocked status is taken from the operator's own terms or licence schedule and may also reflect a sanctions or watchlist match against South Korea. Using a VPN or false residency to bypass a block usually voids the account on KYC, forfeits any balance, and may breach the operator's anti-money-laundering obligations under its home licence.

Country data is taken from operator-declared accept lists cross-checked against regulator data. See the full scoring methodology or browse all regulators.