Player protectionTier 3

Is a Anjouan licence safe?

What happens when your bookmaker won't pay, and what the licence actually does for you.

Anjouan licenses 13 bookmakers in Anjouan, Comoros.

Oversight at a glance

Licensees tracked
13
Currently active
13
Median trust score
37 /100
Enforcement actions
0
Total fines on record
0

What the data says about Anjouan

Where licensees land

Median trust score across 13 scored Anjouan licensees: 37/100. That is 3 points below the Atlas-wide median of 40/100. Within the Light-touch oversight bracket, this regulator's median sits at position 1 of 2 (sorted lowest to highest).

Enforcement footprint

Anjouan has no enforcement actions in the public record that Atlas indexes. Either the regulator has not published actions in a machine-readable format, or none have been issued in the tracked period.

Most common action types

Atlas has not aggregated specific violation patterns for Anjouan yet, either because the enforcement record is empty or the action reasons are not categorised in a standard form.

Trust-score distribution across 13 scored licensees

  • 80+ (1)
  • 60-79 (0)
  • 40-59 (4)
  • Under 40 (8)

Find your bookmaker

All 13 bookmakers Atlas tracks under Anjouan. Search by name or filter by licence status. Each name links to its full brand audit.

Showing 13 of 13

What this licence means for you as a player

Regulator pages on most affiliate sites stop at "this regulator exists". What actually matters: what does this licence cover, what does it not cover, and how do you escalate a dispute.

  • Light-touch licensing

    Tier-3 licensees under Anjouan hold a registration-style licence rather than a fully audited operating permit. KYC, AML, and responsible-gambling rules exist on paper, but enforcement is rare and the regulator publishes little day-to-day oversight detail.

  • Limited player-side protection

    A tier-3 licence is not a strong consumer-protection signal. Segregated player funds, ADR, audited payouts, and binding mediation are typically not enforceable through this regulator. The functional protection is the operator's own reputation, not the licence.

  • Limited recourse

    Complain to the operator first. Anjouan's complaint process exists but rarely compels operator behaviour. Practical recourse usually means public complaint trails (review aggregators, social platforms) rather than the regulator forcing a payout.

About Anjouan

Anjouan is the gambling regulator for Anjouan, Comoros. SharkBetting classifies it as a Tier-3 regulator: lower licensing barriers and limited consumer-protection track record. Player recourse is often weaker than Tier-1 or Tier-2 jurisdictions. The Atlas tracks 13 bookmaker licences issued by this authority, of which 13 are currently active. Notable licensees in the SharkBetting Atlas include Stake, GoldBet, Betroom24. Operators holding a Tier-3 Anjouan licence still vary widely in trust score, so always check the per-bookmaker page before depositing. In practical terms, a Tier-3 licence is closer to a registration than active oversight: dispute resolution is rare, fund segregation is not consistently enforced, and recourse usually falls back on third-party dispute-mediation services.

If your bookmaker is licensed under Anjouan

Anjouan is a Tier 3 regulator. The licence proves the brand has paid registration fees and submitted documentation; it does not prove the brand has been audited or that you have practical recourse. Treat the licence as the floor, not the ceiling.

  1. Step 1

    Do not rely on the regulator for dispute resolution

    Anjouan has limited mediation capacity. The public complaint trail (review aggregators, social media, regulator notices) is usually the only practical pressure point on a Tier 3 licensee.

  2. Step 2

    Cap your exposure per brand

    Spread risk: keep deposits and balances small per brand, withdraw frequently, and avoid concentrating funds on a single Tier 3 licensee. Recovery in a payout dispute is not guaranteed.

  3. Step 3

    Read Atlas' brand-level audit BEFORE depositing

    Tier 3 brands carry most of the cluster-level risk Atlas tracks. The brand-level audit page surfaces specific red flags (KYC trap clauses, withdrawal caps, account-closure language) that the licence itself does not screen for.

  4. Step 4

    Use payment rails that retain chargeback rights

    Credit cards and some e-wallets allow chargebacks on undelivered services. Crypto and direct bank transfers do not. Tier 3 disputes often end up resolved at the payment-rail level, not the regulator level.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Anjouan?

The Anjouan is the licensing and supervisory body for online and retail gambling in Anjouan, Comoros. Its public role is to issue operator licences, set conditions for player protection and anti-money-laundering, and intervene when those conditions are breached. The SharkBetting Atlas tracks 13 bookmakers it has licensed, with 13 currently active. Operators must publish their licence number on their site so players can verify status against the regulator's register.

How many bookmakers are licensed by the Anjouan?

The SharkBetting Atlas currently tracks 13 bookmaker entities with at least one licence record from this regulator, of which 13 have an active status in our snapshot. Numbers fluctuate as operators surrender, lapse, or have their licences revoked, and as the Atlas merges new register pulls. The operators with the highest atlas trust scores under this licence include Stake, GoldBet, Betroom24, and the full list is shown in the licensees grid on this page sorted by trust score.

Is a Anjouan licence trustworthy?

Treat with caution. Anjouan is a Tier-3 regulator. Tier-3 regulators (Curacao, Anjouan, Comoros, Costa Rica) typically issue licences with minimal ongoing oversight, so players have limited dispute resolution if the operator behaves badly. A Tier-3 licence does not guarantee that the operator behaves well, only that it has paid for some form of registration.

Has the Anjouan taken enforcement actions?

The SharkBetting Atlas does not yet have a structured feed of enforcement actions for Anjouan. That does not necessarily mean none exist: many regulators publish enforcement only on their own websites without a structured data feed, so absence here is absence of evidence rather than evidence of absence. Check the regulator's official news and enforcement page directly for the latest record before depositing with a licensed operator.

How do I complain about a bookmaker licensed by the Anjouan?

Recourse is limited. The Anjouan Offshore Gaming Authority does not publish a structured complaints process for players. Independent ADR is rare. Players largely rely on third-party dispute-mediation services. Always file in writing, attach screenshots and transaction IDs, and quote the operator's licence number so the regulator can locate the file quickly. Independent third-party dispute-mediation services can also escalate cases that the regulator declines.

How do I verify a Anjouan licence number?

Look at the operator's site footer for a licence number, then cross-check it on the regulator's official public register. Each licensee profile on this page links back to the bookmaker's atlas page, where SharkBetting records the licence number under "Multi-Jurisdiction Badges". Mismatches between the displayed number and the regulator's register are a strong red flag: an operator that misrepresents its licence is one to avoid.

Sources: SharkBetting regulator hub, licensee data from official regulator registers, enforcement actions parsed from regulator press releases. Tiers are SharkBetting's editorial classification, derived from the Trust Score v2 reference lists. See the full scoring methodology.

Other Atlas-tracked regulators at the same tier. Useful when comparing licence quality across jurisdictions.