A branded high risk payment gateway for legitimate iGaming, sports betting, and fantasy operators whose merchant category classifies them outside mainstream processor risk appetite. "High risk" is not a description of the operator — it is a description of where mainstream payment processors will not go. We go there, with branded infrastructure under your domain across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Philippines, and Myanmar.
Two-part pricing: monthly hosting fee plus 0.1%–0.4% transaction share, aligned with your channel's actual performance.
Operators searching for a "high risk payment gateway" have already discovered the punchline: their business is not actually riskier than most processors' books. It is differently classified. The label travels with the merchant category, not with the operator's quality, governance, or compliance posture. Plenty of legitimately operated, properly licensed, financially sound iGaming operators are categorized as high-risk for the simple reason that mainstream processors do not have the risk-management framework, the underwriting appetite, or the partner-bank cooperation to serve them.
The result is a market gap. Operators who could be served well by infrastructure built for their category are instead routed through general-purpose processors that treat them as exceptions, charge them as exceptions, and drop them as exceptions when an internal review pulls their category. The right answer is not to argue that the category should be reclassified. The right answer is to operate inside a payment infrastructure built specifically for the category — branded, managed, and run by people who are not surprised when "iGaming merchant" appears on the underwriting form.
This page is for operators in iGaming, sports betting, and fantasy sports. We do not serve other categories that share the high-risk label — adult, certain pharma sub-categories, MLM-adjacent businesses, or anything that does not fit the iGaming product spine. Specificity is part of how the underwriting and partner relationships actually function. A platform that tries to serve every "high risk" merchant ends up serving none of them well.
None of the four are about the operator being a bad business. They are about the structural mismatch between iGaming's actual risk profile and the way mainstream processors are organized.
Card networks classify iGaming-related MCCs with chargeback expectations that mainstream processors find uncomfortable. Whether or not your specific operation produces those chargeback rates is irrelevant to the underwriting model — the category-level expectation drives the decision. Processors built for retail e-commerce do not have the dispute-management apparatus to absorb the iGaming category's normal range, even when the specific operator's actual chargebacks are within standard limits.
iGaming regulation differs by country and continues to evolve. Mainstream processors are not staffed to track regulatory state across multiple gaming jurisdictions and adjust merchant onboarding accordingly. The path of least resistance is to decline the entire category. We treat regulatory variability as the working environment rather than as an exception, which is what makes operating across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Philippines, and Myanmar tractable.
Mainstream processors rely on a small set of large acquiring partners that decline gaming-classified flows for reasons unrelated to the specific operator. Operating in this category requires acquiring relationships specifically built and maintained for it — partners who underwrite gaming-classified merchants, settle gaming-classified flows, and stay in the relationship through the regulatory and political weather. Those relationships are scarce; they are also the entire game.
A mainstream processor that occasionally underwrites a gaming-classified merchant typically does so on a contract that gives the processor the option to reclassify, re-rate, or terminate the relationship at short notice. Operators on those contracts live with quarterly anxiety about whether the processor's internal review will pull the merchant. A platform built for the category does not have that incentive structure — our model only works if your channel keeps performing, which means we are aligned to keep the relationship working rather than to find a reason to exit it.
A focused list. Specificity is part of how the underwriting and partner relationships work.
Mass-market and VIP casino product, including live dealer streams. Casino-specific routing and fraud rules. casino payment gateway →
Pre-match and in-play betting including peak-event capacity planning for IPL, World Cup, PSL, and other major windows. sportsbook payment gateway →
Daily and weekly fantasy formats with contest-cycle reconciliation patterns and pre-lock deposit handling.
What we do not serve. We are not a generic high-risk processor. We do not serve adult content, MLM-adjacent businesses, certain pharmaceutical sub-categories, or other industries that sit under the "high risk" label but outside the iGaming product spine. The category-level focus is part of why the underwriting and partner relationships work for the operators we do serve.
The deployment shape is the same as any other tenant on our platform. The high-risk-specific posture is in the partner stack underneath, the underwriting framework, and the ongoing-relationship management.
Operators on our platform inherit acquiring relationships specifically built and maintained for iGaming, sports betting, and fantasy. The partner-acquisition slog that takes most operators a quarter or more is shortened to a structured proposal at onboarding. When a partner moves under regulatory pressure or political weather, the platform absorbs the change rather than forcing the operator to rebuild from scratch.
Payment-layer fraud rules, velocity thresholds, BIN-attack detection, and dispute-management processes all calibrated for iGaming patterns rather than for retail e-commerce. The operator's iGaming platform handles player-side risk (bonus abuse, account farming, RG flags); we handle payment-side risk; the two layers exchange events. Neither tries to do the other's job, which is how both layers stay calibrated correctly.
The 0.1%–0.4% transaction share keeps us invested in the operator's channel performance for the lifetime of the partnership. There is no incentive to find a reason to exit; the model only works when the channel keeps performing. That alignment is what makes the relationship survive the category's normal regulatory and political weather rather than fracturing the first time an internal-review email comes around.
The high-risk umbrella label is the same across markets; the actual regulatory, partner, and rail picture differs sharply.
UPI rail, state-by-state regulatory variability, evolving GST framework. India coverage →
SBP-conservative bank acquiring; JazzCash and Easypaisa on the wallet layer. Pakistan operator context →
bKash dominance; Bangladesh Bank's MFS framework underneath. Bangladesh coverage →
SBV intermediary-payment-service framework; MoMo as trust signal. Vietnam coverage →
Two operating modes (PAGCOR-licensed local vs offshore-from-PH). Philippines context →
Volatile rail availability; adaptive routing posture. Myanmar operator notes →
Tell us your product (casino, sportsbook, fantasy), your target markets, your monthly volume, and where the current processor relationship is failing. We will tell you within an hour whether a branded high risk payment gateway on our infrastructure is the right call.