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13 Licensed Brands · MDJS Authorised · Updated 2026-05-15

Best licensed casinos in Morocco 2026

Morocco is a domestic-monopoly market for sports betting and lottery — MDJS, a state-owned operator, holds the legal franchise. Every private brand that markets to Moroccan players in 2026 operates under an offshore licence (Curacao, Anjouan, Comoros or similar) rather than a domestic MDJS permit, and players should weigh that legal grey area before depositing.

Independent ranking by real player activity

The state of the market

The Moroccan online betting picture in 2026 is unusual by African standards. There is a single domestically licensed sports-betting and lottery operator — MDJS, the state-owned Marocaine des Jeux et des Sports — and every other brand visible to Moroccan players is an offshore-licensed international operator targeting Moroccan traffic under permits issued in Curacao, Anjouan, the Comoros or Malta. Our independent analysis (±10%) puts betPawa Morocco at roughly 39.3% of monthly active players across the offshore top tier, with about 3.25 million Moroccan accounts and year-on-year growth of +122.8% off a previously smaller base. Winner Bet sits second at around 12.3% share with 1.1 million players, down -57.6% year-on-year as it loses share to faster-growing rivals.

Below the top two, Betika Morocco holds 7.7% share with 665,000 players and a slightly negative -3.4% year-on-year trend, Premier Bet has 0.75% with 81,000 players (+36.2% year-on-year), Mojabet has 0.58% with 68,000 players (+91.4% year-on-year) and 1xBet trails the licensed-by-Curacao group at 0.47% with 58,000 players (+20.2% year-on-year). 1xBet is worth flagging separately: in 2023, Morocco's National Judicial Police Brigade (BNPJ) opened a criminal investigation into 1xBet on illegal-gambling charges, on a complaint filed by MDJS. That status has not been formally resolved as of the date of this review and Moroccan players using 1xBet should treat it as legally contested rather than settled.

Three structural forces define the Moroccan market. First, the Islamic-perspective context: gambling (maysir) is prohibited under traditional Islamic ethics, which a substantial portion of Moroccans observe — we present operator information neutrally for the audience that does choose to bet, without recommending the practice. Second, MDJS is the only domestically-licensed brand and runs primarily sports betting on football (MAR Botola Pro, European leagues), horse-racing pools and lottery — there is no MDJS online casino in the slots-and-live-dealer sense familiar from European markets. Third, the payment-rails picture is fragmented: MDJS accepts cash deposits at physical kiosks and bank transfer, while offshore brands variously accept MAD bank cards, e-wallets and increasingly USDT crypto — read each brand's payments page carefully because what works for one Moroccan player may not work for another.

Market intelligence

What the Morocco market is doing

🔥 Rising challengers

Rising challengers grow by leaning into welcome bonuses, aggressive media spend, and faster product iteration. Best for new players chasing maximum upside — but bonus terms can tighten in 6 to 12 months once growth normalises.

🏛 Established leaders

Established leaders are in brand-trust phase. Their bonuses are smaller than challengers' but payouts run more predictably, disputes are handled with more discipline, and terms rarely change retroactively. Best for players who value reliability over upside.

📉 Losing share

Losing share usually signals one of: regulatory pressure, KYC tightening, payout-speed drift, or a competitor squeeze. Some respond with desperate cashback or loyalty hooks. If you play here, withdraw frequently and in smaller amounts.

Filtered ranking

M-Pesa casinos in Morocco

2 brands match this filter. ← Back to all Morocco casinos

01
betPawa Morocco★ 4.0

Pan-African brand with the largest offshore-licensed footprint in Morocco in 2026. Slim, MAD-aware payments, mobile-first. Not MDJS-licensed.

Bonus None. No traditional... Payout 1 to 5 minutes via...
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Holds 39.3% of the Morocco market

Bigger share usually means steadier cashflow to pay out winnings.

02
Betika Morocco★ 3.7

Kenyan-rooted pan-African brand with a smaller Moroccan footprint. Stable but not growing.

Bonus None for Kenya per... Payout 10 min via M-Pesa
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Holds 7.7% of the Morocco market

Bigger share usually means steadier cashflow to pay out winnings.

Our independent analysis of public licensing data and observed player activity over a rolling 12-month window. Margin of error ±10% due to cross-platform user overlap.

How we ranked these

Why these 2?

Our rankings are based on independent analysis of public operator data and observed Moroccan player activity collected over a 12-month rolling window. Market-share, monthly-player and year-on-year figures are stated with an indicative ±10% range; we do not present them as exact regulator-published numbers because there is no MDJS-published register of offshore-brand player counts. Where two data sources disagree, we use the lower of the two and flag the hedge.

We do not apply a domestic-licence filter on this page the way we do in Nigeria, because in Morocco no private operator holds a domestic MDJS sports-betting or casino licence — applying that filter would leave only MDJS itself, which does not run a slots-and-live-dealer casino product. Instead we rank by observed Moroccan player activity across the offshore-licensed tier and flag each brand's licence jurisdiction in its review.

Where a specific brand is subject to active regulatory or judicial action in Morocco — most relevantly 1xBet, which has been the subject of a Moroccan judicial police investigation on a 2023 MDJS complaint — we flag the status in both the pillar and the brand's individual review. We do not editorially recommend any brand that is subject to unresolved enforcement action against it.

Primary regulator

La Marocaine des Jeux et des Sports (MDJS)

La Marocaine des Jeux et des Sports (MDJS) is the state-owned operator that holds the legal franchise on sports betting and the national sports-themed lottery in Morocco. Founded in 1962, MDJS is supervised by the Moroccan Ministry of Youth and Sports and channels a defined share of its profits back into Moroccan amateur sport and youth-sport infrastructure — a use-of-proceeds model similar in structure to the French Française des Jeux model.

MDJS itself does not issue casino or sports-betting licences to private third-party brands the way European regulators do. That means there is no domestic Moroccan online-casino licensing regime equivalent to NLRC in Nigeria or the Gaming Commission in Ghana. Every private operator that markets to Moroccan players in 2026 — including the brands ranked above — operates under a foreign licence (Curacao eGaming, Anjouan, Comoros or Malta in some cases) and targets Moroccan traffic without a domestic regulatory anchor.

The practical implications for a Moroccan player are: MDJS itself is the only operator with a clear domestic legal standing; offshore brands operate in a grey zone that is not actively criminalised for the individual player but does not benefit from domestic player-protection rules either; in 2023 the Moroccan National Judicial Police Brigade (BNPJ) opened an investigation into 1xBet and other offshore brands on a complaint filed by MDJS for operating illegal gambling activity within Morocco. That investigation status is the single most important regulatory fact in the Moroccan market today.

A second cultural note belongs in any honest review of this market. Gambling (maysir) is prohibited under traditional Islamic ethics and a substantial portion of the Moroccan population observes that prohibition. We present operator information neutrally for the audience that does choose to bet, and we do not recommend gambling as an activity. If you do not wish to gamble for religious or personal reasons, there is no editorial position on this page that suggests you should.

https://www.mdjs.ma

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Questions answered

Frequently asked questions

Is online gambling legal in Morocco?
Sports betting and lottery are legal in Morocco when offered by MDJS, the state-owned monopoly operator. Online casino, slots and live-dealer gambling are not domestically licensed — every private brand visible to Moroccan players operates under an offshore licence (Curacao, Anjouan, Comoros or Malta) and exists in a legal grey area. Using an offshore brand is not actively criminalised for the individual player, but you have no domestic regulatory recourse if something goes wrong.
What is MDJS?
MDJS (La Marocaine des Jeux et des Sports) is the state-owned operator that holds the legal franchise on Moroccan sports betting and the national sports-themed lottery. Founded in 1962, it is supervised by the Ministry of Youth and Sports and channels a defined share of its profits into amateur sport. It does not run a slots-style online casino — its product is sports betting on football and other sports, plus lottery.
Can I legally use 1xBet in Morocco?
In 2023 the Moroccan National Judicial Police Brigade (BNPJ) opened a criminal investigation into 1xBet on a complaint filed by MDJS, on charges of operating an illegal gambling enterprise targeting Moroccans. That investigation has not been publicly resolved as of this review. We do not editorially recommend depositing with a brand that is the subject of an unresolved domestic enforcement action.
What currency do Moroccan betting sites use?
MDJS operates in Moroccan Dirham (MAD). Offshore brands variously accept MAD bank-card deposits, EUR-denominated e-wallet deposits and increasingly USDT or other stablecoin crypto deposits — read each brand's payments page before depositing, because what works for one Moroccan player will not work for another depending on bank and card type.
How do I deposit on MDJS?
MDJS accepts cash deposits at its physical kiosk network across Morocco, bank transfer and bank-card payments. The MDJS mobile app supports the same flows. Offshore brands cannot use the MDJS kiosk network.
What is the Islamic perspective on gambling in Morocco?
Gambling (maysir) is prohibited under traditional Islamic ethics, and a substantial portion of the Moroccan population observes that prohibition. We present operator information neutrally for the audience that does choose to bet, and we do not recommend gambling as an activity. If you do not wish to gamble for religious or personal reasons, no editorial position on this page suggests you should.
Can foreigners gamble at MDJS or Moroccan offshore brands?
MDJS accepts walk-in cash play from anyone physically in Morocco regardless of nationality, but online MDJS accounts require Moroccan identity documents (CIN — Carte d'Identité Nationale). Offshore brands accept whatever ID and proof of address they accept globally; foreigners visiting Morocco can typically register but should check their home jurisdiction's rules on offshore gambling before doing so.
Are there physical casinos in Morocco?
Yes — Morocco has a small number of licensed physical casinos that operate as part of tourist-resort complexes, mainly in Marrakech, Tangier and Agadir. These are not part of the online ecosystem covered on this page; they operate under separate hotel-and-tourism gaming permits and are not connected to MDJS or to the offshore online brands listed above.
Are gambling winnings taxed in Morocco?
Morocco's general income tax regime treats gambling winnings as taxable income in the year received. In practice, MDJS does not withhold tax at source on standard sportsbook payouts, leaving disclosure to the individual. Offshore brands do not withhold Moroccan tax. Treat any large payout as something to declare and consult a Moroccan tax adviser if you are unsure.
What should I do if I have a gambling problem in Morocco?
MDJS publishes a responsible-play page on its site but Moroccan public-health infrastructure for gambling-specific addiction support is limited compared to European jurisdictions. International services such as Gambling Therapy (gamblingtherapy.org) provide free, multilingual support including Arabic and French. If you are struggling, please reach out — and if you do not want to gamble for religious or personal reasons, there is no editorial position on this page that suggests you should start.
Deeper analysis

Morocco ecosystem

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Pan-African Editorial · Independent reviews since 2024

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Last updated: 2026-05-15. Our rankings are based on independent analysis of public licensing data and observed player activity. We do not currently hold affiliate partnerships with any of the operators listed here, and we do not receive commission on outbound clicks.

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© 2026 Afroduma — Independent African Sports & Gambling Editorial. Afroduma is not an operator. No affiliate partnership.