The fastest way to check if an online betting app is properly licensed in the Philippines is to verify the exact app brand, operator name, and website or URL against PAGCOR’s official lists. Do not rely on a PAGCOR logo, a “licensed” badge, a Facebook ad, an influencer post, or the fact that the app appears in Google Play or the App Store. In the Philippines, a betting app is only safe to treat as authorized if the regulator’s public records match the actual app or website you are using.
What “properly licensed” means for an online betting app in the Philippines
For most online casino, e-bingo, e-casino, online poker, specialty games, numeric games, and sports betting platforms available to players in the Philippines, the main regulator is the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation, commonly known as PAGCOR.
PAGCOR’s Electronic Gaming Licensing Department says PAGCOR regulates games of chance and issues licenses for gaming operations within Philippine territory. Its electronic gaming coverage includes:
- Traditional bingo games
- Electronic bingo games
- Electronic casino games
- Sports betting
- Specialty games
- Online poker games
- Numeric games
- Other games PAGCOR may allow in the future
You can review this directly on PAGCOR’s official Electronic Gaming Licensing Department page.
For ordinary users, the important point is simple: the app must match an authorized operator, brand, and domain or URL appearing in PAGCOR’s official records.
A legitimate-looking app may still be unauthorized if:
- The app uses a similar name but a different website
- The app copied a PAGCOR logo from another site
- The app redirects you to a domain not listed by PAGCOR
- The payment recipient is a private person or unrelated company
- The “license certificate” is just an image with no official verification trail
Legal basis: why licensing matters
Philippine gambling law is built around the idea that games of chance are generally restricted unless authorized by law.
Under Presidential Decree No. 1869, the PAGCOR Charter, the State centralized and integrated the regulation of games of chance through PAGCOR. You can read the official text of PD 1869 on the Supreme Court E-Library.
Republic Act No. 9487 (2007) further amended PAGCOR’s franchise and extended its authority. It also recognizes that some games may fall under other existing franchises, regulatory bodies, or special laws. The official text is available on Lawphil: RA 9487.
Illegal gambling remains punishable under Presidential Decree No. 1602, which imposed stiffer penalties for violations of Philippine gambling laws. The Civil Code also matters. Under Article 2013 of the Civil Code, a game of chance is one that depends more on chance or hazard than skill. Under Article 2014, no action can be maintained by the winner to collect winnings in a game of chance, while the loser may recover losses from the winner, with legal interest, and subsidiarily from the gambling house operator or manager. The Civil Code provisions on gambling are available in the official Civil Code text on Lawphil.
In practical terms, if the betting app is unlicensed, you may face two problems at once:
- The app may be operating illegally.
- Your ability to enforce “winnings” may be weak, because Philippine law treats unauthorized games of chance differently from regulated gaming.
Which government agency should you check?
Different gambling products may fall under different agencies. Do not assume every betting-related app is a PAGCOR app.
| Product or activity | Main agency to check | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Online casino, e-casino, e-bingo, online poker, sports betting, specialty games, numeric games | PAGCOR | Check PAGCOR’s official lists of registered brands, domains, URLs, and gaming venue operators. |
| Lotto, sweepstakes, STL, PCSO lottery products | PCSO | A private “lotto app” is not automatically authorized just because it shows PCSO results. Check the PCSO official website. |
| Horse racing betting | GAB / Philracom context | GAB supervises betting aspects of horse racing, while Philracom regulates non-betting aspects of horse racing. |
| Offshore gaming or POGO-style operations | Currently banned under EO No. 74, s. 2024 | Be very careful with any app claiming to be a “POGO,” “offshore,” or “foreign-facing” Philippine licensee. |
| Foreign online casino with Curaçao, Malta, Isle of Man, or other foreign license | Foreign regulator, not Philippine regulator | A foreign license does not by itself authorize offering gambling services to people in the Philippines. |
| SEC, DTI, mayor’s permit, barangay clearance | Business registration only | These are not gambling licenses. They do not legalize online betting operations. |
Step-by-step guide: how to check if an online betting app is licensed by PAGCOR
1. Get the exact details from the app
Before checking PAGCOR’s lists, write down or screenshot the following:
- App name as shown on your phone
- Website or landing page URL
- Login URL
- Any redirected URL after you click “Play,” “Deposit,” or “Register”
- Operator or company name in the app footer, terms, privacy policy, or “About” page
- Claimed PAGCOR license number, if any
- App developer name in Google Play or App Store
- Payment recipient name for deposits
- Customer support email, phone number, Telegram, Viber, or Facebook page
This matters because many scam apps use names similar to legitimate brands. For example, a legitimate listed domain might be sample.ph, while the scam version may use sample-vip.com, sample88.net, or a shortened link that redirects elsewhere.
2. Go to PAGCOR’s official regulatory page
Use PAGCOR’s official regulatory website, not a search ad or a random “PAGCOR casino list” blog.
Start with the official PAGCOR Regulatory page, then go to Electronic Gaming Licensing.
The key PAGCOR lists to check are:
- List of PAGCOR-Accredited Gaming System Administrators and Registered Brands and Domain Names/URLs
- List of Registered Brands and Domain Names/URLs of Licensed Casinos
- List of Licensees for Gaming Venue Operations
These lists are usually PDFs. Check the date on the document header because PAGCOR updates lists from time to time.
3. Search the PDF for the brand and domain
Use your browser or PDF viewer’s search function.
Search for:
- The app brand
- The operator name
- The main domain
- The subdomain
- The shortened or redirected URL
- Any alternative spelling used by the app
A proper match should not be vague. Ideally, you should see the app’s brand or related brand in the PAGCOR list, together with the exact domain, subdomain, or additional URL used by the platform.
PAGCOR’s brand/domain list contains columns such as:
- Gaming System Administrator
- Game Offering
- Main Brand
- Root Word
- Sub Brand
- Main Domain
- Sub-domain
- Additional URL
For users, the most important columns are the brand and the domain or URL. A brand name match alone is not enough if the website you are using is different.
4. Check the exact URL, not just the logo
This is where many people get tricked.
A fake site may display:
- PAGCOR logo
- “PAGCOR licensed” badge
- A screenshot of an old certificate
- A QR code
- A fake “verification” page
- A name similar to a real licensed brand
But if the actual URL is not in PAGCOR’s official list, treat it as suspicious.
Check carefully for:
.phversus.com- Extra words like
vip,official,bonus,agent,cash,play, orpromo - Hyphens or misspellings
- Telegram-only registration
- Short links such as bit.ly or tinyurl
- Redirects to a different domain after login
- Payment pages hosted under unrelated domains
A licensed brand may have several registered domains, but you should still confirm that the specific domain you are using appears in PAGCOR’s list.
5. Check whether the app is tied to a licensed gaming venue or casino
PAGCOR’s local online gaming framework is not just about a random mobile app existing on the internet. PAGCOR’s Electronic Gaming Licensing Department explains that remote or online gaming operation is connected with approved gaming venues and registered players.
This is why you should also check the List of Licensees for Gaming Venue Operations.
That list contains an important caution: the listed entities are licensees or operators for domestic land-based gaming venues offering PAGCOR-approved games, and they are not licensed to operate offshore gaming operations or POGO.
This distinction is very important after the Philippine government’s ban on offshore gaming operations.
6. Check if the app is claiming to be offshore, POGO, or IGL
If an app says it is a Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator, POGO, Internet Gaming Licensee, offshore casino, or foreign-facing Philippine licensee, be extra careful.
Under Executive Order No. 74, s. 2024, the Philippine government ordered the immediate ban of Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators, Internet Gaming Licensees, and other offshore gaming operations in the Philippines. The official issuance is listed by the Presidential Communications Office as Executive Order No. 74.
As a practical rule, an app that markets itself today as a Philippine-based offshore gaming operator should not be treated as automatically legitimate. Check PAGCOR’s current notices and lists of cancelled or reported entities on the official PAGCOR Offshore Gaming page.
7. Confirm age and responsible gaming controls
PAGCOR’s responsible gaming rules matter because a real regulated platform should not operate like an anonymous cash-in/cash-out game.
PAGCOR states on its Responsible Gaming page that persons under 21 years old are not allowed to gamble. PAGCOR also identifies other restricted persons, including certain government officials and employees, AFP and PNP members, persons in the National Database of Restricted Persons, and Gaming Employment License holders.
A properly regulated app should usually have:
- Age verification
- Know-your-customer or KYC requirements
- Account verification before withdrawal
- Responsible gaming reminders
- Self-exclusion or exclusion mechanisms
- Clear terms on deposits, withdrawals, bonuses, and disputes
- A privacy policy for handling IDs and personal data
No KYC at all can be a red flag, especially if the app lets anyone deposit through a personal wallet within minutes.
8. Contact PAGCOR if the match is unclear
If the app name appears in an ad but you cannot find the exact domain in PAGCOR’s list, send an inquiry directly to PAGCOR.
Use PAGCOR’s official contact page, which lists info@pagcor.ph for inquiries and concerns.
Include:
- App name
- Website and all URLs
- Screenshots of the license claim
- Screenshots of the deposit page
- Operator or company name shown in the app
- Payment recipient details
- Your specific question: “Is this app/domain authorized by PAGCOR for online gaming in the Philippines?”
Do not send passwords, OTPs, full card numbers, or unnecessary personal financial information.
Red flags that an online betting app may be illegal or unsafe
Treat the app as high-risk if you see any of these:
- The app says “PAGCOR licensed” but does not show an operator name
- The domain is not in PAGCOR’s official list
- Deposits go to a personal GCash, Maya, bank, or crypto wallet
- Customer service is only through Telegram, Messenger, or Viber
- The app refuses withdrawals unless you pay “tax,” “unlocking fee,” “verification fee,” or “VIP upgrade”
- The app requires repeated deposits before releasing winnings
- The app uses a foreign license but targets Philippine residents
- The app tells you to use a VPN
- The app advertises “guaranteed wins”
- The app has no age verification
- The app uses celebrity photos or fake news articles
- The app’s terms say disputes must be handled in a foreign country unrelated to the operator
- The app is not searchable on PAGCOR’s current lists
- The app uses a real licensed brand name but a different domain
The biggest practical warning sign is this: a legitimate licensed platform should not need to hide behind personal wallets, fake urgency, or changing URLs.
Is being on Google Play or the App Store proof that the app is legal?
No. App store availability is not a Philippine gambling license.
Google Play and the App Store may screen apps under their own platform policies, but they do not replace PAGCOR, PCSO, GAB, or any Philippine regulator. A scam app may also distribute itself through:
- APK download links
- QR codes
- Telegram channels
- Facebook ads
- Mirror websites
- “Agent” referral links
For Philippine licensing, always go back to the official regulator’s records.
Is GCash, Maya, or bank transfer proof that the betting app is licensed?
No. Payment access is not the same as a gambling license.
An unlicensed operator may still receive money through personal wallets, mule accounts, payment aggregators, crypto, or bank transfers. A payment channel only proves that money can move. It does not prove the betting activity is lawful.
If the payment recipient is a private person, unrelated company, or frequently changing account, that is a serious warning sign.
What documents should you save before reporting a suspicious betting app?
Save evidence before the app, website, or chat disappears.
| Evidence | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| App name and screenshots | Shows what platform you used. |
| Exact URLs and redirects | Helps PAGCOR or investigators compare the app with official registered domains. |
| Claimed license certificate or badge | Useful for checking possible counterfeit PAGCOR claims. |
| Deposit receipts | Shows where your money went. |
| Bank, GCash, Maya, or crypto transaction references | Helps trace payments. |
| Chat logs with agents or customer service | Shows promises, withdrawal refusals, or fee demands. |
| Account ID or username | Helps identify your account without sharing passwords. |
| Withdrawal request screenshots | Shows non-payment or changing conditions. |
| Terms and conditions | Shows the app’s stated operator, jurisdiction, and dispute process. |
| Date and time of events | Helps establish a timeline. |
Do not delete the app immediately if doing so will erase transaction history. Take screenshots first.
What to do if the betting app is not on PAGCOR’s list
If the app, domain, or operator is not found in PAGCOR’s current records:
- Stop depositing money. Do not pay “withdrawal fees,” “tax clearance,” “anti-money laundering fee,” or “VIP activation” charges just to release winnings.
- Take screenshots and export transaction records.
- Check whether the app is using the name of a real licensed brand but a different domain.
- Ask PAGCOR to verify the specific domain or app.
- Report payment fraud to your e-wallet or bank immediately.
- If there is deception, identity theft, hacking, or a scam pattern, report to the PNP Anti-Cybercrime Group or the NBI Cybercrime Division.
- If personal IDs were submitted, monitor for identity misuse.
A simple non-payment dispute with a licensed operator is different from a scam using a fake license. With a licensed operator, the regulator may have a clearer path to act. With an unlicensed app, the issue may become a criminal, cybercrime, or fraud complaint rather than a normal gaming dispute.
What if the app refuses to pay winnings?
First, determine whether the app is licensed.
If the app appears licensed
Collect:
- Account verification status
- Withdrawal request number
- Terms and bonus conditions
- Screenshots of the balance
- Chat history
- Transaction records
Then use the app’s formal dispute process and send a documented complaint to PAGCOR if the issue remains unresolved.
Common reasons licensed platforms delay or deny withdrawals include:
- Incomplete KYC
- Mismatched account name and payment account
- Multiple accounts
- Bonus wagering requirements
- Suspicious transactions
- Use of another person’s wallet
- Underage or restricted player status
- Violation of platform rules
Some reasons may be legitimate; others may be abusive. The key is to force the issue into a documented, reviewable complaint rather than informal chat.
If the app is unlicensed or fake
Be cautious about treating the unpaid “winnings” as a normal collectible debt. Under the Civil Code rules on games of chance, collection of gambling winnings is not treated like an ordinary loan or sale. If the operator used deception, fake credentials, or false promises to obtain deposits, the stronger route may be to document the fraud and report it to the proper authorities.
Special concerns for foreigners and Filipinos abroad
Foreigners in the Philippines should not assume that a foreign gambling license is enough. Philippine penal laws and public safety laws generally apply to persons who live or sojourn in Philippine territory. If an online betting service is operating or accepting bets in the Philippines without proper authority, a foreign license may not solve the Philippine law issue.
Filipinos abroad should also be careful. A PAGCOR-related listing does not automatically mean the app is legal in the country where the Filipino is physically located. Many countries restrict online gambling, including some common OFW destinations. A platform allowed in the Philippines may still be blocked or illegal under the host country’s law.
For tourists, expats, and dual citizens, the safest practical question is:
Is this exact app or website authorized for the place where I am physically located and the type of betting I am doing?
Common scams involving fake licensed betting apps
The “tax before withdrawal” scam
The app shows a large winning balance, then asks you to pay tax before withdrawal. Real tax obligations are not usually paid to a random agent’s personal wallet before releasing funds. Treat this as a major red flag.
The “VIP upgrade” scam
The app says your account must be upgraded before withdrawal. The required amount keeps increasing. This is common in fake casino and task-app scams.
The fake PAGCOR certificate scam
The app sends a certificate image with a PAGCOR logo. A certificate image is not enough. Check the exact operator and domain on PAGCOR’s official website.
The mirror site scam
The scammer copies a real licensed brand but uses a different URL. This is why exact domain matching is essential.
The agent commission scam
An “agent” invites you through Facebook, Telegram, or TikTok and says the app is private or invitation-only. Deposits go to the agent’s wallet. If the agent disappears, the supposed platform may deny any connection.
Quick checklist before depositing money
Before placing any bet, check these:
- Is the exact domain or URL in PAGCOR’s official list?
- Does the app’s operator match the listed operator or authorized brand?
- Is the game type covered by the listed authorization?
- Does the app require proper KYC and age verification?
- Is the payment recipient a legitimate business account, not a private person?
- Are withdrawal rules clear before you deposit?
- Is customer support official and traceable?
- Is the app avoiding VPN use, hidden links, and mirror domains?
- Are you at least 21 years old and not a restricted person?
- Are you physically located in a place where this betting activity is allowed?
If you cannot answer these clearly, do not deposit.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I check if an online betting app is PAGCOR licensed?
Go to PAGCOR’s official Regulatory page, open the Electronic Gaming Licensing section, and check the official PDFs for registered brands, domain names, URLs, licensed casinos, and gaming venue operators. Match the exact app brand and URL. A similar name is not enough.
Is a PAGCOR logo on the app enough proof?
No. Anyone can copy a logo. The real test is whether the app’s exact operator, brand, and website appear in PAGCOR’s official records.
What if the app is licensed abroad but not listed by PAGCOR?
A foreign license does not automatically authorize online betting operations in the Philippines. If the app accepts players in the Philippines, you should check Philippine regulatory authority, not only the foreign license.
Are POGOs still legal in the Philippines?
Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators, Internet Gaming Licensees, and other offshore gaming operations were covered by the government’s ban under Executive Order No. 74, s. 2024. Be very cautious with any app currently claiming to be a Philippine offshore gaming operator.
Can I trust an app because it accepts GCash or Maya?
No. E-wallet access is not proof of licensing. Always verify the app against PAGCOR’s official lists and check whether deposits go to a legitimate business account.
Can foreigners use online betting apps in the Philippines?
Foreigners physically in the Philippines are still subject to Philippine laws and regulator rules. They should use only properly authorized platforms, comply with age and KYC rules, and avoid foreign sites that are not authorized to operate in the Philippines.
What is the legal gambling age for online betting in the Philippines?
For PAGCOR-regulated gaming, persons under 21 years old are not allowed to gamble. PAGCOR also identifies other restricted persons, including certain government employees, AFP and PNP members, persons in the National Database of Restricted Persons, and Gaming Employment License holders.
What should I do if the app will not release my winnings?
First verify whether the app is licensed. If licensed, gather documents and use the platform’s dispute process, then report unresolved issues to PAGCOR. If unlicensed or fake, stop paying additional fees, preserve evidence, report payment fraud to your wallet or bank, and consider reporting to cybercrime authorities.
Is a mayor’s permit, SEC registration, or DTI registration enough?
No. Business registration is not a gambling license. An entity may be registered as a corporation or business name but still lack authority to operate online betting.
Can I recover money lost to an illegal betting app?
Recovery depends on the facts. If the issue involves fraud, fake licensing, identity theft, or deceptive collection of deposits, preserve evidence and report promptly. For unauthorized games of chance, Civil Code rules on gambling may affect ordinary collection claims, so the practical route often focuses on fraud reporting, payment tracing, and regulator or law enforcement action.
Key Takeaways
- Check the exact app name, operator, and URL against PAGCOR’s official lists.
- A PAGCOR logo, app store listing, influencer ad, or e-wallet payment option is not proof of licensing.
- For most online casino, e-casino, e-bingo, online poker, sports betting, specialty games, and numeric games, check PAGCOR.
- For lotto, check PCSO; for horse racing betting, check the relevant GAB and Philracom context.
- Foreign gambling licenses do not automatically authorize betting services in the Philippines.
- Be especially careful with apps claiming to be POGO, offshore, or IGL platforms after EO No. 74, s. 2024.
- Save screenshots, URLs, transaction receipts, and chat logs before reporting a suspicious app.
- Do not pay extra “tax,” “unlocking,” “VIP,” or “verification” fees just to withdraw winnings from a suspicious platform.