Payments // by jurisdiction
Payment Processing for Curacao and Anjouan Operators
Same business, different licence, opposite outcome. What processing really looks like for each, and which routes get you banked.
Two operators apply for card processing on the same day, same product, same markets. One holds a Curacao licence and gets a specialist processor after some work. The other holds Anjouan and is refused at the door by automated checks, and ends up on crypto. The licence on your application is not just a regulatory badge. To an acquiring bank it is a risk input, and the two main offshore options sit in very different places on that scale. This page is what payment processing actually looks like for each, and which routes get you banked rather than stranded.
Curacao
Workable
Specialist processors underwrite it, with conditions and usually a holding company.
Anjouan
Hard
No tier-1 or tier-2 card-acquiring path. Payment-agent structure or crypto-first.
What underwriters read
Your licence
The jurisdiction is one of the strongest risk signals on your application.
Why the licence changes your payment options
Underwriters price your licence, not just your business, and the offshore licences do not price the same. A card-acquiring bank reads your jurisdiction as one of its strongest risk signals: a regime it recognises lowers the perceived risk, a regime it associates with weak oversight raises it, sometimes past the point where any approval is possible. This is the reputation discount made concrete. It does not just affect how players see you; it decides whether you can take their money at all.
Curacao: workable, with conditions
A recognised regime that mainstream-adjacent specialist processors will underwrite, for all its post-LOK turbulence. Processing is achievable through high-risk specialists. The work is in the conditions attached, not in whether a door exists.
Anjouan: the harder road
Card acquiring is hard to the point of being unavailable through the upper tiers. Anjouan-only books have no tier-1 or tier-2 path, and most operators end up on a payment-agent structure or crypto rails entirely. We will not pretend otherwise, because pretending wastes months.
Anjouan operators // told straight
Industry analysis of Anjouan applications reports no card-acquiring path through tier-1 or tier-2 acquirers, with applications citing Anjouan Offshore Finance Authority paperwork refused at intake or pushed into enhanced due diligence where the underwriter asks for a different licence. What works is one of two things: a payment-agent or holding company in a more reputable jurisdiction such as Cyprus, Estonia or the UK, or crypto rails, which for many Anjouan operators move from backup to primary out of necessity.
Non-gambling MCC ... <7 day USDT settlements ... Serious offers only.
operator running an Anjouan-licensed casino, listing card-acquiring requirements, r/PaymentProcessing, March 2026
That requirement list, a non-gambling merchant code, fees under 10 percent, USDT settlement within seven days, and capacity above $100,000 a month, is a portrait of the workaround the licence forces.
The routes that work, across both
Route 01
Specialist high-risk PSP
An acquirer or PSP that underwrites gambling explicitly. For Curacao, one whose appetite already includes CGA paper.
Route 02
EMI + PSP stack
Close to mandatory for Anjouan, common for Curacao. A holding company holds the money while the licensed entity holds the licence.
How it worksRoute 03
Crypto rails
A bridge or a primary depending on markets and licence. For many Anjouan operators it moves from backup to primary out of necessity.
When to use itRoute 04
Payment orchestration
Once you are at scale across several markets, route across acquirers to lift approval rates and keep a fallback.
We keep processor names off this page deliberately, because which provider approves a Curacao or Anjouan file changes quarter to quarter, and naming a partner before it has confirmed it will take your specific profile is the empty promise this brand exists to replace.
What underwriters check for an offshore licence
Match your licence to a processor that underwrites it
Meridian maps your specific licence, jurisdiction, markets and volumes against the processors that accept that exact combination. For Curacao that usually means finding the specialist whose appetite includes CGA paper and structuring the holding company correctly. For Anjouan it often means being honest that the realistic route is a payment-agent company or a crypto-first stack. The eight-minute fit check launches with this site.
Meridian's fee: £1,500 for the first 20 operators, then £2,500. Published. The processors set their own rates.
See the Curacao licensing guideCommon questions
Can I get payment processing with a Curacao licence?
Yes, through specialist high-risk processors rather than mainstream ones. Curacao's 2024 FATF grey-list placement raised the bar and lengthened diligence, and most operators that process reliably pair the licensed entity with an EU holding company that holds the payment relationships. A second recognised licence in the stack improves the underwriting read.
Why is payment processing so hard for Anjouan operators?
Industry analysis reports that Anjouan-only books have no card-acquiring path through tier-1 or tier-2 acquirers, and that applications citing Anjouan paperwork are often refused at intake or pushed into enhanced due diligence. The realistic routes are a payment-agent company in a reputable jurisdiction, or crypto rails as the primary cashier.
Do I need a second licence or a holding company?
For Curacao, a holding company that holds the payment and EMI accounts is the standard pattern, and a second recognised licence strengthens a thin file. For Anjouan, a payment-agent or holding company in Cyprus, Estonia or the UK is close to mandatory because the Anjouan entity alone cannot get banked.
Where this fits in the cluster
The full payment processing guide
Why licensed casinos get declined, the four routes that work, and the real costs.
The Curacao licensing guide
The real cost and timeline of the licence itself, and the post-LOK transition.
The EMI plus PSP stack
The holding-company structure that gets offshore casinos banked.
Crypto payment rails
When crypto goes primary, which is common for Anjouan.
Sources & verification
Figures verified 27 May 2026.
- Curacao FATF grey-list placement (2024) and resulting processor caution: per the Curacao licensing guide sources; shared PSP/banking landscape.
- Anjouan card-acquiring access, AOFA recognition, payment-agent structure: industry analysis, iGaming Payment Solutions (May 2026); 4H Agency (July 2025). Treated as market analysis, attributed and hedged, not stated as regulator fact.
- Operator-voice quote: verified via Reddit JSON, 27 May 2026.
This page is positioning and qualification content, not legal or financial advice. Acquirer appetite and jurisdiction recognition change quarterly.