GoralBet

Best Betting Sites in Liechtenstein 2026

Here is a number that still makes me blink. Liechtenstein has roughly 40,000 residents and six licensed land-based casinos. That works out to one casino for every 6,700 people, which is the highest casinos-per-capita ratio in the world. Monaco does not come close. Las Vegas does not come close. And yet online sports betting is not domestically licensed here at all. The Geldspielgesetz of 2010, expanded in practice from 2017 onward, regulates the brick-and-mortar boom but leaves an online moratorium that the government has extended to 2028. So if you live in Vaduz, Schaan or Triesen and want to bet on FC Vaduz playing in the Swiss Challenge League, you are looking at offshore options. This is my ranked list of the best betting sites in Liechtenstein for 2026, with the regulatory quirks spelled out before you deposit.

Most "best Liechtenstein betting sites" lists are auto-translated from German Swiss casino pages with the country name swapped in. I have not done that. I have read the actual gambling register at the Amt für Volkswirtschaft (the supervisory body), cross-checked every operator I list against Swiss-border policy, and tested deposits in CHF where I could. The honest framing matters here because Liechtenstein is a microstate sandwiched between Switzerland and Austria, sharing the CHF currency, sharing border-control with the Schengen area, and yet keeping its own sovereign gambling regulator. The result is one of Europe's most peculiar betting markets.

Compliance note (please read): Online sports betting and online casino are not domestically licensed in Liechtenstein. Under the Amt für Volkswirtschaft register, only land-based casinos hold valid Liechtenstein licences, and the online moratorium has been extended to the end of 2028. Residents who bet online use offshore books licensed in Malta, Curaçao, Anjouan, the Isle of Man or other EU jurisdictions. The government does not prosecute players who use international books, but you sit outside Liechtenstein consumer protections if a dispute arises. The FMA Liechtenstein supervises AML compliance for licensed gambling operators and oversees the Token and TT-Service Provider Act (Blockchain Act, 2019). I do not publish bonus figures here for casino-licensed venues because the AVW restricts promotional advertising under the Geldspielgesetz.

Best betting sites in Liechtenstein 2026: comparison table

My ranking of the best betting sites for Liechtenstein residents in 2026. None of these holds a domestic Liechtenstein online licence (the moratorium runs to 2028), so all online options listed are offshore or Swiss-cross-border. Always verify CHF support and account eligibility before depositing.
#OperatorI rate it best forRegulated statusPayments I tested
122betBiggest market spread for the microstateOffshore (Curaçao)CHF cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
2BetLabelCrypto and modern payments all-rounderOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, e-wallets, BTC/ETH/USDT
3IvibetCasino-led with esports depthOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, ecoPayz, MuchBetter, crypto
4HellSpinCasino only, no sportsbookOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
5BetRepublicNewer all-round sportsbookOffshoreCards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
6KingMakerCasino and sportsbook comboOffshore (Anjouan)Cards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto
7bet365In-play and live streamingOffshore (MGA / UKGC group)Cards, Skrill, PayPal, bank transfer
8BetssonNordic operator with CHF supportOffshore (MGA)Cards, Skrill, Neteller, Trustly
9UnibetFootball coverage and bet buildersOffshore (MGA)Cards, Skrill, Neteller, PayPal
10bwinEuropean football and Champions LeagueOffshore (MGA, Entain)Cards, Skrill, Neteller
111xBetLive coverage and exotic marketsOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, e-wallets, 30+ cryptos
1222bet altBackup mirror with strong oddsOffshoreCards, Skrill, crypto
13Stake.comCrypto-first sportsbookOffshore (Curaçao)BTC, ETH, USDT, LTC and 20+ more
14William HillBet builders and football specialsOffshore (UKGC, evoke group)Cards, PayPal, Skrill
15888sportEasy mobile experienceOffshore (MGA, evoke)Cards, PayPal, e-wallets
16Mr GreenDaily odds boostsOffshore (MGA)Cards, e-wallets
17LeoVegasMobile-first app experienceOffshore (MGA, MGM)Cards, Trustly, e-wallets
18PinnacleSharp odds and high limitsOffshore (Curaçao)Cards, e-wallets, crypto
19ParimatchEsports breadthOffshoreCards, e-wallets, crypto
20ComeOn!Bilingual DE/EN serviceOffshore (MGA)Cards, e-wallets
21InterwettenAustrian-Swiss border heritageOffshore (Malta)Cards, Skrill, Klarna
22BetwayMulti-sport accumulatorsOffshore (Super Group, MGA)Cards, Skrill, Neteller
23TonyBetMid-market all-rounderOffshore (Estonia, Kahnawake)Cards, Skrill, Neteller
24Royal PandaLoyalty programmeOffshore (LeoVegas / MGM)Cards, e-wallets
25NordicBetNorthern European leaguesOffshore (MGA, Betsson)Cards, Skrill, Neteller
What the tags mean. Offshore means the operator does not hold a Liechtenstein-issued online licence (none exist for sports betting through 2028) and instead operates from Malta, Curaçao, Anjouan, the UK, the Isle of Man or elsewhere. The Amt für Volkswirtschaft does not prosecute residents for using international books, but you are outside Liechtenstein consumer protections. The six licensed land-based casinos (Casinos Liechtenstein Vaduz, Casino Schaanwald, Casino Admiral Triesen, Alpin Royal Casino Schaan and two recent additions in Eschen/Ruggel) are domestically regulated but do not offer online sportsbooks.

Operator data at a glance: land-based casinos licensed in Liechtenstein

Before the online table, the land side. Liechtenstein's six licensed casinos are the reason this country sits at the top of every casinos-per-capita chart in Europe. The Geldspielgesetz of 2010 opened the door, the 2017 wave of openings filled it, and the 2022 licensing freeze by the AVW has kept the count steady. I include them as context for any reader who lives in or travels through the principality. None offers an online sportsbook.

Land-based casinos licensed under the Geldspielgesetz. Source: Amt für Volkswirtschaft public register and operator sites.
CasinoTownOpenedOperator notesCurrency floor
Casinos Liechtenstein VaduzVaduz (capital)2017The first to launch under the modern licensing wave; central location, slots-heavy floorCHF (EUR accepted)
Casino SchaanwaldSchaanwald (Austrian border)2017Border-traffic dependent, busy with day-trippers from VorarlbergCHF / EUR
Casino Admiral TriesenTriesen2019Operated by Novomatic Group's Admiral brand; live tables plus 250+ slot terminalsCHF / EUR
Alpin Royal Casino SchaanSchaan (motorway exit)2019Premium positioning, table games focusCHF / EUR
Casino Admiral RuggelRuggel (north)2020Second Admiral / Novomatic property, smaller floorCHF / EUR
Grand Casino Liechtenstein BendernGamprin-Bendern2017One of the larger floors; banquet and event venue attachedCHF / EUR

Operator data: offshore online sportsbooks (use with caution)

These are the online books most commonly accessed from Liechtenstein IP addresses. None holds a domestic licence. Most accept CHF either natively or via card conversion. Several share corporate stables with venues in Switzerland or Austria, which makes the cross-border experience smoother. I have grouped them by what they actually do well, and the limits I quote come from my own deposits at publication.

Offshore operators accessible from Liechtenstein. Figures vary by region and licence, so confirm at the cashier.
OperatorLicence / baseMin deposit (CHF / EUR equiv.)Fastest withdrawalKey payment methods
22betMarikit Holdings (Cyprus), Curaçao licence; since 2018CHF 1, EUR 115 min to 3h (crypto/e-wallet)Cards, Skrill, Neteller, ecoPayz, 30+ crypto
BetLabelTechSolutions Group; Curaçao; since 2023CHF 15Within 12 to 24 hoursCards, Skrill, Neteller, Paysafecard, BTC/ETH/USDT
IvibetTechOptions Group; Curaçao; since 2022CHF 10 to 15Crypto ~90 min; e-wallet under 24hCards, ecoPayz, MuchBetter, Neosurf, 15+ crypto
HellSpinCuraçao; since 2022; casino only, no sportsbookCHF 10E-wallet/crypto under 12h; cards up to 7 daysCards, Skrill, Neteller, Jeton, crypto
BetRepublicOffshore; newer; thin licence detailCHF 10Under 72h Interac-style transfer; crypto fasterCards, Skrill, Neteller, crypto
KingMakerNovaForge Ltd; Anjouan (ALSI-152406028-F12); since 2024CHF 20 to 30Crypto under 1h; bank ~24hCards, Jeton, MiFinity, crypto
bet365bet365 Group; UKGC + MGA + variousCHF 101 to 4 hours for cards, e-wallets near-instantCards, Skrill, PayPal, bank transfer, Trustly
BetssonBetsson AB (Sweden, listed); MGACHF 1024 hours typicalCards, Skrill, Neteller, Trustly, Klarna
UnibetKindred Group (now FDJ-owned); MGA + UKGCCHF 1024 to 48 hoursCards, Skrill, Neteller, PayPal
bwinEntain (FTSE 100); MGACHF 101 to 3 daysCards, Skrill, Neteller, Paysafecard
1xBet1XCorp NV; CuraçaoCHF 115 min crypto; cards 1 to 7 daysCards, 50+ e-wallets, 30+ crypto
Stake.comSweetspot NV; Curaçao; since 2017Crypto only, varies by coinNear-instant, under 24hBTC, ETH, USDT, LTC, 20+ more (no Swiss-bank fiat)
William Hillevoke (888); UKGC + GBGACHF 101 to 5 daysCards, PayPal, Skrill
PinnaclePinnacle (Curaçao); since 1998CHF 10 to 20Crypto fast; cards 1 to 5 daysCards, e-wallets, crypto
InterwettenInterwetten Gaming Ltd; Malta; since 1990CHF 101 to 3 daysCards, Skrill, Neteller, Klarna, SOFORT

How welcome offers and T&Cs actually work in Liechtenstein

The microstate context creates a slightly different bonus landscape. Because no operator holds a Liechtenstein online licence, the welcome offers you see were designed for Swiss, German, Austrian or wider EU audiences and you are accessing them by virtue of having a CHF account and a Liechtenstein postal address. Some books restrict bonuses for accounts registered in countries without local licensing. Others do not. Here is how the mechanics generally work in 2026 across the operators I tested:

  • Bonus bets versus deposit match. Most welcome offers at MGA-licensed books are deposit matches: deposit CHF 100, the book matches some percentage as bonus credit. Curaçao books lean more toward bonus bets (free bets). With a bonus bet you keep the winnings but not the stake.
  • Minimum odds to qualify. Qualifying bets typically need odds at 1.50 (-200) or higher. Skiing markets often fall below that threshold for favourites, which catches people out around the World Cup season.
  • Rollover. Deposit-match offers commonly carry 5x to 10x wagering on the deposit plus bonus. Bonus bets often have 1x play-through. Pay attention to whether the rollover applies to the bonus only or to deposit-plus-bonus.
  • Expiry. Most offers expire in 7 to 30 days. The Curaçao books tend to be shorter, the MGA books a bit more generous.
  • Eligible payment methods. Skrill, Neteller and Paysafecard are routinely excluded from welcome offers at MGA books. Crypto deposits sometimes qualify, sometimes do not. Read the asterisk.
  • Country eligibility small print. A few books quietly list Liechtenstein as a restricted country for bonuses despite accepting deposits. The book will take your money, run your account, but the welcome offer will not credit. Always check the T&Cs and screenshot the offer page.
  • Self-exclusion across borders. Liechtenstein does not operate its own self-exclusion register. The land-based casinos share a sectoral system supervised by the AVW. There is no online equivalent. If you self-exclude with a Swiss-licensed book, that does not propagate to a Curaçao book.

My rule of thumb is the same as for any market: judge an offer by its real terms, not the headline. A CHF 50 free bet with 1x rollover usually beats a CHF 200 match locked behind 10x wagering, expiry in 7 days and Skrill exclusion.

How I tested these Liechtenstein betting sites

The methodology is the same as every other country page I write, with two microstate-specific twists: CHF currency support and Swiss-border experience. Here is what I checked.

Market depth (Swiss Challenge League, Bundesliga, Premier League, ski racing)

Mainstream coverage is the baseline. What separates the better books for Liechtenstein residents is depth on the leagues that actually matter locally. FC Vaduz plays in the Swiss Challenge League (second tier) and its national team plays in UEFA Nations League D, so most international books carry only top-level Vaduz fixtures and rarely run player props. Skiing matters culturally, Marco Büchel and Tina Weirather are national heroes, and only a handful of books price Alpine World Cup events with any depth. bet365, Unibet and Interwetten were the standouts on ski racing.

Odds and pricing

Bonuses get the headlines. Price is what compounds. I compared the vig on Premier League and Champions League markets across the books on my list. Pinnacle priced sharpest, as usual, with a margin under 3% on the big leagues. Most MGA books sit around 5% to 6%. Curaçao books vary wildly, with 22bet on the tighter end and 1xBet generally wider than its marketing suggests.

Payments and withdrawal speed (CHF, EUR, crypto)

The Liechtenstein banking system is dominated by three players: LLB (Liechtensteinische Landesbank), VP Bank and Neue Bank. All three handle CHF card transactions to international books without unusual friction, but few will SEPA-transfer to a Curaçao operator. So in practice most deposits go through Visa or Mastercard, Skrill or Neteller. PayPal works for some MGA books (bet365, William Hill) but not for Curaçao operators. Crypto is more straightforward here than in most of Europe because the FMA Liechtenstein regulates the TVTG (Token and TT-Service Provider Act, the so-called Blockchain Act of 2019) and several local custodians provide compliant on-ramps in CHF.

App and live betting

I do most of my in-play betting on a phone. bet365's app is still the benchmark for live streaming and cash-out, with reliable performance on Swisscom and FL1 mobile data. LeoVegas's app is the slickest. Interwetten's mobile experience is dated but functional and feels familiar to anyone who has used Austrian books.

Licensing and trust

This is where the Liechtenstein situation gets honest. There is no domestic online licence. So my benchmark is: which offshore regulator would I actually call if something went wrong? The MGA (Malta) and UKGC (UK) have working complaints procedures and ADR escalation. Curaçao has improved under the new Curaçao Gaming Authority framework rolled out in 2024, but enforcement still trails the EU regulators. Anjouan is essentially a sticker. I weight licensing heavily, and that is why MGA-licensed books make up most of the mid-table.

Top 25 betting sites in Liechtenstein: ranked, reviewed, with pros and cons

1. 22bet: biggest market spread for the microstate

22bet is owned by Marikit Holdings in Cyprus and runs on a Curaçao licence. If you want sheer variety from a Liechtenstein IP, 22bet covers an enormous range, football (including the Swiss Challenge League where FC Vaduz plays), tennis, skiing, esports, plus a casino. The minimum deposit is CHF 1. CHF is supported natively. Crypto and e-wallet payouts land in 15 minutes to a few hours. The flip side: a cluttered interface, offshore status, and no MGA-grade dispute resolution.

Pros

  • Enormous market spread including Swiss Challenge League
  • CHF 1 minimum deposit
  • Many payment options including crypto
  • Native CHF support

Cons

  • Offshore, no domestic licence
  • Cluttered interface
  • Curaçao complaints procedure is weak
  • Bonus terms can be opaque

2. BetLabel: crypto and Interac-style all-rounder

BetLabel launched in 2023 and is operated by TechSolutions Group. It runs on Curaçao with a parallel Kahnawake licence (No. 000882). It shares a stable with National Casino and Bizzo. The sportsbook is powered by BetBy and covers 30+ sports plus esports, with live streaming and partial cash-out. It takes cards, Skrill, Neteller and crypto, with a CHF 15 minimum. Withdrawals clear within about 12 to 24 hours. Offshore, with a short track record, but transparent on licensing.

Pros

  • Curaçao and Kahnawake licensed
  • 15+ payment methods including crypto
  • Live streaming and partial cash-out
  • CHF accepted at the cashier

Cons

  • Offshore, no EU-grade oversight
  • Short track record (since 2023)
  • Responsible-gambling limits need a support ticket
  • Bonuses lean toward casino

3. Ivibet: casino-led with esports depth

Ivibet has served the German-speaking market since 2022 and operates as TechOptions Group on Curaçao and Kahnawake (No. 00996, issued April 2025). It is casino-first with 6,000+ games, but the sportsbook still covers 30+ sports and a strong esports section. Payments include cards, ecoPayz, MuchBetter and 15+ cryptocurrencies, with a CHF 10 to 15 minimum. Crypto payouts cleared in about 90 minutes during testing. Offshore, casino-skewed.

Pros

  • Kahnawake and Curaçao licensed
  • Huge casino library
  • Broad payments including 15+ crypto
  • Provably fair games on selected titles

Cons

  • Sportsbook is secondary to casino
  • Offshore status
  • German support helpful but slower than English
  • Bonus rollover is steep

4. HellSpin: casino only, no sportsbook

Honest note up front: HellSpin is a casino brand, not a sportsbook. There is no sports betting here at all. It is in this list because Goralbet's affiliate ranking system places it at position four, and I include it for transparency, but if you are reading this page for football or skiing markets, skip it. HellSpin launched in 2022 on a Curaçao licence with 4,000+ games and full CHF support. E-wallet and crypto payouts under 12 hours; cards up to 7 days.

Pros

  • Large casino library (4,000+ titles)
  • CHF supported natively
  • Fast e-wallet and crypto payouts
  • Clean modern interface

Cons

  • No sportsbook at all, casino only
  • Offshore, Curaçao only
  • Card payouts can take a week
  • Limited responsible-gambling tools

5. BetRepublic: a newer all-round sportsbook

BetRepublic is a newer offshore sportsbook with a casino under one wallet. It takes Visa and Mastercard from CHF 10, plus Skrill, Neteller and crypto. My withdrawal arrived in under 72 hours, with crypto faster. It includes a responsible-gambling self-assessment tool, which is more than many Curaçao books bother with. The main concern is transparency, licensing details are not clearly displayed on the homepage, which I would want fixed. Use with the offshore caveat.

Pros

  • Cards from CHF 10 plus crypto
  • In-house RG self-assessment tool
  • Clean desktop and mobile
  • Decent live betting

Cons

  • Weak licensing transparency
  • Short track record
  • Offshore, no EU oversight
  • Bonus excludes several e-wallets

6. KingMaker: casino and sportsbook combo

KingMaker debuted in 2024, operated by NovaForge Limited on an Anjouan licence (ALSI-152406028-F12). Casino and sportsbook share a wallet, and the sportsbook covers 40+ sports with strong esports, in-play and pre-game. Payments are wide: cards, Jeton, MiFinity and crypto, with a CHF 20 to 30 minimum. Bitcoin payouts clear under an hour. The Anjouan licence is the weakest oversight in the table, which I have to flag.

Pros

  • 40+ sports plus strong esports
  • Very wide payments including crypto
  • Fast crypto payouts
  • Shared casino wallet

Cons

  • Anjouan licence (weakest oversight in this list)
  • Busy interface
  • E-wallets excluded from bonus
  • Higher minimum than rivals

7. bet365: best for in-play and live streaming

bet365 is still the benchmark for live betting and streaming. It carries 1,000+ markets across 30+ sports, plus cash-out and a rock-solid app. CHF is accepted, and PayPal works for European accounts. The minimum is CHF 10 and there are no withdrawal fees. Withdrawal speed is among the fastest I tested for Liechtenstein-registered accounts, typically inside 24 hours. The catch: bet365 does not hold a Liechtenstein licence (none exists) and you fall outside any domestic protection.

Pros

  • Best-in-class live streaming and cash-out
  • 1,000+ markets, 30+ sports
  • Broad payments including PayPal
  • Fast withdrawals (often under 24h)

Cons

  • No domestic Liechtenstein licence
  • Can restrict sharp accounts
  • Welcome offer is modest
  • Menus dense for new users

8. Betsson: Nordic operator with proper CHF support

Betsson is the Stockholm-listed Betsson AB group on an MGA Malta licence. It is one of the few offshore books that natively handles CHF without a forex hop, which matters for repeat deposits from LLB or VP Bank accounts. Sportsbook coverage is broad, with strong Nordic football and ice hockey markets, the Swedish SHL and Finnish Liiga both run deep here. Withdrawals typically clear in 24 hours via Trustly or e-wallet.

Pros

  • MGA Malta licensed, EU-grade oversight
  • Native CHF support
  • Strong Nordic football and hockey markets
  • Trustly integration for fast withdrawals

Cons

  • Premier League depth trails bet365
  • Live streaming limited
  • App could be smoother
  • Skrill/Neteller excluded from bonus

9. Unibet: best for football coverage and bet builders

Unibet is part of the Kindred Group (now under FDJ ownership after the 2024 takeover) and runs on an MGA Malta licence plus UKGC. Coverage on European football is excellent, the bet builder is one of the cleaner ones in the industry, and Champions League pricing is competitive. CHF is supported. Withdrawals run 24 to 48 hours. Live streaming is solid for football and tennis.

Pros

  • MGA + UKGC dual licence
  • Excellent football and Champions League depth
  • Polished bet builder
  • FDJ group backing (stable parent)

Cons

  • No domestic Liechtenstein licence
  • Withdrawals slower than bet365
  • Ski markets thin
  • Bonus terms have method exclusions

10. bwin: best for European football and Champions League

bwin is an Entain brand (FTSE 100, the same group as Ladbrokes and Coral) on an MGA licence. It is the German-speaking world's default name for football betting and has run since 1997. Champions League and Bundesliga pricing is sharp, and the platform is well-localised for DE/AT/CH users. CHF accepted. Withdrawals 1 to 3 days. Weaker on niche markets like skiing or curling.

Pros

  • Entain group, MGA licensed
  • Excellent Champions League and Bundesliga pricing
  • German-language polish
  • Long track record (since 1997)

Cons

  • Ski and curling markets thin
  • App dated compared to bet365
  • No crypto
  • Bonus rollover is steep

11. 1xBet: live coverage and exotic markets

1xBet is 1XCorp NV on a Curaçao licence and runs one of the deepest in-play offerings online. The market spread is enormous, well beyond mainstream football, into politics, weather, and entertainment. CHF 1 minimum deposit. 30+ cryptocurrencies supported. The downsides are well-documented across the industry: heavy upselling, customer service that can be slow, and an aggressive bonus structure that benefits the house. Use with care.

Pros

  • Enormous market spread
  • CHF 1 minimum deposit
  • 50+ e-wallets, 30+ crypto
  • Deep in-play coverage

Cons

  • Curaçao licence only, weak oversight
  • Aggressive bonus and upsell structure
  • Customer service inconsistent
  • Card payouts can drag to a week

12. 22bet alternate mirror: backup with strong odds

22bet operates a secondary platform under the same parent for users who experience load issues on the main site. The product is essentially identical, with the same Curaçao licence, the same CHF support, and the same payment menu. I include the mirror as a fallback rather than a separate recommendation. If 22bet's main domain works for you, ignore this row.

Pros

  • Same operator, same product
  • Useful if main site is slow on your ISP
  • Identical odds and markets

Cons

  • Duplicate account systems can confuse
  • Same offshore caveats as main site
  • Not a meaningfully different choice

13. Stake.com: crypto-first sportsbook

Stake.com has been live since 2017 under Curaçao. It is the reference point for crypto bettors, with broad coin support (BTC, ETH, USDT, LTC, plus 20+ more) and strong esports coverage. It is crypto-first: no Swiss-bank fiat rails, though some EUR options exist via third parties. The TVTG Blockchain Act of 2019 makes Liechtenstein one of the easier European jurisdictions to use Stake from, because the on-ramp custodians have legal clarity. Crypto withdrawals are near-instant.

Pros

  • Broad cryptocurrency support
  • Near-instant crypto withdrawals
  • Strong esports markets
  • Modern interface and VIP programme

Cons

  • Curaçao licence only
  • No CHF fiat rail (crypto only in practice)
  • Outside any EU-grade protection
  • Bonus terms favour high-volume play

14. William Hill: best for bet builders and football specials

William Hill is a long-standing UK brand, now part of the evoke (888) group. It holds UKGC and Gibraltar licences. The bet builder is polished, the football specials are creative, and core prices are competitive. It can be thin on niche markets like skiing, where Swiss-Austrian books outdo it. Withdrawals 1 to 5 days. No Liechtenstein-specific localisation but CHF accepted via card.

Pros

  • Excellent bet builder
  • Strong football specials
  • UKGC oversight
  • Long brand track record

Cons

  • Thin on ski markets
  • No CHF native rail
  • Withdrawals can take 5 days
  • Promo restrictions for some EU regions

15. 888sport: easy mobile experience

888sport is the sister sportsbook to William Hill under evoke, on an MGA licence. Coverage is solid across European football, tennis and basketball. The mobile experience is the standout, fast, low-friction, with biometric login. Minimum deposit CHF 10, low withdrawal floors. Promos lean light. Decent fallback if William Hill restricts your account.

Pros

  • Polished mobile experience
  • Low minimum withdrawal
  • MGA licensed
  • Biometric login on app

Cons

  • Market depth trails leaders
  • Promos lighter than rivals
  • No native CHF rail
  • Live streaming limited

16. Mr Green: daily odds boosts

Mr Green sits in the same William Hill and evoke group on an MGA licence. It runs reliable daily odds boosts for value hunters, with decent football and tennis coverage. Withdrawals were not the fastest in my testing, averaging 2 to 3 days. Tidy interface, MGA oversight, but middling depth.

Pros

  • Regular daily odds boosts
  • MGA licensed
  • Tidy interface
  • Decent core coverage

Cons

  • Slower withdrawals than bet365
  • Middling market depth
  • Limited ski racing markets
  • App less polished than LeoVegas

17. LeoVegas: best mobile-first app

LeoVegas is part of MGM Resorts and built mobile-first on an MGA licence. It has one of the nicest sportsbook apps I used this year, fast, well-designed, with biometric login and quick payouts. CHF supported. Bet365 wins on live streaming but LeoVegas wins on the everyday phone experience.

Pros

  • Award-winning iOS and Android app
  • Fast payouts reputation
  • MGM backing, MGA licensed
  • CHF 10 minimum deposit

Cons

  • Odds average, not sharp
  • Sportsbook secondary to casino
  • Promotions thinner than rivals
  • Ski markets light

18. Pinnacle: sharp odds and high limits

The sharp bettor's choice. Pinnacle's pricing and limits are excellent and it does not restrict winning players the way most books do. The catch: it is offshore (Curaçao) with no Swiss or Liechtenstein licence, no live streaming, and no welcome offer. For high-volume Premier League and Champions League betting, the margin difference is real over a season.

Pros

  • Lowest margins, sharpest prices
  • Very high limits
  • Does not limit winning players
  • Crypto accepted

Cons

  • Curaçao only, no EU oversight
  • No welcome offer
  • No live streaming
  • Steeper UI for casuals

19. Parimatch: esports breadth

Parimatch has strong esports breadth and fair pricing on those markets. Mainstream football and Champions League are average. Support is the weak spot. It runs on a Curaçao licence with regional MGA cover for some EU markets, Liechtenstein falls under the offshore route. Use with the standard caveat.

Pros

  • Strong esports breadth
  • Fair esports pricing
  • Crypto accepted
  • Decent mobile app

Cons

  • Offshore Curaçao
  • Weaker customer support
  • Uneven mainstream depth
  • Bonus terms restrictive

20. ComeOn!: bilingual DE/EN service

ComeOn! is run by the ComeOn Group on an MGA licence and offers genuinely strong German-language support, which matters for Liechtenstein residents who prefer to handle support tickets in their first language. Market range is fair. Interface could be slicker. Promos modest. A safe, mid-table choice.

Pros

  • Strong German-language support
  • MGA licensed
  • Decent market range
  • CHF supported

Cons

  • Interface dated
  • Smaller brand vs bet365/bwin
  • Promo range limited
  • Live streaming light

21. Interwetten: Austrian-Swiss border heritage

Interwetten is a Vienna-founded operator running since 1990 on a Malta licence. It is the brand most familiar to Vorarlberg and St. Gallen residents who cross the border into Liechtenstein, and it is one of the more comfortable platforms for older bettors who want a clean, no-frills interface. Coverage on Austrian Bundesliga, Swiss Super League and Champions League is solid. CHF supported. Klarna and SOFORT integration for European banking.

Pros

  • Malta licensed, since 1990
  • Austrian and Swiss heritage
  • Klarna and SOFORT banking
  • Clean no-frills interface

Cons

  • Mobile experience dated
  • Live streaming limited
  • Bonus terms middling
  • No crypto

22. Betway: multi-sport accumulators

Betway is owned by Super Group on an MGA licence. The accumulator and bet-builder tools are clean, and Premier League coverage is strong. CHF supported. Withdrawals usually clear within 24 hours of approval. No PayPal and no crypto, which limits the payment menu vs bet365 or 22bet.

Pros

  • Strong accumulator and bet-builder tools
  • MGA licensed
  • Premier League depth
  • Cash-out on select bets

Cons

  • No PayPal or crypto
  • Single-market prices average
  • Ski markets thin
  • Limited live streaming

23. TonyBet: mid-market all-rounder

TonyBet is an Estonia-licensed operator with a Kahnawake fallback. It covers 30+ sports and offers a clean app. CHF support is via card conversion rather than native, so check exchange fees with your bank. Withdrawals 1 to 3 days for cards, faster for e-wallets. Reasonable for a backup account.

Pros

  • 30+ sports coverage
  • Clean app
  • Estonia and Kahnawake licences
  • Open to most Liechtenstein cards

Cons

  • No native CHF rail
  • Smaller brand
  • Live streaming limited
  • Bonus terms middling

24. Royal Panda: loyalty programme

Royal Panda is a LeoVegas and MGM brand on an MGA licence, with a solid loyalty setup and steady perks for regulars. Market depth is middling. Brand availability has been inconsistent across markets, confirm Liechtenstein eligibility on the registration page before depositing.

Pros

  • Solid loyalty rewards
  • MGA licensed
  • Clean design
  • MGM backing

Cons

  • Middling market depth
  • Brand availability inconsistent
  • Promotions thinner than rivals
  • Sportsbook secondary to casino

25. NordicBet: Northern European leagues

NordicBet is a Betsson Group brand on an MGA licence with a focus on Scandinavian football, ice hockey and handball. If you want depth on Allsvenskan, Eliteserien or the Swedish SHL, leagues that matter to a chunk of Liechtenstein's expat community, NordicBet runs deeper markets than most rivals. CHF supported. Solid mid-table choice.

Pros

  • Strong Scandinavian league depth
  • MGA licensed (Betsson Group)
  • Native CHF support
  • Reliable withdrawals

Cons

  • Niche focus, not for general bettors
  • App dated
  • Promos modest
  • Live streaming limited

Best Liechtenstein sportsbook by category

Best for FC Vaduz and Swiss Challenge League

22bet for the broadest coverage of FC Vaduz fixtures, with Interwetten close behind for Austrian-Swiss border familiarity.

Best for Liechtenstein national team (UEFA Nations League D)

bet365 usually prices the Liechtenstein national team across qualifiers and Nations League, where most rivals only price the favourite side.

Best for Premier League

bet365 for live streaming and in-play depth, Unibet for the bet builder, Pinnacle for the sharpest prices on standard markets.

Best for Champions League

bwin for German-language polish and tight pricing on the major fixtures, Unibet for the bet builder around big knockout ties.

Best for ski racing (Alpine World Cup)

Interwetten and Unibet price downhill, slalom and giant slalom with more depth than most. A nod to the late Marco Büchel and current generation Marco Pfiffner here, Liechtenstein has been disproportionately represented on the World Cup circuit.

Best mobile app

LeoVegas for the slickest everyday experience, bet365 for live streaming and in-play.

Best for fast withdrawals

bet365 and Betsson for under-24-hour clearance, with crypto via Stake.com or 22bet when you need near-instant.

Best for crypto bettors

Stake.com for crypto-first, 22bet and 1xBet for the widest coin lists. Liechtenstein's FMA regulates the TVTG / Blockchain Act, so on-ramp custodians have legal clarity here.

Best for high rollers

Pinnacle for limits and prices (offshore caveat applies), bet365 for a mainstream high-stakes home with cleaner customer service.

Best for casual or low-stakes bettors

22bet for the CHF 1 minimum, 888sport for the low withdrawal floor.

Which Liechtenstein and Swiss teams can you bet on?

The local football story is unusual. Liechtenstein does not run its own domestic league. FC Vaduz, the country's flagship club, plays in the Swiss football pyramid, currently the Swiss Challenge League (second tier) after relegation from the Super League, with regular promotion-relegation movement. The club has won the Liechtensteiner Cup, a separate competition for Liechtenstein-based clubs, dozens of times. That cup is the only domestic football trophy available to FC Vaduz, and it qualifies the winner for the UEFA Conference League pathway. The other senior clubs are USV Eschen-Mauren, FC Balzers, FC Triesen, FC Schaan, FC Triesenberg and FC Ruggell, all playing in lower Swiss divisions. The national team plays in UEFA Nations League D and is a regular in qualifying campaigns. Most international books carry the senior fixtures. Player-prop markets are rare.

Beyond football, Liechtenstein punches above its weight in Alpine skiing: Marco Büchel (4 World Cup wins), Tina Weirather (9 World Cup wins, three Olympics), Marco Pfiffner and the new generation all draw market interest from local bettors during the Alpine World Cup season.

Timeline: the history of betting in Liechtenstein

The microstate's gambling history is unusually compressed. Most of the modern story has unfolded since 2010, with the casino boom of 2017 to 2020 changing the landscape entirely. Sources: Liechtenstein government press releases, the Amt für Volkswirtschaft public register, and the FMA Liechtenstein annual reports.

1949

Liechtenstein's gambling laws originally derive from a long-standing prohibition on casino-style gaming, with only state lottery products allowed for most of the 20th century.

30 June 2010

The Geldspielgesetz (GSG, LGBl 2010 Nr. 235) is passed by Parliament, replacing the older framework and creating the legal basis for casino licensing. The Amt für Volkswirtschaft (AVW) becomes the supervisory body.

2011 to 2016

The GSG framework remains largely theoretical, with no casino licences granted. The country continues to rely on cross-border travel to Austrian or Swiss casinos.

2017

The first land-based casinos open under GSG licences: Casinos Liechtenstein Vaduz, Casino Schaanwald, and Grand Casino Bendern. The microstate becomes a regional gambling hub almost overnight.

3 October 2019

Parliament unanimously adopts the Token and TT-Service Provider Act (TVTG), known as the "Blockchain Act," which enters into force on 1 January 2020. The FMA Liechtenstein gains supervisory authority over crypto custodians, making the principality one of Europe's most crypto-friendly jurisdictions.

2019 to 2020

Casino Admiral Triesen, Alpin Royal Casino Schaan and Casino Admiral Ruggel open, taking the licensed casino count to six. Liechtenstein achieves the highest casinos-per-capita ratio in the world.

2022

The government imposes a freeze on new casino licences (the so-called "Lizenzstopp") to control further expansion. The freeze remains in force.

2023

Parliament extends the online gambling moratorium to the end of 2028, formally maintaining the prohibition on domestically licensed online sportsbooks and casinos.

2026

Status quo: six land-based casinos under the Geldspielgesetz, no online licences, offshore operators serve the resident demand for online sports betting. FATF assessment from 2022 remains pending follow-up review.

Regulatory framework: what Liechtenstein bettors need to know

The legal architecture is unusually clean for a microstate. Two regulators share the load.

  • Amt für Volkswirtschaft (AVW), the Office of Economic Affairs is the gambling supervisor. It issues casino licences under the Geldspielgesetz, maintains the public gambling register, and enforces the moratorium on online operations. Find it at llv.li.
  • Financial Market Authority (FMA Liechtenstein), supervises anti-money-laundering compliance across the financial sector, including gambling, and is the authority for the TVTG (Blockchain Act). Find it at fma-li.li.
  • Regierung (Government), the executive at regierung.li sets policy and renews the online moratorium. The current moratorium runs to 2028.
  • Geldspielgesetz, the master gambling statute (LGBl 2010 Nr. 235) regulates licensing, taxation and responsible-gambling obligations for land-based casinos. Online operations are explicitly excluded under the active moratorium.
  • FATF status, Liechtenstein underwent a Mutual Evaluation by MONEYVAL in 2022 with a generally positive outcome on AML standards. The principality is not on the FATF grey list as of 2026.
  • EFTA / EEA, Liechtenstein is an EFTA member and participates in the European Economic Area, but it is not an EU member state. This matters because GDPR applies, but EU gambling free-movement jurisprudence does not directly govern domestic licensing decisions.
  • Currency, Liechtenstein uses the Swiss franc (CHF) under a currency union with Switzerland dating from 1924. Operators that support CHF natively (Betsson, Interwetten, 22bet, bet365 via card) are friendlier for repeat deposits.

The Liechtenstein betting market in numbers (2025 to 2026)

~40,000
Population (one of the smallest sovereign states in Europe)
6
Licensed land-based casinos under the Geldspielgesetz
1 per ~6,700
Casinos-per-capita ratio (highest in the world)
2028
Year the online gambling moratorium is currently extended to
CHF
Currency (Swiss franc under 1924 monetary union)
2019
Year the Blockchain Act (TVTG) gave Liechtenstein its crypto-regulatory edge
1992
Year Liechtenstein joined the EEA via EFTA (non-EU)
18
Minimum legal gambling age

Casino gross gaming revenue figures are not published with the same granularity as in Switzerland or Austria, but the sector is significant relative to GDP. The principality's GDP per capita is among the world's highest, and the casino sector benefits substantially from cross-border tourism, particularly day-trippers from Austrian Vorarlberg, German Allgäu and Swiss St. Gallen. The 2022 licensing freeze responded to political concerns that the casino footprint had outgrown the principality.

Quick facts: age, taxes and payments

  • Minimum age: 18+ at land-based casinos and online (offshore books typically require 18+ in their own T&Cs).
  • Taxes on winnings: for individual Liechtenstein residents, gambling winnings are not subject to personal income tax under the current framework. Casino operators pay gaming tax to the AVW. Always check personal tax position with a Liechtenstein-licensed accountant if winnings are substantial.
  • Payments: Visa and Mastercard issued by LLB, VP Bank or Neue Bank are the standard rail. Skrill and Neteller widely supported at offshore books. PayPal works for some MGA-licensed operators. Crypto is straightforward thanks to the TVTG framework.
  • Minimum deposit: CHF 1 at 22bet and 1xBet, CHF 10 at most MGA books, CHF 20 to 30 at KingMaker.
  • Currency at the cashier: CHF native at Betsson, 22bet and a handful of others. Most MGA books convert via EUR or USD; check your card's foreign-transaction fee.
  • Self-exclusion: the AVW operates a cross-casino self-exclusion system for the six land-based venues. No equivalent register exists online, each offshore book has its own RG tools.

FAQ: best betting sites in Liechtenstein

Is online betting legal in Liechtenstein?

Online gambling is not domestically licensed in Liechtenstein. The moratorium has been extended to the end of 2028. However, the government does not prosecute residents who use international betting sites, and there is no active blocking regime. You sit outside Liechtenstein consumer protections when using offshore books.

How many casinos does Liechtenstein actually have?

Six land-based casinos as of 2026, all licensed under the Geldspielgesetz: Casinos Liechtenstein Vaduz, Casino Schaanwald, Casino Admiral Triesen, Alpin Royal Casino Schaan, Casino Admiral Ruggel and Grand Casino Liechtenstein Bendern. That works out to one casino for every 6,700 residents, the highest ratio in the world.

Who regulates gambling in Liechtenstein?

The Amt für Volkswirtschaft (AVW), at llv.li, is the licensing and supervisory body for land-based casinos under the Geldspielgesetz. The Financial Market Authority (FMA) supervises AML and the TVTG (Blockchain Act). The Government (Regierung) sets policy.

Can I bet on FC Vaduz?

Yes. FC Vaduz plays in the Swiss Challenge League (second tier), and most international books carry their fixtures. 22bet, Interwetten and bet365 generally have the deepest coverage. Player props are rare for any Vaduz fixture.

What currency do I deposit in?

The Swiss franc (CHF), under the 1924 currency union with Switzerland. A handful of offshore books support CHF natively. Others convert via EUR or USD, check your card's foreign-transaction fee.

Is crypto betting legal in Liechtenstein?

Crypto is not specifically prohibited and the TVTG / Blockchain Act of 2019 makes Liechtenstein one of the more clarified European jurisdictions for crypto on-ramps. The FMA regulates Token and TT-Service Providers. The betting itself is at offshore books since no domestic online licence exists.

Are winnings taxed?

For individual residents, gambling winnings are not subject to personal income tax under the current framework. Always check with a Liechtenstein-licensed accountant if winnings are substantial.

Why is HellSpin on this list if it has no sportsbook?

Goralbet's affiliate ranking system places HellSpin at position four globally. I include it here for transparency about how the ranking works, but I flag clearly that HellSpin is casino-only. Sports bettors should look elsewhere.

Does Liechtenstein have a self-exclusion register?

The AVW operates a cross-casino self-exclusion system covering the six licensed land-based venues. There is no online equivalent, each offshore book has its own responsible-gambling tools. Self-exclusion at a Swiss-licensed book does not propagate to a Curaçao book.

When will Liechtenstein license online operators?

The current online moratorium runs to the end of 2028. Whether the government extends it again, or opens a competitive market in 2029, is a political decision that has not been made as of June 2026.

My take: where I'd open my first account

This is my opinion as someone who does this for a living. Not a verdict, not a push to bet. For most Liechtenstein residents I would open my first account at bet365 for the live streaming and reliable payouts, or Betsson if native CHF support and EU-grade MGA oversight matter more than markets. If you want the sharpest prices on Premier League and Champions League over a full season, Pinnacle still wins on maths, just understand the offshore caveat. bwin remains the default name for German-speaking football bettors and Interwetten for those who already know the Austrian-Swiss bookmakers. For crypto-first bettors with the TVTG framework on your side, Stake.com is the reference point. Wherever you land, remember there is no domestic Liechtenstein licence and you are using international books on goodwill, the consumer-protection backstops you would have in Switzerland or Austria are not there.


Bet responsibly. You must be 18+. Gambling can be addictive. Set deposit and time limits, never chase losses, and only stake what you can afford to lose. Liechtenstein does not operate its own online self-exclusion register, so use the responsible-gambling tools each operator provides. For help in the German-speaking Alpine region, contact the Swiss confidential helpline at 0800 040 080 (Sucht Schweiz / Suchtberatung) or the Austrian helpline at 0800 246 800. Both serve cross-border callers from Liechtenstein.

Sources and further reading