Rank #37 · Operator profile

Betoranje

Spanish-language Spinorhino sister; landing footer references a Zephyr Holding entity distinct from the Anjouan licensee.

Score
5.7/10
Bonus
Welcome offer published on operator's site at time of writing
Licence
Anjouan
Brand stable
8 brands
Licence
Anjouan
Licence no.
ALSI-202509069-FI2
Licensee
3-102-937541 SRL
Domain
betoranje.com
KYC threshold
Not disclosed in public T&Cs at time of writing
Licence expires
September 29, 2026
Payment rails: Cards, E-wallets, Crypto (per operator landing)
Visit Betoranje
Marc Hessel Last reviewed May 24, 2026

Betoranje is one of eight consumer brands listed under Costa Rican entity 3-102-937541 SRL on Anjouan licence ALSI-202509069-FI21 . Sister brands under the same licence include Spinorhino, Baloo, Dragobet, fano.bet, holyluck.com, likes.bet, and zumo.bet. The landing page is Spanish-language and lists a separate operating entity, Zephyr Holding Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (registration 3-102-926727, San José, Costa Rica), in the footer2 . This is a notable two-entity disclosure pattern that we explain below. This is a profile, not a tested review.

Two Costa Rican entities, one Anjouan licence: the disclosure pattern

The Anjouan register lists 3-102-937541 SRL as the licensee for betoranje.com (alongside seven sister brands). The Betoranje landing page footer names a different Costa Rican entity, Zephyr Holding SRL (registration 3-102-926727), as the operating company.

There are several plausible readings:

  1. Operating-vs-licence-holding split: The Anjouan licensee 3-102-937541 holds the regulatory licence and contracts; Zephyr Holding 3-102-926727 operates the consumer-facing brand under a sub-licensing or operating agreement. Multi-tier corporate structures of this kind are common in offshore licensing where the licensee is a single-purpose vehicle and the operating entity holds payment processing, employment, and intellectual-property assets.
  2. Stale page footer: An older operating entity name retained in the footer template after a licence handoff. Page-footer maintenance is one of the most-neglected areas in operator infrastructure, and a discrepancy between the public-facing footer and the regulator’s register entry is not unusual.
  3. Affiliate-network white-label: The operating entity is a third-party who licences the brand name and traffic from the Anjouan licensee on a revenue-share basis.

We cannot disambiguate from a single landing-page fetch. For a player, the practical implication is that disputes may be processed under the operating entity’s terms, not the licensee’s, and the chain of accountability runs through two corporate vehicles in two regulatory jurisdictions (Costa Rica for the operating entity; Anjouan for the licence).

Spanish-language positioning within an 8-brand stable

Spinorhino’s eight-brand licensee mostly displays English-language outward branding, but Betoranje’s Spanish landing-page language places it in a different segment. The “oranje” (Dutch for orange) in the brand is more likely a Latin-American football / colour reference than a Netherlands reference; Spanish-speaking players in Spain and Latin America are the obvious target market. The brand-stable design appears to use per-domain language localisation rather than a single multi-language site, which is consistent with white-label operator architecture.

The licensee structure

3-102-937541 SRL is the largest brand-stable Anjouan licensee in our coverage with eight consumer brands. The Betoranje two-entity footer disclosure (operating entity distinct from the licensee) is the first concrete example in our coverage where the page footer surfaces a different Costa Rican corporate number than the register entry; the other Spinorhino sisters (most of which returned HTTP 403 from our test location) are not externally verifiable on this dimension.

What the Anjouan licence actually covers

Betoranje is licensed by the Anjouan Gaming Authority, the regulatory body established on the autonomous island of Anjouan (one of the three islands that make up the Union of the Comoros in the Indian Ocean). Anjouan's modern iGaming licensing framework was relaunched in 2023–2024 by Anjouan Licensing Services Inc., the exclusive licence administrator, and has been adopted at scale since by operators that previously sat under Curaçao's old master-licence system. The operator's licence number is ALSI-202509069-FI2, listed as valid on the official Anjouan licence register.

What the licence does

  • Operator vetting at issue. The framework requires KYC on beneficial owners and directors, clean criminal-record checks, source-of-funds documentation, a written business plan, and AML/KYC/responsible-gaming policies before the licence is issued.
  • Game-software certification. Operators must use certified RNG technology, with provider certificates submitted as part of the licensing pack.
  • Segregated player funds. Operators must hold player balances in accounts separate from operating funds. This is the single most consequential player-protection clause in the framework.
  • Formal complaint process. Operators must publish a complaint-handling procedure and respond to player disputes within the timeframes defined by the regulator.
  • Public register and seal verification. Every licensed operator appears on the official register with licence number, issue and expiry dates, status, and authorised domains. Operators may display a seal whose ID resolves to the register entry in real time.

What the licence does not do

  • No binding third-party adjudication. Anjouan provides a formal complaint process between player and operator, but it does not offer the binding ADR (alternative dispute resolution) tier that regulators like the UKGC or MGA mandate. If the operator refuses to pay, the regulator can revoke the licence — but does not order the operator to pay the player.
  • No deposit caps or central self-exclusion. Unlike MGA, UKGC, KSA, or Sweden's Spelpaus, Anjouan does not run a cross-operator self-exclusion register or impose mandatory deposit limits. Self-exclusion is a per-operator setting; players who want cross-operator protection have to rely on GamStop / Cruks / Spelpaus where applicable.
  • Disputes from excluded territories are not mediated. The Anjouan Gaming Board explicitly excludes mediation for players based in jurisdictions the operator was supposed to block. If you played from a restricted country, the regulator will decline the case.
  • No public dispute decisions database. There is no published archive of operator complaints and rulings comparable to the UKGC's enforcement-action page or the MGA's player-complaint summaries. Track-record information has to be reconstructed from third-party sources (Trustpilot, AskGamblers, casino-forum threads).
  • Limited recourse outside the licence. Anjouan's jurisdiction is the autonomous island, not the Comorian Union. Comorian union-level law treats most gambling as prohibited, which creates a structural mismatch: the licence is real and the regulator acts, but it operates entirely within the island's autonomy carve-out.

How this compares to other offshore licences

Anjouan sits in the same operational tier as the new Curaçao LOK framework (issued directly by the CGB since 2024, replacing the old master/sub-licence system) and Tobique (Canadian First Nation regulator that took over from Kahnawake for many crypto operators). All three offer real but light-touch licensing: operator vetting at issue, mandated segregated funds, formal complaint handling, no binding third-party arbitration, and minimal ongoing player-protection infrastructure compared to MGA, UKGC, or KSA.

In practical terms: an Anjouan licence means the operator has been vetted by a regulator that exists, will respond, and can revoke. It does not mean a player will be made whole by the regulator if the operator decides not to pay. Players who want that should play at UKGC, MGA, or comparable-tier operators, accepting the friction (KYC at every turn, withdrawal holds, deposit limits) that comes with that protection.

What a prospective player should verify

If you are considering Betoranje:

Our analytical position

Betoranje is a Spanish-language sister in the eight-brand Spinorhino stable with a notable two-entity disclosure pattern in the page footer. The licence is current. The two-entity structure adds a layer of complexity to the accountability chain that is worth flagging. Score reflects: same-licence Anjouan baseline (neutral), distinct Spanish-language market positioning (positive for that audience), two-entity footer disclosure (neutral; potentially legitimate operating-vs-licensee split, potentially a stale footer artefact, requires player diligence either way).

Score: 5.7 / 10.

Frequently asked questions

Why does Betoranje show two different company names?

The Anjouan register lists 3-102-937541 SRL as the licensee. The Betoranje landing-page footer references Zephyr Holding SRL (3-102-926727) as the operating entity. This two-tier structure is common in offshore licensing but it does affect which entity holds your contractual relationship and the dispute-resolution path. Read the T&Cs to confirm.

Is Betoranje the same operator as Spinorhino?

Same Anjouan licensee, different consumer brand. Both share licence ALSI-202509069-FI2 under 3-102-937541 SRL. Spinorhino's licensee is the largest brand stable in our coverage at 8 brands.

Is Betoranje a Dutch operator?

No. The 'oranje' (Dutch for orange) in the brand is more likely a colour or sport reference than a Netherlands reference; the landing-page language is Spanish.

Does Betoranje accept crypto?

Operator landing materials reference multiple payment options at time of writing. Specific cryptocurrencies, confirmation requirements, and clearing-time SLAs were not independently verified for this profile.

When this might not apply to you

The two-entity footer disclosure is the verifiable observation; the interpretation (operating split, stale footer, or white-label) is not externally determinable from a single fetch. The Anjouan framework does not include cross-operator self-exclusion.

References

  1. Anjouan licence register entry (3-102-937541 SRL) , Anjouan Gaming Authority
  2. Betoranje landing page , Betoranje