Morocco Among the Best African Betting Hubs with 4.7 Million Visits Online

Morocco is proving to be an African gambling stronghold in terms of online traffic after it recorded approximately 4.7 million visits to prominent betting platforms, according to SEMRUSH data.
Despite this impressive volume, Morocco’s gambling industry remains fragmented and operates within a regulatory environment that is only partially defined.
Leading the market is Stake, which attracted an estimated 2.8 million visits, followed by Geny with around 1.29 million, and Equidia with roughly 685,000 visits. However, despite these substantial figures, Morocco remains underrepresented in mainstream industry discussions. Its hybrid regulatory model and the lack of comprehensive oversight contribute to its peripheral status. The market’s size is fueled by a combination of offshore operators’ dominance and a deeply rooted local betting culture.
These primary platforms generate nearly five million interactions each month, even before accounting for smaller operators, mirror sites, and affiliate-driven traffic, indicating that total activity could be significantly higher.
What sets Morocco apart is its unique operational structure. Unlike fully regulated markets like Ghana, Morocco functions within a mixed framework. It hosts offshore sportsbooks and casino sites alongside a traditional and well-established horse racing sector.
Offshore Markets Thriving in Morocco
Read Also: World Sports Betting Pays Out to Morocco Bettors Following CAF Ruling
Offshore platforms are gaining considerable traction in the country. Traffic data reveals robust offshore growth, with Stake experiencing a 39.7% month-on-month increase in Moroccan traffic during March. This trend highlights rapid user acquisition and expanding market penetration as digital betting services continue to grow. This stats were cited by SEMRUSH.
Mobile devices are the dominant access point for bettors in Morocco, aligning with broader African betting behaviors. This mobile-first approach supports market expansion without the need for extensive physical infrastructure. Despite its sizable user base, Morocco’s gambling environment remains difficult to categorize definitively. While land-based gambling and horse racing are legal, online betting operates in a regulatory grey area—neither fully licensed nor strictly prohibited—straddling a line between unofficial offshore activity and informal regulation.
With nearly 4.7 million monthly visits, Morocco’s online gambling activity rivals some of Africa’s more mature markets, yet it lacks a formal licensing regime or a transparent operational framework for online operators.
For industry stakeholders, the takeaway is clear: Morocco is not merely an emerging market on the verge of development. It is an active, high-volume betting environment that already demonstrates substantial scale.








