Isle of Man Proposes Historic Regulatory Shift: Personal Liability for iGaming Executives

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on March 23, 2026
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GSC proposes regulatory compliance for executives

The Isle of Man Gambling Supervision Commission (GSC) has signaled a transformative shift in its approach to industry oversight, moving to place the burden of regulatory compliance directly on the shoulders of individual executives.

In a recently unveiled legislative proposal, the regulator seeks the authority to impose significant financial penalties on management and key personnel who fail to uphold strict Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Know Your Customer (KYC) standards.

Moving Accountability to Key Personnel

The GSC has officially launched a public consultation to deliberate on these draft measures, which aim to extend civil penalties far beyond the corporate entity. Under the proposed Gambling Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2025, individual workers could face personal financial sanctions if compliance breaches are found to have occurred through their “consent, connivance, or simple negligence.”

This represents a radical departure from the island’s current framework, where the commission’s enforcement powers are limited to penalizing the licensed operating companies. The new strategy specifically targets directors, compliance officers, and high-level executives, the individuals whose daily decision-making processes directly influence a firm’s protections against money laundering and terrorism financing.

Recent Enforcement Actions Provide Critical Context

The timing of this proposal is closely linked to a series of high-profile enforcement actions. Just last month, the regulator issued a £200,000 fine to Shelgeyr, the parent company of Maverick Games. Investigators uncovered systemic failures regarding customer due diligence, enhanced due diligence procedures, and the lack of robust ongoing account monitoring.

Reflecting on the Shelgeyr case, commission officials noted that the identified gaps were not isolated errors but “systemic” in nature. This case has served as a catalyst for the GSC to demand better tools to ensure that individuals within these organizations are held personally responsible for the integrity of their operations.

Managing Ongoing Industry Risks

Authorities currently maintain a “medium-high” money laundering risk rating for the island’s gambling sector, a status that has remained unchanged since 2020. This persistent vulnerability has prompted the GSC to reassess its supervisory toolkit.

To support the transition, the commission has drafted comprehensive guidance documents. These files explain the exact criteria regulators will use to assess individual responsibility and the specific “math and logic” involved in calculating personal financial penalties. The GSC clarified that this new system will complement, rather than replace, existing penalties for operating companies.

Industry Input Requested Before Finalization

The Isle of Man Commission is actively seeking input from industry specialists and stakeholders before moving forward. The public consultation remains open until May 25. To further clarify the impact of these changes, the agency will host an online Q&A session to discuss how personal penalties might reshape the local iGaming landscape. Following the review of all feedback, the commission will determine the final structure of the Gambling Legislation.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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