A new class action is taking aim at SkyCity’s Malta-run online casino, putting years of player losses and a legal gray area in New Zealand squarely in the spotlight.
Lawsuit Puts SkyCity’s Offshore Model on the Spot
SkyCity Entertainment Group is facing class-action proceedings challenging whether its online casino setup is lawful for New Zealand players. The case targets SkyCity Online Casino, which launched in February 2020 and has been operating through Malta rather than from inside New Zealand.
According to the filing, the action has been brought by an unidentified party and seeks to cover gambling losses recorded on the platform between February 2020 and February 2026. SkyCity has rejected the claims and says it will fight the case.
For regular players, the dispute boils down to one question: can a well-known local casino brand legally offer online gambling to New Zealand customers by running the business from offshore?
Plaintiffs Want Losses Repaid
The claim is aimed at recovering money lost by New Zealand customers who played on SkyCity Online during the six-year period. The proceedings also seek approval to run the matter as a funded class action, which would allow a wider group of affected players to be represented if the court signs off.
That raises the stakes fast. If the case is certified, SkyCity could be dealing with claims from a large pool of customers who used the site over several years.
SkyCity, for its part, says it does not accept any liability tied to the proceedings and intends to contest both the class action application and the underlying claims.
Malta Licensing Sits at the Center of the Fight
The legal challenge zeroes in on the way SkyCity’s online casino is structured. The platform is tied to SkyCity Malta Limited and operated under Silvereye Entertainment Limited, a Malta-based company licensed by the Malta Gaming Authority under license MGA/B2C/880/2021.
That offshore structure is the whole point of the argument. New Zealand’s Gambling Act 2003 blocks local operators from offering online casino gambling to residents, but it does not stop New Zealanders from playing on offshore sites. SkyCity’s model appears built around that gap.
Critics argue the company is using a foreign base to do something it could not do directly from home. SkyCity’s position is that the arrangement complies with the law.
Why This Case Matters Beyond SkyCity
This is more than a courtroom headache for one operator. The case lands as New Zealand works toward a regulated online casino market, with plans to issue up to 15 licenses by the end of 2026.
That makes the timing awkward for SkyCity. On one hand, it already has a recognizable brand and an active online offering aimed at New Zealand customers. On the other, it is now being challenged over whether that very setup should have been allowed in the first place.
For players, the case could help decide whether losses on offshore-branded sites can later become the subject of legal recovery claims. For operators, it is a reminder that clever corporate structuring does not always keep legal risk off the table.
A Precedent Could Be on the Way
The proceedings are still in the early stages, and SkyCity has said little beyond confirming it will defend the matter vigorously. Still, the case could become a test of how far New Zealand law reaches when a domestic casino brand uses offshore licensing to target local customers.
If the claim gains traction, it may shape how future online gambling rules are written and enforced. If SkyCity wins, the result could strengthen the case for offshore-facing models until New Zealand’s licensing regime is fully in place.
Either way, this is not just a corporate legal scuffle. It is a live test of a setup many players probably assumed was already settled.










