Starting 2 December, William Hill will stop accepting bets from customers in 13 countries across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The move, driven by parent company Evoke, marks one of the brand’s biggest international withdrawals in years.
Affected players—located in Angola, Bolivia, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Kenya, Mozambique, Nepal, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, DRC, Somalia, and Vietnam—will see services discontinued. Bets placed before the deadline will be settled normally, but anything due to resolve after that date will be voided and refunded.
Players will still be able to log in and withdraw funds until 5 January. After that, accounts will be locked, and any remaining balance will require customer service assistance.
For regular online casino users in these countries, it’s a sharp cutoff. There’s no gradual wind-down—just a narrow window to wrap things up.
More Than a Market Exit: A Shift in Strategy
This isn’t just a string of local exits—it’s a full-blown corporate pivot.
Rather than responding to individual licensing issues or local restrictions, Evoke appears to be consolidating its footprint, especially in regions where operational challenges—like payment systems and regulatory unpredictability—make things messy.
In Africa, the company had already adjusted its approach via the 888Africa joint venture. That setup, which focuses on regulated local markets, is run by industry veterans and lets Evoke back out of less stable jurisdictions without abandoning the continent entirely.
This wider retreat now looks like an extension of that same thinking: one streamlined structure, fewer complications, and a tighter focus on markets that meet Evoke’s standards.
Meanwhile, Trouble Brews at Home in the UK
While William Hill is scaling back abroad, Evoke is also bracing for potential fallout in the UK. If gambling taxes increase in the upcoming budget, the company has warned that up to 200 retail shops could shut, putting around 1,500 jobs at risk.
An Evoke spokesperson described the closures as a necessary part of planning for multiple tax scenarios, noting that higher costs could push more players toward unregulated markets.
For players in the UK, that could mean fewer in-person options and more pressure on the online side—especially if brick-and-mortar operations are trimmed to protect margins.
A Pattern of Quiet Restrictions
This move isn’t happening in a vacuum. Over the past few years, William Hill has gradually limited its offerings in various regions—ending poker in Slovenia, pulling sports betting from Armenia and Hungary, and curbing gaming access in Germany and Latvia.
That patchwork of restrictions now looks like the early steps of a wider shift. What we’re seeing in December is simply a more visible, final phase of that process.
For Players, a Short Window to Cash Out
The sudden nature of the exit leaves little time for customers to react. Most operators offer a longer grace period when pulling out of a country. William Hill’s timeline—just over a month from announcement to full account lock—gives players in these markets a tight deadline.
Anyone with funds in their accounts should act fast to avoid complications.
What This Means Going Forward
William Hill’s global pullback shows how volatile the online gambling landscape has become. For everyday players, it’s a reminder that access to your favorite site can change quickly—and not always for reasons you can see.
With regulation tightening and tax burdens rising, big names like Evoke are narrowing their focus. That could mean fewer choices in smaller or less regulated markets, as companies shift resources toward jurisdictions that promise more stability.
As always, players should keep an eye on communications from their operators—and be ready to move if the next round of changes hits closer to home.









