Most publishers will not link to gambling sites.
That is not an opinion. That is the reality of iGaming link building. News sites, lifestyle publications, general blogs, local businesses — the vast majority of the web has blanket policies against linking to gambling-related content.
Some of this is ethical positioning. Some is advertiser pressure. Some is just default caution about anything gambling-adjacent.
The result is that the pool of legitimate, high-quality link sources available to iGaming and casino brands is significantly smaller than in almost any other industry.
That is exactly why link building in this space commands premium pricing. And why the quality of the links that do exist in iGaming matters more, not less.
This page covers what actually works in iGaming link building, why this niche is different, and how we approach campaigns for gambling brands.
The difficulty is structural.
In most industries, if you have good content and a legitimate website, you can earn links from a broad range of domains — news sites, blogs, industry publications, educational resources, directories.
In iGaming, that pool is restricted by the nature of the industry. Gambling sits next to alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and adult content in the category of industries that major publishers have policies against linking to.
The consequences for iGaming SEO:
Working in iGaming link building means being rigorous about quality precisely because the temptation to cut corners is greater, and the consequences of doing so are more severe.
This is the most underused legitimate link source in iGaming.
Responsible gambling organisations — the National Council on Problem Gambling, GamCare, BeGambleAware, Gambling Therapy, and many state-specific programs — maintain resource pages that link to gambling operators who demonstrate genuine commitment to player safety.
These are high-authority, genuinely editorial links from non-commercial organisations that Google treats as credible references.
Getting listed on responsible gambling resource pages requires:
A link from problemgambling.ca, the NCPG, or a state gambling authority's resource page is a very different proposition from a link from a generic gambling affiliate site.
Sports betting news is a legitimate editorial category that has grown significantly with the legalisation of sports betting across US states.
Sites like The Action Network, OddsShark, Covers.com, BettingPros, and a growing ecosystem of state-specific sports betting guides are genuine editorial publications covering sports betting news, odds analysis, and market commentary.
These sites link to sportsbook operators in the context of:
Links from legitimate sports betting news and analysis sites are topically relevant and editorially earned. The quality varies significantly across this category — there is a spectrum from genuine journalism to affiliate content dressed as editorial.
The distinction matters. Genuine editorial links carry real value. Paid placements on affiliate sites may count as links, but they are viewed differently by Google and carry more risk over time.
Sports sponsorships are one of the most effective iGaming link building approaches for brands with significant marketing budgets.
When a gambling brand sponsors a sports club — particularly at the professional or semi-professional level — the sponsorship is typically mentioned on the club's website. The club's website links to the sponsor. Professional sports club websites often have DRs in the 50–70 range.
UK Premier League clubs sponsoring gambling brands is the most visible example, but the same model exists at every level of sport:
Sports sponsorship links are transparent and legitimate — they are commercial relationships disclosed as sponsorships. They are not manipulative or deceptive. And they are often from some of the highest-authority domains available to gambling brands.
Beyond mainstream sports betting, there are specialist publications that cover gambling, gaming, and related topics with genuine editorial standards.
Getting into these publications requires having something genuinely worth covering: a new product launch, a regulatory development, original data on player behaviour, expert commentary on industry trends.
The iGaming trade press — iGaming Business, SBC News, EGR — covers the business of gambling. Links from these publications are authoritative within the industry but may carry less weight for consumer-facing operator sites than links from sports media or mainstream news.
The line between affiliate link and editorial link gets complicated in iGaming.
The largest gambling affiliate networks — Catena Media, Better Collective, Gambling.com, OLBG, Casino.org — operate websites with genuine editorial teams and real review processes. Their links to operators are affiliate-tagged, but they come from high-authority domains with millions of organic visitors.
A top-10 placement in a "best online casinos in New Jersey" roundup on Casino.org (DR 80+) is a valuable link despite the affiliate nature of the relationship. The editorial teams make genuine assessments. The reviews are substantive. The sites have real traffic.
The risk is in treating all affiliate directory links as equivalent — they are not. A link from a well-established gambling affiliate with genuine audience and editorial integrity is meaningfully different from a link from a newly created affiliate doorway site with no traffic.
Being direct about this: the iGaming link ecosystem is full of things that look like link building but are not.
Private blog networks (PBNs). Networks of low-quality sites built specifically to sell links to gambling brands. Cheap. Dangerous. Google has become sophisticated at detecting these patterns.
Fake casino review sites with no real audience. Some link sellers create "review sites" with no traffic that exist solely to sell links. These carry no real value and real penalty risk.
Mass link insertion into irrelevant content. "Niche edits" placed into unrelated content on hacked or compromised sites. Common in iGaming. Bad idea.
Reciprocal linking between competing gambling brands. "I link to your casino, you link to mine." Mutual link exchanges between direct competitors are a pattern Google discounts.
The short version: iGaming has more link fraud than almost any other industry. The only way to build a link profile that holds up under increased scrutiny — which is where the industry is headed — is to build real links from real websites.
The cost of iGaming link building is higher than most other industries. This is not arbitrary.
The reasons:
Competing in that environment requires investing accordingly. Cheap iGaming link building is almost by definition bad iGaming link building.
We run iGaming link building campaigns focused on links that hold up.
That means:
We understand regulatory requirements by jurisdiction. We do not place links that create compliance exposure.
For iGaming clients, we work with link building packages that reflect the higher cost of legitimate link acquisition in this space. If you are looking for cheap links, we are not the right partner. If you are looking for links that build a profile you can stand behind in front of a regulator or in front of Google's manual review team, talk to us.
Our broader link building services page explains how we work and what you can expect from an engagement.
The iGaming brands dominating organic search in competitive markets — US states with legalised sports betting, competitive online casino markets — have invested heavily in legitimate, high-quality link building over years.
A shortcut approach might work briefly. It has stopped working for most of the brands that tried it.
If you want to build something that lasts, get in touch with us. We will be honest about what is achievable in your market, what it costs, and what results you can realistically expect.
No promises that would only make sense if we were selling fake links. Just a clear conversation about the real opportunity.