CASA (Casino Association South Africa)

CASA is an Industry body (not a regulator).

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⚠️ CASA Website Link Unavailable

The Casino Association of South Africa (CASA) has an official website, but it is currently inaccessible due to an expired SSL certificate. For security reasons, we have not linked directly until their site is restored with a valid certificate. As soon as the website is back online, this profile will be updated with the correct link.

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Mandate & Oversight

  • Role Industry body representing licensed casinos across South Africa.
  • Scope Advocates for the casino sector, educates the public, and engages regulators and policymakers. National
  • Founded 2003, to promote transparency, education, and responsible industry growth.
  • Contribution CASA members sustain over 53,000 jobs and contribute significantly to provincial and national revenues.
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Code of Conduct

  • Consumer Rights Upholds the Consumer Protection Act with commitments to fairness, transparency, and safe play.
  • Corruption Zero tolerance for bribery, extortion, or unethical practices within the industry.
  • Anti-Money Laundering Members comply with FIC regulations and enforce strict “know your customer” standards.
  • Responsible Gambling Commitment to staff training, customer awareness, and support for the National Responsible Gambling Programme.
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Contact & Resources

Casino Association of South Africa (CASA) – FAQ

Quick answers about CASA’s role, its Code of Conduct, consumer protection standards, anti-corruption commitments, and responsible gambling measures in South Africa.

+What is the Casino Association of South Africa (CASA)?
CASA was founded in 2003 to represent South Africa’s licensed casino industry. It works to educate the public, regulators, and policymakers about the role of casinos, while promoting responsible gambling and ethical business practices.
+What role does CASA play in the casino industry?
CASA represents the majority of licensed casinos in South Africa. It advocates for the industry, highlights its contribution to the economy, supports job creation, and ensures members follow strict codes of conduct regarding fairness, transparency, and social responsibility.
+How does CASA protect casino players?
CASA’s Code of Conduct requires members to respect the Consumer Protection Act. This includes fair marketing, transparent information, honest dealings, quality service, and providing access to redress through proper complaint channels and dispute resolution mechanisms.
+What is CASA’s stance on corruption and money laundering?
CASA members adopt a zero-tolerance approach to corruption. They prohibit bribery, extortion, and unethical practices, while also complying with anti–money laundering and counter-terrorist financing legislation. Members apply “know your customer” principles and cooperate fully with the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC).
+How does CASA promote responsible gambling?
CASA integrates responsible gambling into daily operations. Members provide player self-exclusion, deposit limits, helpline signage, and employee training. They also fund the National Responsible Gambling Programme (NRGP) to support research, education, and treatment for problem gambling.
+How can I contact CASA?
You can reach CASA by email at jacquesb.casa@gmail.com. Their official website is temporarily unavailable due to an SSL issue, and no phone or physical address is listed at this time.

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The Casino Association of South Africa is the industry body representing the interests of South Africa’s licensed casino gaming industry. It was founded in 2003 to create a better understanding of casino entertainment through education and advocacy directed at the public, media, regulators and policy makers.

CASA represents the vast majority of the country’s licensed casino operators and plays a constructive role in the development of public policy and good governance within the casino industry.

CASA is not a regulator. It is an industry association that represents its members’ interests and promotes ethical standards across the licensed casino sector. Its activities include advocacy on policy and legislative matters, engagement with regulators and government, and the development and enforcement of a code of conduct that all members are expected to follow.

CASA operates under a formal code of conduct enacted in December 2012. The code covers several areas relevant to the integrity of the casino industry and the protection of the public.

  • Consumer protection requires members to respect and uphold consumer rights as set out in the Consumer Protection Act. This includes the right to fair and responsible marketing, honest dealing, plain language disclosure and access to dispute resolution.
  • Anti-corruption commits members to a zero tolerance approach towards all corrupt activities, including bribery, extortion and blackmail. Members undertake not to offer, accept or solicit unlawful inducements in the private sector or from public officials.
  • Anti-money laundering requires members to comply with all South African anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing legislation, implement detection strategies, subscribe to know-your-customer principles and cooperate fully with the Financial Intelligence Centre and law enforcement agencies.

CASA members are committed to making responsible gambling an integral part of daily casino operations. The code of conduct sets out specific obligations covering employees, customers and the public.

Members are required to educate and train employees on responsible gambling, display helpline signage in gaming areas and on every gaming machine, make responsible gambling brochures clearly visible, and provide customers with the ability to request self-exclusion from gaming activities.

CASA members also fund the National Responsible Gambling Programme through the South African Responsible Gambling Foundation.

CASA members are required to make diligent efforts to prevent underage gambling and to address unattended children at casino properties. Employees receive training on procedures for dealing with underage persons, and the legal gambling age is communicated through signage and brochures.

CASA’s code sets out rules for casino advertising and marketing. All advertising must contain the National Responsible Gambling Programme’s helpline number and a responsible gambling message. Advertising must not be misleading, target underage audiences, suggest that gambling guarantees financial success, or imply that gambling is an alternative to employment or a form of investment.

CASA members have been responsible for substantial infrastructure and tourism investment across all nine provinces. The casino industry provides significant tax revenue to the fiscus and is the second largest provider of own income to the provinces. CASA members sustain approximately 53,000 employees in the operational phase of the industry.

  • Full name: Casino Association of South Africa
  • Founded: 2003
  • Type: Industry association (not a regulator)
  • Represents: Licensed casino operators in South Africa
  • Code of conduct: Enacted 6 December 2012

Website: casa-sa.co.za

Founder of Betline.co.za

Responsible Gambling (18+)

Betting and Lotto are for adults only. Bet for fun, set limits, and only use money you can afford to lose. If gambling stops being enjoyable or you’re worried about your play, take a break and get support. Winners know when to stop.

You must be 18 or older to gamble in South Africa. If you need help now, call the NRGP on 0800 006 008.

Fanie Zevgolis
Founder, Betline.co.za
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