About PayDo
PayDo is a UK-based payment provider serving businesses that need accounts, transfers, merchant payments, and payouts. In iGaming, the company focuses on licensed operators with cross-border payment needs. Its services cover multicurrency accounts, local payment rails, mass payouts, cards, and payment acceptance.
The company was founded in 2017 and operates with offices in London and Malta. Its product set includes business accounts, personal accounts, multicurrency IBANs, FX tools, card products, and merchant payment services. According to PayDo’s own material, iGaming clients can manage funds in one dashboard and use one contract across several payment functions.
PayDo’s iGaming proposition is built around volume, reach, and payment control. The source material states that operators can transact across more than 180 countries, use 35 currencies, and access schemes including SEPA, SEPA Instant, Faster Payments, and cross-border transfers. It also describes mass payouts, instant settlement, user reports, anti-fraud checks, and dedicated account management for the sector.
| Founded | 2017 |
|---|---|
| Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
| Payment Type | Electronic money institution, PSP, bank transfers, merchant payments, cards |
| Supported Currencies | 35 currencies, according to PayDo’s iGaming material |
| Key iGaming Markets | United Kingdom, EU, EEA, Canada, and international cross-border markets |
| Regulatory Status | Authorised by the FCA in the United Kingdom, authorised by the MFSA in Malta, and registered with FINTRAC in Canada |
Market Coverage & Operator Value
PayDo’s regulatory footprint is split across the United Kingdom, Malta, and Canada. The company announced its MFSA authorisation in 2025, adding a Malta base for EU payment services. Its 2025 SEPA and SEPA Instant connection also supports faster euro transfers for European business clients.
For iGaming operators, PayDo is most relevant where treasury, pay-ins, payouts, FX, and card spend need to sit in one payment setup. The fit is strongest for licensed operators that process high transaction volumes across several markets. Compliance teams should still check accepted jurisdictions, merchant terms, settlement timing, fees, and prohibited activity rules before onboarding.