NRG UKGC Licence Status: Sharedbet, Surrendered Activities and Inactive Domain
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The current Gambling Commission public register evidence should control any UK-facing NRG licence page. The register lists Sharedbet Limited account 63635, shows the relevant remote Bingo, Casino and betting activities as surrendered with 20 May 2026 as the end date, and lists nrg.bet as inactive on the domain-name record. That does not support describing NRG as an active UKGC-licensed casino, an active UKGC-listed gambling domain, or a site where UK readers can now register, deposit, play or claim an NRG bonus. The practical conclusion is not a broad legal opinion. It is a register-based review position: treat NRG as closed or inactive unless future official pages and the public register clearly prove otherwise.
The register answer in plain English
For NRG, the key public-register details are specific. The operator account is Sharedbet Limited. The account number shown on the Gambling Commission register is 63635. The relevant remote gambling activities that matter to a casino and sportsbook review are shown as surrendered, with a 20 May 2026 end date. The domain-name page lists nrg.bet as inactive. Read together, those records make active NRG claims unsafe.
This page uses those records as the strongest current source because UKGC register evidence is more reliable for active licensing status than an old review table, a cached bonus page or stale footer language. A casino page can keep old navigation or footer fragments after the operating position changes. The register is where a UK reader should check whether the relevant activities and domain are currently shown as active.
Four pieces of evidence to keep separate
A licence check can become confusing when all licence-related phrases are treated as the same thing. For NRG, they are not the same. The company account, the activity status, the domain status and the regulatory-action count answer different questions.
- Operator account
- Sharedbet Limited is the business account shown on the public register for account 63635. That identifies the register entry readers should inspect when checking the NRG evidence trail.
- Remote activity status
- The relevant remote Bingo, Casino and betting activities are marked surrendered. That is the central reason this guide avoids active NRG licence language.
- Domain-name status
- The domain record lists nrg.bet as inactive, so the domain should not be described as an active UKGC-listed gambling domain.
- Regulatory actions
- The public-register summary shows zero regulatory actions recorded for the business. That is a separate fact and it does not revive surrendered activities or an inactive domain.
Why current register evidence outranks stale footer wording
Some visible NRG footer text still refers to SharedBet Ltd and licence number 63635. That wording matters as a clue to which register record to check, but it should not be treated as a current active-status certificate by itself. Footer text can remain on a site after a closure, surrender or domain-status change. For a reader trying to decide whether NRG is usable now, the live public-register rows carry more weight.
The same rule applies to old affiliate reviews. If a third-party review still contains a score, a sign-up button, an old payment method list or a bonus table, it may be describing an older commercial position. The licence page should not copy that material into a current review. It should anchor every active-status sentence to the current public register and the current official NRG closure message.
That is why the main NRG Casino UK review uses closed-status framing rather than a conventional casino sales format. The dedicated NRG closure status page handles the operational-status evidence, while this page focuses on the UKGC licence record.
What surrendered activities mean for this review
Surrendered remote activities mean this page should not call NRG an active UKGC-licensed remote casino or sportsbook. They also mean the page should not infer current UK registration, current deposits, current withdrawals, current bonus eligibility or current game availability from older text. The conclusion is evidence-based and limited: the current register evidence does not support active NRG product claims.
Surrendered activities do not automatically answer every former-account question. A former user may still have personal records, old emails, historic transactions or support correspondence. Those situations are better handled as account and evidence questions, not as reasons to promote new gambling activity. The supporting page on former-user account issues explains that distinction without giving a current withdrawal process.
Surrendered activities also do not prove that every webpage module disappeared instantly. A site can still display old layout elements, partner messaging or footer text. Those elements need context. For NRG, the register status, inactive domain record and closure wording are the facts that control current public wording.
Why the Great Britain and Northern Ireland distinction matters
UK readers often say “UKGC licence” as shorthand, but precision matters. The Gambling Commission regulates commercial gambling in Great Britain and remote gambling offered to consumers in Great Britain. The National Lottery has a different UK-wide scope. Northern Ireland should not be collapsed into the Great Britain licence framework in the same way, because the Commission’s own remit explains a separate Northern Ireland context for remote gambling provision and advertising.
For this NRG page, that distinction prevents overstatement. It is accurate to say the GB remote-gambling framework makes the public register important for NRG status checks. It would be too broad to claim that every online-gambling provision in every part of the UK is regulated in exactly the same way. The safer wording is to explain the register evidence, state the Great Britain scope, and avoid giving legal advice to individual readers.
How remote casino licensing fits NRG specifically
The Gambling Commission describes a remote casino operating licence as the licence type used for offering casino games through a website, mobile phone, TV or another online service. Guidance for the remote sector also says a licence is needed to provide remote gambling facilities to consumers in Great Britain and to serve British consumers from abroad. That is why this NRG licence page does not treat licence wording as a decorative footer issue.
For a currently active casino review, a licence section would normally ask what company holds the relevant licence, what domain is attached, and whether the activity type matches the product being promoted. For NRG, those checks lead to a cautious result. The activity rows are surrendered and the domain is inactive, so the review should not present the site as a live UKGC-licensed casino journey. For a deeper domain-only explanation, use the planned nrg.bet inactive domain status page. For company context, use SharedBet Limited operator details.
What this licence page can and cannot conclude
| Question | Supported conclusion | Conclusion to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Is there a Sharedbet Limited register account? | Yes, account 63635 is the relevant public-register record to check. | Do not treat the account number alone as proof of active NRG availability. |
| Are the relevant remote activities active? | The current register shows the relevant remote activities as surrendered with 20 May 2026 as the end date. | Do not call NRG an active UKGC-licensed remote casino or sportsbook. |
| Is nrg.bet active on the domain record? | The domain-name record lists nrg.bet as inactive. | Do not describe nrg.bet as an active UKGC-listed gambling domain. |
| Are regulatory actions recorded? | The register summary shows zero regulatory actions recorded for the business. | Do not use that separate fact to override surrendered activity or inactive domain status. |
Practical register-check sequence for UK readers
- Start with the current official NRG page and note whether it shows closure wording.
- Find the Gambling Commission public-register entry for Sharedbet Limited account 63635.
- Check the activity rows before reading old footer wording as active licence evidence.
- Check the domain-name page for nrg.bet rather than assuming the visible domain is still active.
- Separate regulatory-action history from current activity and domain status.
- Use the UK player checks for NRG guide for broader checks around KYC, bonuses, payments and safer-gambling protections.
The main decision rule is conservative: where current register evidence and old promotional language disagree, do not rely on the old promotional language for money or account decisions.
How to handle apparent contradictions
NRG is a useful case because a reader may see several apparently contradictory signals in one journey. A page can say the brand has closed, while a footer still names an old licence number, while another module promotes a partner brand, while an older review on another site still looks like a live recommendation. The right response is not to pick the most attractive signal. The right response is to rank the evidence by purpose and freshness.
For active licensing status, use the public register. For whether the original brand presents itself as open or closed, use the current official brand page. For a partner offer, read the destination brand’s current terms and operator information rather than treating the old brand page as the offer owner. For personal account or payment history, use your own records and official communication rather than search snippets or copied pages.
This evidence-ranking method is especially important before money, identity documents or self-exclusion choices are involved. A licence number in isolation is not the same as active remote activity. A domain in a browser bar is not the same as an active domain-name entry. A partner offer is not the same as a reopened NRG casino. Those separations are the main information gain of this page.
Common licence questions
Is NRG currently an active UKGC-licensed casino?
This guide does not describe NRG that way. The current public register shows the relevant remote activities as surrendered and nrg.bet as inactive.
Does the old footer licence number make NRG active?
No. Footer wording can identify which register account to check, but the current register status should control active-status wording.
Does zero regulatory action mean the site is active?
No. Recorded regulatory actions and current activity status are different checks. A zero-action count does not change surrendered activity or inactive domain records.
Can this page give legal advice?
No. It is an editorial explanation of public register evidence for UK readers. Individual disputes, balances or account issues may need appropriate official or professional guidance.
Bottom line
The current UKGC evidence makes this an inactive-status licence page, not a reassurance page. Sharedbet Limited account 63635 is the record to check, the relevant remote activities are shown as surrendered, and nrg.bet is listed as inactive. Any future change would need to be verified from both official NRG pages and the public register before the review could move away from this cautious position. For shorter answers, see the NRG Casino UK FAQ.
This material was created by the nrgcasinoplayuk.com team.
