What Is Skrill?
Skrill is a digital wallet — an online account you load with money and then use to pay merchants without handing over your card or bank details each time. It launched in 2001 (as Moneybookers) and is now part of Paysafe, a major regulated payments group. In the UK, Skrill is operated under FCA authorisation as an e-money institution, so it is a mainstream, well-established payment method, not a fringe one.
You top up your Skrill wallet from a debit card, credit card or bank transfer, then spend the balance at any merchant that accepts Skrill. For online gambling that matters, because Skrill has long specialised in serving the sector — which is exactly why it is accepted so widely at offshore casinos while other wallets are not. Skrill's sister product, Neteller, is the same idea from the same company and works at the same casinos, so if you already hold one of the two you are covered.
Why Skrill Works Offshore When PayPal Doesn't
This is the single most useful thing to understand about funding a non-GamStop casino with an e-wallet. PayPal only partners with UKGC-licensed operators — its agreements prohibit it from processing payments to unlicensed or non-GamStop casinos, so you will never see it in an offshore cashier. Searching for a "PayPal non-GamStop casino" is largely a dead end.
Skrill takes a different, more open approach to the gambling sector and is accepted across the offshore market, including every casino on this page. That is why this is a genuine, honest page: Skrill really does work at these sites, so we are not steering you toward a method that will be declined. If you want the convenience of an e-wallet at a non-GamStop casino, Skrill (or Neteller) is the realistic option.