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The Space Casino Terms and Conditions on spacecasino.com contain a country-restriction clause that names specific countries whose residents Luminect Limited B.V. does not accept as customers. United Kingdom appears in that list. The wording is general account-level wording, not a bonus-only exclusion, which is why the entire Space Casino UK Guide treats it as the controlling caveat for every commercial topic on the site. This page focuses narrowly on how that wording is read and verified, and it deliberately does not republish the full country list as a legal substitute for the current operator source.
Where the wording sits inside the terms
The country-restriction clause sits inside the general Terms and Conditions for spacecasino.com, the version checked for this review being 1.8 (last edited 13 January 2025). Operator terms typically include a customer-eligibility section that covers age, jurisdiction, identity verification and country acceptance together, and the country list belongs to that section. Reading the country list in isolation, away from the rest of the eligibility wording, can make it look like a bonus or promotion exclusion. Read in context, it is part of who Luminect Limited B.V. accepts as a customer in the first place.
This matters because some third-party reviews treat country restrictions as soft “this offer is not available” wording, the same way a marketing promotion might exclude a market. The Space Casino wording is stronger. It is not about a particular bonus; it is about the operator’s customer base.
Why “general account-level” is the right reading
An account-level restriction governs whether a resident can become a customer at all. A promotion-level restriction governs whether an existing customer can claim a specific offer. The two look superficially similar – both name countries – but they have very different consequences for a UK reader. A promotion-level exclusion would still leave registration, deposits and gameplay open while removing a single bonus. The Space Casino wording does not work that way. It is upstream of bonuses, payments and game access, and it applies to the customer relationship itself.
For this guide, that means a UK reader does not need a bonus angle to fall under the restriction. Simply being a United Kingdom resident is enough. The downstream pages on registration and KYC caveats, licence and operator check and the wider UK casino rules hub all read from this same starting point.
Why this page does not reproduce the full country list
It would be possible to scrape the full restricted-country list from the operator’s terms and paste it here. This site does not, for two practical reasons. First, country lists in operator terms can change between versions, and a pasted copy could go stale without warning. The current operator wording on spacecasino.com is the controlling source; an editorial copy is not. Second, a UK reader does not need the full list to answer the UK question. The United Kingdom name match alone is enough to make the rest of the not-accepted list a secondary consideration for this site’s GEO.
If a future revision removes United Kingdom from the list, the current Terms and Conditions would be the place to see that, not a fixed copy on a third-party page. The verification workflow below describes how to confirm the current wording in two minutes.
How to recheck the official wording yourself
- Open spacecasino.com directly. Operator wording on the brand’s own pages is the controlling source.
- Locate the Terms and Conditions link in the site footer or legal menu. The full document is usually titled Terms and Conditions or General Terms.
- Note the version number and last-edited date at the top of the document. Older review pages may reference an older version.
- Use the in-page search (Ctrl-F or Cmd-F) for “United Kingdom” inside the terms document. The country-restriction clause is the relevant hit.
- Confirm whether United Kingdom is present in the not-accepted list. If it is, the restriction stands; if it is no longer present, that is a material change worth comparing against the rest of the licence and operator picture in licence and operator check.
Two cautions during this check. A marketing page that mentions “available in the UK” is not the Terms and Conditions; the marketing page is not the controlling source. And a search-result snippet that quotes an older terms version is older evidence, not current evidence; the version date in the live document is the tie-breaker.
Signals that look reassuring but are not enough
Several signals look like they should override a country restriction and do not. A familiar UK-flag favicon on a third-party review does not change the operator’s terms. A GBP currency symbol in a screenshot does not establish acceptance; many international cashier pages display multiple currencies regardless of acceptance. A reference to UK customer support in an older review does not extend to the present operation if the older review describes the STech-era UK domain. A statement like “regulated by the UKGC” without a current public-register entry for the present spacecasino.com operation is not the same as current Commission authorisation; the related www.spacecasino.co.uk entry under STech Technology UK Limited is currently inactive on the public register.
The operator’s own terms outrank all of these signals. The breakdown of why the inactive UK-domain record cannot be borrowed by the present spacecasino.com operation is on the licence and operator check, and the reader-facing availability matrix sits on Is Space Casino available in the UK?.
What this means for the rest of the site
Because the United Kingdom restriction is account-level wording, every commercial page on this site carries the same caveat: games, mobile presentation, customer support, payment methods, withdrawal timing, bonus codes, KYC processes and complaint procedures are general operator facts only. None of them creates a UK acceptance path. The registration and KYC caveats guide is the next step for anyone wondering whether an onboarding workaround exists; it does not.
Frequently asked questions
Is the country restriction in the terms a temporary thing?
Operator terms can change between versions, so the wording is not necessarily permanent. As of the checked version 1.8 (last edited 13 January 2025), United Kingdom remains in the not-accepted list. Future versions would need to be checked directly on the operator’s own page.
Does the restriction apply only to certain Space Casino products?
No. The wording is at customer-acceptance level for Luminect Limited B.V. on spacecasino.com, not product-specific. Games, sportsbook, live casino and any other catalogue area inherit the same restriction.
If United Kingdom is removed from the list one day, is that enough?
It is the first signal but not the only one. A UK acceptance picture would also need a current Gambling Commission record for the live operation and a coherent UK payment, KYC and complaint structure attached to it. The licence and operator check sets out those wider conditions.