Disclaimer: GambleDB is not affiliated with the UK Gambling Commission. Data sourced from official UKGC public register.
Lucky Hit Casino used to be a mid-sized online casino site on the Aspire Global platform, aimed at slot and table game players rather than sports bettors. It ran on luckyhit.com and focused on real-money casino play with a fairly broad game library and a structured rewards system, but it has since closed and is no longer accepting new UK players or real-money wagers.
The brand launched around 2019, operated under the Aspire Global umbrella and targeted several regulated markets including the UK. In Britain it was operated by AG Communications Limited, a company that runs a large number of white-label casino brands under a UK Gambling Commission operating licence. There is no sign of any ownership transfers or rebrands of the luckyhit.com domain; the site simply appears to have been wound down, with review sites now listing it as closed.
While it was active, Lucky Hit Casino was a straight casino product. There was no sportsbook, bingo network, or poker room β the focus was slots, RNG table games, and a live casino lobby.
The main draw was the slot collection, which reviewers at the time described as β300+ gamesβ from a mix of well-known studios. Titles included:
One notable downside mentioned by reviewers was the lack of major progressive jackpots, so if you were chasing seven-figure prize pools, Lucky Hit Casino wasnβt the best fit. On the flip side, RTPs and game fairness were handled at platform level by Aspire, which was generally seen as reliable and audited.
Lucky Hit Casino carried the usual spread of RNG table games β blackjack, roulette, baccarat, and a few casino poker variants. The depth here was solid but not exceptional: enough versions to give you some choice of rules and table limits, but not the hundreds of variants you see at the very biggest brands.
The live casino section used mainstream live dealer providers (typical of Aspire-powered sites), with:
Streaming quality and interface were in line with other Aspire skins: clean, functional, and mobile-friendly, but with a fairly standard look rather than anything custom-branded or flashy.
A key feature of Lucky Hit Casino was its multi-level loyalty scheme. Players earned points at a published rate (widely reported as 1 point per β¬40 wagered) and could move up through seven tiers. Higher levels unlocked perks such as faster withdrawals, personal account management, and various extras like birthday treats or cashback days. This was a shared Aspire Global structure, so if youβve played at other brands on the same platform, it would have felt very familiar.
Lucky Hit Casino did not rely on a dedicated app; instead, it used a responsive mobile website. The mobile version of luckyhit.com loaded directly in your browser and gave access to the same core games and account features as desktop:
Reviews at the time suggested the mobile site ran smoothly on modern Android and iOS devices, although the lobby design was more functional than stylish.
Specific banking details for Lucky Hit Casino are no longer published by the operator, but you can infer a lot from how Aspire/AG Communications brands typically work in the UK.
For deposits, players usually had access to several of the following:
Withdrawals on Aspire-powered sites are normally routed back to the same method where possible. Typical practice has been:
As with most UKGC-licensed sites, players would have been asked to complete standard KYC checks (ID, proof of address, sometimes source of funds) before larger withdrawals or once cumulative deposits hit certain thresholds. Some historic player comments around Aspire brands mention frustration with document requests and response times, so Lucky Hit Casino likely felt similar: generally reliable, but not the fastest cash-out experience on the market.
In the UK, Lucky Hit Casino operated under the remote casino licence of AG Communications Limited, issued by the UK Gambling Commission. That meant it had to comply with rules on fair games, segregation of player funds, and responsible gambling tools (deposit limits, reality checks, self-exclusion, and access to services like GAMSTOP and GamCare).
External review sites rated Lucky Hit Casino as above average for safety while it was open, with no major scandals or direct blacklisting. Some negative points were inherited from related Aspire brands rather than Lucky Hit itself.
For UK players today, the decision is simple: Lucky Hit Casino is closed, so itβs not an option for new sign-ups or ongoing play. If you held an account there in the past, your balance and access would have been handled during the wind-down, and youβll now need to choose a different UKGC-licensed casino.
Looking back, Lucky Hit Casino would have suited:
It was less ideal if you prioritise:
If you liked the overall experience at Lucky Hit Casino, your best bet now is to look for other active UKGC-licensed casinos run by the same operator, which tend to share similar game libraries, loyalty structures, and mobile layouts, but are still open for UK play.
AG Communications Limited
St George's Business Centre, Level 5, St George's Road, St Julians
35 sister sites operated by AG Communications Limited