The casino stays open for now, but the latest extension makes clear that Star still has plenty to fix before regulators are ready to move on.
Regulators Keep Star on a Tight Leash
The Star Sydney will keep operating under a suspended casino license until 30 September 2026 after the New South Wales Independent Casino Commission extended both the suspension and the appointment of the state manager. The move follows Star’s decision not to seek a license determination this month, even after submitting its latest pathway-to-suitability plan to the regulator.
That leaves the business in the same odd spot it has occupied since October 2022: open for gaming, but still under direct oversight because regulators remain unconvinced it is fit to hold a casino license on its own.
Why the Suspension Is Still in Place
Star was found unsuitable for a license after the Bell inquiries exposed major failures around anti-money laundering controls and broader compliance standards. Since then, the company has been trying to clean house through a remediation program covering governance, culture, financial crime, safer gambling, and risk management.
NICC chief commissioner Philip Crawford said the regulator is watching changes under the company’s new ownership and leadership, with a close eye on whether those changes can make the business stable enough, and trustworthy enough, to earn its way back.
Fresh Funding Buys Time
The timing matters because Star is also racing to shore up its balance sheet. This week, the group secured a US$390 million, about A$550 million, refinancing package with WhiteHawk Capital Partners. The deal is meant to wipe out existing debt and leave the company with enough breathing room to keep normal operations running.
That refinancing still has hurdles to clear, including regulatory approvals and the disposal of Star’s interest in the Destination Brisbane Consortium. The company is aiming to get it wrapped up by 15 May 2026, which is the deadline tied to a waiver from its current lenders.
Bally’s Now Has Real Skin in the Game
Bally’s Corporation now holds a 38 per cent stake in Star Entertainment, making it the company’s biggest shareholder. Investment Holdings owns another 23 per cent after the pair teamed up on a A$300 million investment last year.
For Star, that backing gives management a better shot at surviving a rough stretch. For regulators, it is one more thing to test: new money is useful, but it does not erase old failures.
What This Means for Players
For the average casino customer, this extension means business continues much as before. The doors stay open, gaming goes on, and there is no sudden cliff-edge closure in Sydney.
Still, the bigger message is less comforting. Star remains a casino operator on probation, and the regulator is clearly not ready to hand back full trust. Players are unlikely to feel the impact at the tables day to day, but the long-running license saga is a reminder that the company is still fighting for stability, both financially and operationally.













