Germany’s gambling regulation was built around a serious and defensible objective: players should be pushed towards legal, supervised and safer gambling environments. That principle is difficult to criticise in itself, because any functioning online gambling regime must protect consumers, identify risk behaviour and prevent operators from turning player vulnerability into commercial advantage. The uncomfortable question is whether the practical result of strict regulation always matches the stated objective, or whether some rules may unintentionally make the licensed market less attractive to the very players who should remain inside it....
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Laws
June 29, 2026
Gambling Comparison Websites and Consumer Choice in Germany
Germany’s regulated gambling market is often discussed through the behaviour of operators. That is understandable, because operators hold licences, accept deposits, manage player accounts and carry the direct regulatory obligations...
iGaming News, Laws
February 10, 2026
Sweden updates gambling supervision fees SIFS 2026:1 for operators
Sweden will introduce a revised system of supervision fees for gambling operators and software permit holders starting on March 1, 2026. The updated regulation, known as SIFS 2026:1, replaces the...
iGaming News, Laws
September 1, 2025
BOS reports Swedish gambling channelization falls in 2024
The Swedish Trade Association for Online Gambling (BOS) has issued a detailed commentary on the latest assessment of Sweden’s gambling channelization rate for 2024, as published today by the Swedish...
iGaming News, Laws
July 1, 2024
Challenges in Swedish Gambling Regulation
The Swedish Trade Association for Online Gambling (#BOS) recently addressed significant concerns regarding Sweden’s #gambling regulation in an op-ed published in @DagensNyheter, Sweden’s foremost #morningnewspaper. The online release on Friday...


















