Austria Debates Gambling License Reform: Monopoly vs. Multi-License Models for 2027

January 14, 2026
Austria Debates Gambling License Reform: Monopoly vs. Multi-License Models for 2027
  • Austria faces a pivotal decision on its gambling license regime, with signals ranging from preserving a monopoly to moving to a limited multi-license model or embracing a competitive approach similar to other EU markets.

  • If the monopoly endures, regulatory efficacy may remain weak; adopting a multi-licensing system would align with Europe’s typical consumer-protection framework, while stalling reform could keep grey-market activity alive.

  • The draft reportedly includes uniform player protection standards, age-based loss limits, and stronger enforcement tools against unlicensed operators, such as payment blocking, domain blocks, and penalties, potentially alongside an independent gambling authority.

  • In addition, the draft aims to apply uniform standards to both land-based and online gambling, widen player protections, and establish an independent regulatory body with enhanced enforcement against unlicensed operators.

  • The current monopoly licenses, including Win2day online and six of twelve land-based licenses, expire starting in 2027, with remaining licenses due by 2030, prompting early preparation for the next tender cycle.

  • Final direction remains uncertain until the Ministry of Finance releases the full proposal and the coalition clarifies its stance on expansion, transformation, or replacement of the current system.

  • A leaked December draft suggested tougher enforcement of the monopoly, but officials have since signaled revisions and distancing from that text.

  • Because licenses under the current framework begin expiring in 2027, the ministry must launch a comprehensive tender process, and lengthy Austrian procurement timelines are driving early work.

  • Industry groups argue the monopoly is no longer fit for purpose, citing low online market share for Win2day and ongoing grey-market risks, while reform proponents push for open or multiple licenses to strengthen consumer protection and tax revenue.

  • The broader push is toward liberalization or multi-license models to curb gray-market activity and boost tax intake, with concerns over consumer protection at stake.

  • Austria’s Finance Ministry is drafting a new monopoly tender for 2027, signaling a formal reform of the gambling framework while scrutinizing the single-operator model amid grey-market activity and EU scrutiny.

  • The ministry plans a framework for 2027 that applies uniform rules to online and land-based gambling and contemplates an independent gambling authority.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

Austria Prepares New Casino Monopoly Tender Draft

World Casino News • Jan 14, 2026

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