Austria’s long-running online casino monopoly is finally facing a real shake-up, with a new licensing system planned after years of stalled reform.
The Monopoly Finally Cracks
Austria’s coalition government has agreed on a new gambling law draft that would open the online gambling market to multiple licensed operators. The ÖVP, SPÖ and NEOS coalition called it the country’s biggest gambling-law reform in 26 years, with the draft moving into review on June 29, 2026.
That is a major turn for a market built around tight state control. At present, Austrian online casino is tied to the lottery licence held by Austrian Lotteries’ Win2Day brand, while Casinos Austria runs the country’s 12 land-based casinos. The current online licence is due to expire on September 30, 2027.
New Licences, But Not a Free Pass
The new system would introduce open online gambling concessions. Operators that meet the rules, including player protection controls, anti-money laundering systems and at least €10 million in share capital, could apply for a licence.
There is a catch, and it is not a small one. Operators that want in must stop offering unlicensed online gambling in Austria from January 1, 2027 until licences are awarded. Those that keep taking Austrian players after that date face an 18-month licence ban. From January 1, 2030, that ban rises to 24 months.
Applicants will also need to clear unpaid tax bills and unresolved player-protection claims across their corporate groups. For some grey-market brands, that could turn the application process into a very expensive confession booth.
Players Get More Choice and More Limits
For players, the obvious upside is choice. Austria could move from one legal online casino option to a market with several regulated brands. That should mean more competition, better product quality and fewer players drifting toward sites that sit outside Austrian rules.
The trade-off is tighter control. The draft includes a central self-exclusion register across gambling products, excluding Lotto, plus deposit limits for online gambling and machine gaming. Austrian reports describe caps of €250 per week for players aged 18 to 26 and €1,680 per month for older players.
Online slots would also face stricter game rules. The draft keeps a €10,000 win limit, sets the maximum stake at €5, applies slower spin-speed rules, and adds a mandatory break after 90 minutes of play. Jackpots would still be allowed, which matters if the legal market wants to compete with flashier offshore sites.
Illegal Sites are in the Firing Line
The government is not just opening the front door. It is also trying to lock the side windows. The draft includes payment blocking against illegal operators, with Austrian banks and payment firms expected to block listed accounts. Website blocking is also planned, including pressure on major cloud providers and search engines to stop illegal gambling sites from being reachable in Austria.
That could make the market cleaner, but only if licensed options are strong enough to keep players interested. A dull legal market with heavy limits can push gamblers back toward offshore sites. Austria seems to know that, which is why the jackpot ban is being dropped, and multiple operators are being invited in.
Land-Based Casinos Get Pulled in Too
The reform also touches retail casinos. Austria plans to set the number of casino concessions at 13, with location decisions based on factors such as population coverage and tourism potential.
That does not make Austria a free-for-all casino market. It does mean Casinos Austria’s old grip is loosening. After decades of one dominant structure, the government appears ready to trade monopoly comfort for a controlled version of competition.
Why This Matters
Austria has been one of Europe’s awkward gambling holdouts: legal online casinos existed, but mostly through one state-linked channel, while plenty of players still found their way to offshore brands. That model gave the state control on paper, but not always in practice.
The new plan is an attempt to bring more of the real market into the legal one. For players, it could mean more licensed sites, clearer rules and stronger protection if something goes wrong. For operators, it means opportunity, but with a warning label: clean up, pay up, and play by Austria’s rules, or watch the market open without you.













