Nederlandse Loterij, the Dutch state lottery operator, is open to privatisation, but players should care less about the boardroom drama and more about what it could mean for safer products, bonuses and market choice.
A State-Owned Brand Wants More Room to Move
Nederlandse Loterij, the state-owned operator behind brands including Staatsloterij, Lotto, Eurojackpot, Lucky Day, Krasloten and TOTO, has welcomed a fresh government review of whether it should remain in public hands.
Finance Minister Eelco Heinen told the Dutch House of Representatives that a previous 2025 decision against privatisation was provisional, and State Secretary Eelco Eerenberg now wants a closer look at the operator’s future options. Nederlandse Loterij CEO Arjan Blok said the company sees benefits in independence, mainly because it wants to compete with international lottery and online gambling rivals while keeping a responsible gambling focus.
Why Players Should Care
Privatisation sounds dry, but it can affect the stuff players actually notice: app design, promotions, product range, odds, jackpots and how quickly safer gambling tools improve.
A private Nederlandse Loterij might move faster against commercial operators, particularly in online casino and sports betting through TOTO. Yet the trade-off is obvious. A state-owned lottery can be pushed to put public benefit first; a private or more independent operator faces more pressure to grow.
The Business Case Is Getting Harder
Nederlandse Loterij’s 2025 annual report shows how squeezed the operator has become. Stakes fell to €5.143bn from €6.067bn in 2024, prize money dropped to €4.477bn from €5.358bn, and total contributions to sport, charities and society came in at €200.6m.
The operator also swung to an €8m loss in 2025, with management blaming higher gambling tax, stricter online play limits, a sports sponsorship ban and retail pressure. Dutch gambling tax rose to 34.2% in 2025 and then 37.8% from January 1, 2026, one of the heavier tax loads in Europe.
The Dutch Market Is No Soft Touch
The Kansspelautoriteit (KSA), the Netherlands Gambling Authority, has made clear that 2026 is about tougher action on illegal gambling, youth exposure, advertising and duty of care. It has said it wants to push players toward licensed gambling operators and disrupt illegal sites through payments, hosting, marketing and social media channels.
For players, that makes the Nederlandse Loterij debate bigger than ownership. The real question is whether Dutch players get a strong legal option that is safe enough to trust and good enough to stop them drifting to offshore gambling sites. That is the tightrope, and nobody gets a free jackpot for crossing it.













