Leaked Draft Points To Austria Online Casino Reform To End Monopoly Model

A leaked draft from the Austrian Finance Ministry shows plans to open the online casino market to multiple licensed operators after months of delays. The proposal would keep lotteries under a monopoly, while online casino games would move into a wider licensing system.


Good to Know

  • The plan comes from a leaked Austrian Finance Ministry draft.
  • Austria currently has one licence covering lotteries and online gaming.
  • The draft would add deposit caps, €2 stake limits, lower prize limits and mandatory breaks.

Online Casino Reform Appears In Leaked Draft

Austria has not published the final reform package yet, but the leaked draft points to a major break from the current single-licence model. At present, Austrian Lotteries brand Win2day holds the 15-year permit for lotteries and online gaming. Austrian Lotteries belongs to Casinos Austria, which also holds all 12 land-based casino licences.

Under the leaked proposal, “several providers will be able to offer online gambling in Austria in future” through a “strictly regulated licensing system”.

The ministry says that kind of system would help move players away from illegal gambling sites and deliver “the highest possible standards of player protection”.

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The split in the draft is clear. Lotteries would remain a monopoly, but online casino licences would be available to an uncapped number of operators. Those licences would run for five years at first, with a possible 10-year extension later.

However, wider licensing would come with heavy limits. Players under 26 would face a weekly deposit cap of €250 per operator. Older players would have a €1,680 weekly cap, although that limit could rise if they prove “sufficient liquidity”.

Game rules would tighten as well. Maximum stakes would fall to €2 per spin or game, below the current €5 or €10 thresholds. Maximum winnings would drop to €2,000 from current limits of €5,000 or €10,000. Jackpots would be banned entirely.

The leaked draft also brings land-based player protection rules into the digital market, including speed-of-play controls. The text says: “This ensures that online gambling is subject to the same high standards of player protection as land-based slot machine gambling.”

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Online players would also face mandatory cooling-off periods. After 90 minutes of continuous play, customers would need to take a 15-minute break.

Monitoring would become more centralised too. The draft calls for continuous online gambling oversight and a national self-exclusion scheme run through the regulator.

The post Leaked Draft Points To Austria Online Casino Reform To End Monopoly Model appeared first on iGaming.org.