As Vienna begins drafting the next round of gambling licenses, operators warn that doubling down on the old monopoly could backfire.
Drafting the Future: Ministry Confirms Tender Prep
Austria’s Ministry of Finance has officially kicked off the process for the country’s 2027 casino licensing cycle. A new legislative draft is in development, aiming to unify player protection rules across online and land-based gambling while laying the groundwork for a potential regulatory reboot.
This isn’t just a bureaucratic formality. Six of Austria’s twelve land-based casino licenses, along with the lone online license (held by Win2day), expire in 2027. With tenders known to stretch out over several years, the government is under pressure to lock in a legal framework now.
So far, the Ministry has confirmed a few pillars of the proposal: “uniform player protection standards,” age-based loss limits, and an independent gambling regulator by 2029. Enforcement tools like payment and domain blocking are also in the mix to crack down on unlicensed sites—many of which continue to thrive in Austria’s legal grey zones.
Monopoly Under Fire: Leaked Draft Sparks Backlash
In December, a leaked version of the reform draft signaled a hardline stance: preserving the monopoly and clamping down on offshore operators. It included surveillance-style “test plays” by regulators, strict ad restrictions, and aggressive enforcement. The reaction? Swift and scathing.
Facing heavy criticism, the Ministry distanced itself from the leaked document, promising revisions. Still, the signal was clear—there’s no internal consensus on whether Austria should hold onto its monopoly or finally open the gates to more competition.
Industry Sees a Chance for a Long-Needed Reset
Operators and trade groups haven’t minced words. The current system, they argue, is crumbling. Despite holding exclusive rights, Win2day’s market share is shrinking, while foreign operators—licensed elsewhere in the EU—continue to attract Austrian players. The result is a patchwork market where consumer protections are weak, black-market play is growing, and tax revenues are leaking.
Monika Racek, CEO of Austrian operator Admiral, put it bluntly: “There are no player bans, no limits and no control. The state turns a blind eye and loses not only tax revenue but, above all, control over player protection.”
The call from operators is nearly unanimous: adopt a multi-license model under strict regulation, akin to Germany’s system, where up to 30 operators function under the watch of an independent authority.
The Political Wild Card
Austria’s three-party coalition has only offered vague language about a “further development” of the monopoly model. Whether that means reform or reinforcement remains murky. And time is tight. With the tender process now underway, decisions need to be made fast if any legislative overhaul is going to stick before licenses expire in 2027.
Simon Priglinger-Simader, president of the Austrian trade group OVWG, warned against repeating mistakes. “Payment blocking should only come after licensing,” he said, noting that a crackdown without reform risks starving the budget of exactly the revenue the government claims it wants to protect.
What’s at Stake for Players?
For the average Austrian gambler, the difference between a reformed market and a reinforced monopoly could be huge. A more open system could mean better platform choices, stronger consumer safeguards, and a more transparent environment. On the flip side, keeping the monopoly while tightening enforcement might push players even further toward unlicensed sites—with none of the protections lawmakers say they want to uphold.
Austria is at a crossroads. Whether it chooses reform or retrenchment will say a lot about who this system is really designed to serve.










