The Netherlands is raising the stakes for online gambling operators with sweeping licensing changes that will force companies to plan their own market departure before they can even stay in the game.
Starting January 1, 2026, the Dutch Gaming Authority (Kansspelautoriteit, KSA) will implement revised licensing requirements that fundamentally reshape how operators prove their worthiness to serve Dutch players. The timing is strategic—current five-year licenses granted in September 2021 expire in October 2026, creating a natural checkpoint for regulatory reassessment.
Exit Strategies Now Mandatory for All Applicants
The most striking addition requires every operator to submit a comprehensive exit plan detailing exactly how they would wind down operations if their license expires or gets revoked. These plans must address five critical dimensions: legal, financial, organizational, technical, and communication protocols, with particular emphasis on ensuring customer payouts remain protected.
“When opening the online market, the legislator deliberately chose to issue permits with a term of up to five years,” the KSA explained in its announcement. The regulator emphasized that this fixed-term approach was always intended to create regular evaluation points based on “supervisory experience gained.”
Existing Operators Face Enhanced Scrutiny
Licensed operators seeking renewal will navigate a separate, more intensive review process. They must demonstrate compliance with anti-money laundering regulations under the Dutch WWFT (Wet ter voorkoming van witwassen en financieren van terrorisme) and provide detailed explanations of how they’ve fulfilled Duty of Care obligations.
Perhaps most significantly, operators who stumbled during their initial five-year term must explain their mistakes and prove they’ve implemented effective safeguards. The KSA reserves the right to impose additional conditions or outright refuse renewal if explanations fall short.
Court Compliance Becomes Licensing Litmus Test
The reliability assessment process now explicitly excludes operators who fail to comply with enforceable court rulings at application time. This creates a direct link between legal compliance and market access, potentially shuttering operators who ignore judicial decisions.
Recent Enforcement Actions Signal Serious Intent
The KSA’s commitment to strict oversight is already evident in recent penalty actions. Unibet’s Dutch operation recently faced a €450,000 penalty for repeatedly offering prohibited betting markets, including wagers on corner kicks, yellow cards, and matches involving under-21 players between October 2022 and May 2025.
The violations continued despite previous warnings, prompting the KSA to impose weekly €75,000 penalties until compliance was achieved. “Under Dutch gambling law, betting on certain matches and event components is prohibited,” the authority stated, underscoring its zero-tolerance approach to regulatory breaches.
Market Maturation Through Regulatory Evolution
These changes represent the Netherlands’ evolution from market opening to market refinement. By requiring exit plans and enhanced accountability measures, the KSA is essentially forcing operators to prove they can exit responsibly before proving they can operate sustainably.
The 2026 licensing round will serve as the first comprehensive test of this philosophy, determining which operators have genuinely adapted to Dutch regulatory expectations versus those merely seeking market access.