Romania’s gambling regulator, ONJN, has blacklisted 30 gambling websites after finding they were operating without local licences. Internet providers now have 15 days to block access, redirecting visitors to an official ONJN page confirming the ban.
The move is more than just shutting down a handful of rogue platforms. It’s a signal that enforcement in Romania’s gambling sector is tightening after years of criticism.
A broad sweep of operators
The newly banned domains range from little-known startups to platforms that had already gained traction with local players. Among them are wazbee.casino, jacktop.com, roostake.com, multiple “nv” branded casinos (nv5.casino through nv93.casino), and several under the ybets name.
Some of these sites appeared suddenly and marketed aggressively on social channels, while others had been active for months, luring players with bonuses that licensed operators are prohibited from offering.
By targeting them in bulk, ONJN is making clear that only regulated platforms are considered safe and legal.
How the blocking works
Once the grace period expires, Romanian ISPs must redirect all traffic from blacklisted domains to a designated ONJN server. Visitors will see a notice explaining the operator is not authorised to operate in Romania.
The regulator’s IT and monitoring division has already distributed the list to providers, who must implement blocks within 48 hours of receiving it.
Operators can challenge the decision within 30 days, but only through the Bucharest Court of Appeal — a slow and costly process that most are unlikely to pursue.
ONJN under political pressure
The crackdown follows months of scrutiny after Romania’s Court of Accounts revealed serious oversight failures. The report estimated nearly RON 3.6bn ($1bn) in lost fees between 2019 and 2023 due to lax supervision.
That finding sparked political debate, with proposals for tighter restrictions, including player spending caps. Critics accused ONJN of letting the market grow without adequate control. Blocking 30 domains at once appears designed not only to curb the black market but also to restore credibility.
Why legal operators welcome the move
Licensed operators have long argued that unregulated sites distort the market. By avoiding taxes, offering bigger incentives, and ignoring advertising restrictions, black-market platforms undermine compliance and siphon away players.
Cutting off 30 domains should boost channelisation and reassure licensed firms that the regulator is taking their concerns seriously.
Lessons from other European markets
Romania is far from alone in facing this challenge. Regulators across Europe have struggled to keep players on licensed platforms.
In Germany, strict rules on stakes and bonuses pushed many users to unlicensed operators. In the Netherlands, tighter advertising limits led to a spike in searches for illegal gambling sites this year.
Romania now faces the same balancing act: enforcement must go hand in hand with a regulatory model that keeps legal sites competitive, or players will continue to find workarounds.
The bigger challenge ahead
Blacklisting sites is only a first step. Offshore operators often return under new names, with mirror sites or alternative hosting. Long-term success depends on stronger monitoring, cooperation with banks to block payments, and public awareness efforts to steer players toward licensed platforms.
Without that, enforcement risks becoming a never-ending game of “whack-a-mole.”
Looking forward
Romania’s gambling industry stands at a crossroads. The market has high growth potential, but regulators must prove they can protect consumers and secure tax revenues without driving activity underground.
The ONJN’s latest move shows intent, but the industry will be watching to see if this is the start of a sustained strategy or just a reaction to political heat.
For licensed operators, the ban is a welcome step toward a cleaner, fairer market. For policymakers, the real test is whether they can keep pace with an industry that rarely stays still.