Sweden’s regulated gambling market is again under pressure following a fresh investigation by Spelinspektionen, the country’s national gambling authority. The probe targets three licensed operators—Svenska Spel, ATG, and Malta-based Lotto Direct—over possible violations of the Gambling Act. Regulators are questioning whether these companies properly disclosed changes related to their licenses.
Under the Swedish Gambling Act of 2018, all operators must notify authorities of any updates that could impact their licensing conditions. Spelinspektionen has not revealed details about the specific changes under review but confirmed that the final outcome may include fines or licensing amendments once the investigation concludes.
Court Ruling Adds Legal Complexity for Operators
The investigation comes just after Svenska Spel Sport & Casino successfully challenged a SEK 100 million fine in the Administrative Court of Linköping. The penalty stemmed from claims that the operator failed to meet responsible gambling standards for ten high-spending customers in late 2021.
While the regulator believed the company acted too slowly to prevent gambling harm, the court dismissed the fine. It cited unclear legal definitions in the Gambling Act, which made compliance difficult to measure. Fredrik Wastenson, CEO of Svenska Spel Sport & Casino, echoed that view, stating that operators are struggling with vague rules and inconsistent enforcement.
Operators Struggle with Regulation and Revenue Declines
The timing of the regulator’s inquiry adds to mounting pressure on state-linked operators. ATG’s Q1 report showed an 8% drop in net gaming revenue, totaling SEK 1.2 billion across Sweden and Denmark. Horse racing was hit hardest, declining by 10%. Svenska Spel also reported a weaker quarter but did not release full figures.
Financial strain could make it harder for these operators to adapt quickly to new regulatory demands. At the same time, if penalties or restrictions emerge from the current probe, the reputational impact may further hurt their market position.
A Legal System Still in Transition
These developments show a broader problem: Sweden’s legal and regulatory systems are still aligning. Operators must comply with evolving rules, yet court decisions continue to shape how those rules are interpreted. The feedback loop between regulators and judges is creating legal uncertainty, especially when enforcement actions lack specific benchmarks.
For businesses, this means compliance is becoming less about clear-cut rules and more about preparing for legal disputes. Until regulatory language becomes more precise, Sweden’s gambling framework will likely remain open to court challenges and reinterpretation.
Regulatory Oversight Tightens Amid Mixed Messaging
The latest move by Spelinspektionen signals a stricter approach to licensing—even for state-backed entities. All operators, regardless of ownership, are now under close watch for administrative compliance. But if these standards continue shifting without clear communication, the risk is that compliance becomes reactive, rather than proactive.
Sweden’s regulated casino environment remains attractive, but operators need clarity and consistency to plan for the future. For now, the industry must navigate a path shaped equally by legal rulings and regulator discretion.



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