Austrian Finance Ministry Draft Outlines Plan to Dismantle Win2day Casino Monopoly by 2030

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on May 28, 2026
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Austrian Finance Ministry Draft Outlines Plan to Dismantle Win2day Casino Monopoly by 2030

A leaked internal draft from the Austrian Finance Ministry reveals a plan to completely upend the country’s digital betting landscape, effectively ending a long-standing state-backed monopoly in favor of a competitive, multi-operator licensing system.

For years, the domestic online casino market has been entirely locked down. A single license held by Austrian Lotteries has funneled all legal digital casino play through its Win2day brand, an operation tightly bound to Casinos Austria. While the state intends to maintain its strict monopoly over traditional lotteries, the online casino sector is being carved out for international competition.

Retroactive Clearing of Financial Ledger Slates

The government’s shifting stance is driven by a desire to siphon users away from unregulated, black-market websites and pull them into an overseen national framework. But the proposed transition is far from a free-for-all; getting a foot in the door will require deep pockets. The draft legislation suggests that incoming operators might have to clear old financial ledger slates before receiving a green light.

Specifically, companies could be forced to pay back-taxes on past revenue generated from Austrian residents and settle unresolved local legal rulings. Industry analysts suggest this retroactive financial barrier will likely weed out smaller startups, leaving the newly opened market as a playground exclusively for massive global gambling conglomerates.

Those that do clear the financial hurdles will find themselves operating under some of the most restrictive consumer caps on the continent. The Finance Ministry is proposing rigid limits on how residents can spend their money:

  • Age-Based Deposit Ceilings: Players under the age of 26 will face a strict weekly deposit cap of €250. For older users, the weekly limit stops at €1,680.
  • Gameplay Restrictions: Bets will be hard-capped at just €2 per spin or round.
  • Structural Content Bans: The draft explicitly outlines a total ban on all jackpot-style games, mandates lower maximum payout thresholds, and forces automatic cooling-off periods to interrupt prolonged, continuous gaming sessions.

A Slow Burn to the 2030 Horizon

While commercial operators view the rules as exceptionally heavy-handed, trade representatives see the draft as a massive ideological victory. Leaders at the ÖVWG trade association note that the industry is more optimistic than it has been in years, even with major technicalities still left to negotiate on the parliament floor.

The current monopoly license is locked in until 2027. Even if the law passes smoothly, the actual rollout as shown by the Austrian Finance Ministry will be a slow burn. Between anticipated legal challenges from entrenched interests and the bureaucratic runway needed to establish a completely new independent regulatory authority, insiders don’t expect a fully operational, multi-licensed market to take shape until closer to 2030.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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