Sweden Gambling Channelisation Rate Drops to 84% Driven by Online Casino Headwinds

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on June 16, 2026
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Sweden’s total gambling channelisation rate contracted again over the past year, as newly published annual data compiled by the state regulator highlighted persistent retention challenges within the interactive online casino segment.

sweden gambling authority sga channelisation report 2026
The Swedish Gambling Authority’s latest annual report reveals that the national channelisation rate slipped to 84% during 2025.

According to the latest comprehensive report released by the Swedish Gambling Authority (Spelinspektionen / SGA), the aggregate market channelisation rate for 2025 finished at 84%, down slightly from the 85% recorded in 2024 and the 86% baseline documented in 2023.

Digital Casino Segment Sinks Behind Sports Betting

The SGA noted that player channelisation levels continue to vary drastically between different gaming verticals, with the sports betting sector heavily outperforming the online casino space in terms of keeping consumer volumes locked inside the licensed market. While sports betting maintained an exceptionally high channelisation rate of 96%, the corresponding metric for online slots and interactive tables stood at just 81%.

Despite this drop-off, the regulator’s cross-referencing of consumer surveys and digital internet traffic analysis established that approximately 94% of all active players wagered with a fully licensed operator at least once during the 12-month period.

Evaluating the Underlying Causes of Grey Market Migration

According to the regulatory brief, Swedish players who intentionally utilized unlicensed offshore gambling networks cited several distinct operational motivators for evading local sites. The single most common factor was players actively seeking to bypass their own gambling blocks after previously registering with the Spelpaus national self-exclusion framework. Alternative player responses pointed to better perceived payout odds and direct access to niche game variations that remain stymied by Sweden’s strict domestic content limitations.

To combat this trend, the SGA has intensified its digital surveillance, officially identifying 2,186 unlicensed web domains targeting local consumers, with online casino software comprising the vast majority of these illegal destinations. Illicit esports skin betting portals emerged as the most popular grey-market vertical, capturing a massive 42% share of all unlicensed traffic, followed by blended online casino and sportsbook setups at 35%, and standalone offshore casino sites at 21%.

Institutional Stability Transitions to New Leadership

Despite facing public criticism from commercial trade bodies who argue the regulator’s estimates are overly optimistic, acting Director General Johan Röhr maintained that the figures indicate a highly resilient market structure compared to the pre-regulation era prior to 2019, when less than half of the country’s competitive gaming handle took place with licensed firms:

“The channelisation rate in 2025 is estimated at 84%, which shows that a majority of Swedish gambling continues to take place at operators with a Swedish licence. The measurements in recent years indicate a relatively stable market.”

Röhr has temporarily directed the enforcement agency since November of last year following the high-profile resignation of Rosenberg, and will officially hand over control this August when incoming Director General Peter Knutsson assumes full command of the SGA. Commercial operators like ATG have noted that while historical quarterly tracking dipped as low as 74%, current enforcement parameters and tougher domain blocking tools are gradually stabilizing the regulated ecosystem.

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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