
By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.
For years, the global iGaming industry has been defined by rapid expansion. New markets opened, millions of users registered and operators competed fiercely for attention through aggressive acquisition strategies. Growth was the headline, and often the only metric that mattered.
However, across some of the world’s most established markets, a subtle shift is beginning to take shape. The question is no longer just how many new players are entering the ecosystem, but how is the industry evolving once that growth starts to stabilize. This is not a sign of slowdown. It is a sign of maturity.
When growth meets scale
In markets like the United Kingdom, user penetration has reached significant levels. According to the UK Gambling Commission, around 44% of adults participated in some form of gambling activity in 2023, highlighting how deeply embedded the sector has become in everyday entertainment.
A similar pattern is visible across Europe. Data from the European Gaming and Betting Association shows that the continent’s online gambling market continues to grow steadily, but at a more moderate pace compared to previous years, reflecting a change from expansion to consolidation.
In Portugal, for example, the number of registered online players has surpassed 4.9 million accounts, in a country of roughly 10 million people. This level of penetration naturally limits how much further user growth can accelerate.
A natural turning point, not a ceiling
Reaching high levels of user adoption does not mean the industry is running out of opportunity. Instead, it signals a transition into a more advanced stage of development, one where success is defined less by volume and more by value.
Even in markets showing signs of stabilization, financial performance remains strong. In Portugal, online gambling revenue has consistently hovered near record levels, with quarterly figures exceeding €300 million in 2025, according to official regulatory data.
This reflects a key shift: growth is no longer driven primarily by new users, but by how existing users engage with platforms over time.
The evolution from acquisition to engagement
As user growth slows, operators are rethinking their strategies. The focus is moving away from mass acquisition campaigns toward more refined approaches centered on retention, personalization, and user experience.
Operators are increasingly investing in data-driven personalization to deliver more relevant experiences, while continuously improving product quality across both casino and sports verticals. At the same time, there is a clear shift toward building loyalty ecosystems that foster long-term relationships with players, reducing the reliance on bonus-driven acquisition strategies.
The logic is straightforward. In a mature market, the most valuable player is not the newest one. It is the one who stays.
A more efficient and sustainable model
This shift is also reshaping the economics of the industry. Customer acquisition costs have risen significantly in recent years, particularly in competitive and regulated markets. As a result, operators are under increasing pressure to justify marketing spend and improve long-term profitability.
Focusing on engagement rather than constant acquisition helps address this challenge. It allows operators to extract more value from their existing base while creating more stable and predictable revenue streams.







