
By Tatiana Martins, journalist at G&M News.
In late 2025, Italy’s online gambling market entered a new regulatory era that is reshaping the competitive landscape, enhancing compliance standards, and elevating player protection across one of Europe’s most influential gaming jurisdictions. Driven by the Agenzia delle Dogane e dei Monopoli (ADM), the overhaul reflects a deliberate move toward a more consolidated, transparent, and sustainable iGaming ecosystem, with significant implications for operators, suppliers, affiliates, and investment partners alike.
A new licensing regime sets the tone for market quality
In November 2025, the ADM formally activated its restructured online gambling licensing system. Under the updated framework, 52 online concessions were granted to 46 distinct operators after a competitive tender process. The overhaul replaces the previous multi-domain model with a single-domain-per-license requirement, simplifying market oversight and improving brand transparency.
Each concession carries a €7 million acquisition cost and covers a nine-year operating period. The licensing process generated €364 million in revenue for the Italian state, exceeding initial expectations and underlining the economic value of a high-integrity regulatory ecosystem.
What does this mean for operators
For companies active or planning entry into the Italian market, the new regime establishes several pivotal requirements:
- Single domain policy: Operators may run their business from one official website, erasing the proliferation of affiliate “skins” and prioritizing traceability and consumer clarity.
- Stringent financial prerequisites: Licensing costs and obligations (including annual fees and revenue-linked contributions) ensure that participating operators have the capital strength and risk management protocols suited to a mature market.
- Responsible gaming commitments: Operators must implement self-exclusion measures, spend and deposit limits, and enhanced verification standards, strategically aligning with broader European best practices.
These prerequisites elevate the overall quality of participants and reinforce Italy’s position as a regulated playground for reputable, long-term operators.
Market performance and fiscal contribution
Italy’s online gambling market remains one of Europe’s most robust. In 2024, total online wagers reached approximately €5 billion, generating €3.8 billion in operator revenue and €1.1 billion in tax contributions. The market was able to expand to €6 billion in wagers, and €1.5 billion in tax receipts in 2025, a testament to continued demand and regulatory confidence.
These figures illustrate that regulatory reform and fiscal performance are not mutually exclusive: structured oversight has allowed Italy to channel gaming activity into a compliant and financially productive sector.
Player protection and compliance enhancements
Beyond economic metrics, the Italian framework emphasizes player safety and responsible gambling. New authentication procedures require digital identity verification (such as SPID or electronic ID), ensuring that accounts are tied to real individuals form the basis of market participation.
Tools such as deposit limits, self-exclusion options and behavioral monitoring remain core components of operator obligations, forming a regulatory baseline that elevates Italy’s platform standards to match international benchmarks.
Industry outlook and strategic implications
For operators, the evolving Italian market presents both challenges and opportunities:
- Consolidation favors scale: The higher entry bar naturally prioritizes capital-ready and well-resourced companies, potentially benefiting industry leaders and strategic investors.
- Stronger brand identities: With the end of multi-domain models, operators can focus on unified brand positioning and customer experience, essential for differentiation in a more concentrated competitive landscape.
- Regulatory predictability: A well-defined nine-year concession period offers stability and forecasting confidence for business planning and innovation pipelines.
Only the first stage for a broader reform
The online overhaul represents only the first stage of Italy’s broader gaming reform. A second phase, anticipated in 2026, will focus on the land-based sector, including casinos, betting shops, and arcade networks, further integrating the digital and physical gambling ecosystems under robust governance.
This multi-year transformation positions Italy as an example of regulated market evolution in Europe: one that bricks out low-quality operators, draws in significant state revenue, and nurtures an environment where innovation and responsible engagement thrive side by side.
Italy is now not just a large market, but a well-structured one. Embracing the new regulatory paradigm opens doors to long-term growth, deeper partnerships, and a more trustworthy gaming ecosystem.







