EU Gambling Regulations

Key Takeaways

  • No single EU gambling regulator: Cooperation between national authorities is essential for effective cross-border oversight
  • GREF facilitates coordination: The Gaming Regulators European Forum enables information sharing and best practice exchange
  • MoUs establish formal frameworks: Bilateral and multilateral agreements govern what information can be shared and how
  • Cross-border enforcement is limited: Regulators can only take action within their own jurisdiction but can share intelligence to trigger action elsewhere
  • Operator implications: Compliance issues in one jurisdiction may affect licenses held elsewhere through information sharing
  • Related guides: See our Operator Blacklists and Domain Blocking and License Revocation and Enforcement guides for related information

The Need for Regulatory Cooperation in EU Gambling

Online gambling operates across national borders by its very nature. A player in Germany can access an operator licensed in Malta, funded through a payment provider in the UK, using a platform developed in Estonia. This cross-border reality creates significant challenges for regulatory oversight, as no single national authority has complete visibility or control over the entire gambling ecosystem.

As explained in our EU gambling laws guide, gambling regulation remains a member state competence, meaning there is no unified EU gambling regulator. Each of the 27 EU member states maintains its own licensing framework, regulatory authority, and enforcement mechanisms. According to the European Commission, member states retain primary authority over gambling regulation as it falls outside the scope of EU single market harmonization.

This fragmented regulatory landscape makes cooperation between national authorities essential for several reasons:

Key Regulatory Cooperation Mechanisms

Gaming Regulators European Forum (GREF)

The Gaming Regulators European Forum (GREF) is the primary multilateral platform for gambling regulatory cooperation in Europe. Established to facilitate collaboration between gambling regulatory authorities, GREF brings together regulators from EU member states and other European countries.

GREF Membership and Structure

GREF membership includes gambling regulatory authorities from across Europe, with participation from major EU gambling jurisdictions including:

GREF Functions

GREF provides several important functions for regulatory cooperation:

Bilateral Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs)

Beyond multilateral forums, many gambling regulators maintain bilateral MoUs with counterpart authorities in other jurisdictions. These formal agreements establish specific frameworks for cooperation between two regulatory bodies.

Typical MoU Provisions

Memoranda of Understanding between gambling regulators typically address:

Provision Area Typical Content
Scope of cooperation Defines areas covered (licensing, enforcement, consumer protection, AML)
Information types Specifies what information can be shared (license status, enforcement actions, ownership information)
Request procedures Establishes formal processes for requesting and providing information
Confidentiality Sets protections for shared information and limitations on disclosure
Response timelines Defines expected timeframes for responding to information requests
Designated contacts Identifies specific personnel authorized to handle cooperation matters
Joint activities May include provisions for joint investigations or coordinated enforcement

Example: Malta Gaming Authority MoUs

The Malta Gaming Authority (MGA), as a major European licensing hub, maintains extensive MoU networks. The MGA has signed cooperation agreements with numerous regulatory authorities, enabling information sharing about operators licensed in Malta who may operate in other jurisdictions.

These agreements allow partner regulators to:

European Commission Expert Group on Gambling Services

The European Commission Expert Group on Gambling Services provides a forum for EU member state representatives to discuss gambling-related matters at the European level. While not a regulatory body itself, the Expert Group facilitates:

The Expert Group has addressed topics including online gambling consumer protection, advertising standards, and player identification requirements.

Types of Information Shared Between Regulators

Regulatory cooperation enables the sharing of various categories of information essential for effective oversight. Understanding what information flows between regulators is important for operators, as compliance issues may become known to multiple authorities.

Licensing Information

Regulators share information about licensed operators, including:

Enforcement Intelligence

Information about enforcement actions is routinely shared, enabling regulators to understand an operator's compliance track record across jurisdictions:

Consumer Protection Information

Regulators share information relevant to protecting players:

AML and Financial Crime Intelligence

Anti-money laundering cooperation is particularly important given the cross-border nature of financial crime:

Market Intelligence

Regulators share broader market intelligence to support effective oversight:

Cross-Border Enforcement Mechanisms

While regulatory cooperation enables information sharing, actual enforcement power remains limited to each regulator's own jurisdiction. However, several mechanisms enable effective cross-border action.

Coordinated Enforcement Actions

Regulators may coordinate enforcement actions against operators that violate rules in multiple jurisdictions:

Domain Blocking and Access Restrictions

As detailed in our Operator Blacklists and Domain Blocking guide, regulators can restrict access to unlicensed operators within their jurisdictions. Cooperation enables:

Mutual Recognition and Reliance

Some regulatory frameworks incorporate elements of mutual recognition, where regulators acknowledge each other's assessments:

Referral Mechanisms

When a regulator identifies issues that fall outside its jurisdiction, formal referral mechanisms enable appropriate action:

Sports Integrity and Match-Fixing Cooperation

Cooperation on sports integrity and match-fixing represents a particularly developed area of regulatory coordination, driven by the international nature of both sports and sports betting.

The Macolin Convention

The Council of Europe Convention on the Manipulation of Sports Competitions (Macolin Convention) provides a legal framework for international cooperation on sports integrity. Key provisions include:

As detailed in our Match Fixing and Sports Integrity guide, many EU member states are signatories to the Macolin Convention, creating obligations for regulatory cooperation in this area.

Betting Monitoring and Alert Systems

Regulators cooperate through betting monitoring systems that detect suspicious betting patterns:

Practical Implications for Operators

Regulatory cooperation has significant practical implications for gambling operators, particularly those holding licenses in multiple jurisdictions.

Compliance Reputation Travels

Information sharing means that compliance issues in one jurisdiction may affect an operator's standing elsewhere:

Multi-Jurisdiction Compliance Strategy

Operators holding multiple licenses should adopt coordinated compliance approaches:

Responding to Cross-Border Inquiries

When regulators share information or make inquiries based on intelligence from other jurisdictions, operators should:

Limitations of Regulatory Cooperation

Despite significant cooperation frameworks, several limitations constrain cross-border regulatory action.

Sovereignty and Jurisdiction

Each regulator operates within its own legal framework and jurisdiction:

Data Protection Constraints

Information sharing must comply with data protection requirements, particularly the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR):

Resource Constraints

Regulatory cooperation requires resources that may be limited:

Political Considerations

Regulatory cooperation can be influenced by political factors:

Future Developments in Regulatory Cooperation

Several trends are likely to shape the future of gambling regulatory cooperation in Europe.

Digital Services Act Implications

The EU Digital Services Act (DSA) creates new frameworks for regulating online services that may complement gambling-specific cooperation. While the DSA does not directly regulate gambling, it establishes precedents for cross-border oversight of online platforms that could influence future gambling cooperation mechanisms.

Enhanced AML Cooperation

The evolving EU anti-money laundering framework, including the new EU AML Authority (AMLA), will create new channels for cooperation on financial crime matters affecting the gambling sector. Enhanced AML supervision at the EU level may facilitate more systematic information sharing between gambling regulators and financial intelligence units.

Technology-Enabled Cooperation

Emerging technologies may enhance cooperation capabilities:

Formalization of Cooperation

The trend toward more formalized cooperation frameworks is likely to continue:

Conclusion

Regulatory cooperation is essential for effective gambling oversight in a cross-border digital environment. While no single EU gambling regulator exists, mechanisms such as GREF, bilateral MoUs, and expert groups enable national authorities to work together on licensing, enforcement, consumer protection, and anti-money laundering matters.

For operators, regulatory cooperation means that compliance reputation travels across borders. Issues identified in one jurisdiction may become known to regulators elsewhere, potentially affecting multiple licenses. This underscores the importance of maintaining consistent, high-quality compliance across all markets.

As the gambling industry continues to evolve, regulatory cooperation frameworks are likely to become more sophisticated and formalized, with enhanced technology-enabled information sharing and potentially more binding cooperation mechanisms. Operators and their advisors should stay informed about these developments and build regulatory cooperation considerations into their compliance strategies.

For related information, see our guides on License Application Processes, Compliance Audits, and Fines and Sanctions. Use our Compliance Risk Assessor tool to evaluate regulatory risk across EU markets.

Disclaimer

This article provides general information about gambling regulatory cooperation in the EU for educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or regulatory advice. Cooperation frameworks, MoU provisions, and regulatory practices change and vary significantly between jurisdictions. Always consult with qualified legal and regulatory professionals for specific guidance on cross-border regulatory matters.

If you have concerns about gambling behavior, please contact a responsible gambling support organization such as Gambling Therapy, BeGambleAware, or your national helpline.

Last Updated: January 2026