Online Casinos Top Denmark’s Gambling Market in 2025

Date:

Kyle Kevin
Kyle Kevin
iGaming Writer
Fact Checked

For the first time since Denmark opened its market in 2012, online casinos are its biggest gambling segment — and slots are doing the heavy lifting.

Quick Answer

Online casinos became the largest segment of the Danish gambling market in 2025, overtaking lotteries for the first time since the market’s 2012 liberalisation. Online casino gross gaming revenue reached DKK4.31 billion, or 38% of the market, up 12.1% year-on-year. The figures come from regulator Spillemyndigheden’s annual review.

In This Article
  • Online Casinos Top the Danish Market
  • Segment-by-Segment Breakdown
  • Mobile and Slots Drive Online Casinos
  • Licensing and Operator Spread
  • Problem Gambling Concerns Persist

Online casinos became the largest segment of Denmark’s gambling market in 2025. They overtook lotteries for the first time since the country partially liberalised gambling in 2012. Online casino gross gaming revenue hit DKK4.31 billion, or US$655 million, claiming a 38% market share. That marked a 12.1% rise year-on-year and a 139% jump since 2012. The data comes from Spillemyndigheden, the Danish Gambling Authority, in its annual market review published Monday. The report, titled Spilmarkedet i tal 2025, flagged the milestone as a structural shift in Danish play.

Online Casinos Top the Danish Market

The shift came against a flat overall market. Total Danish gross gambling revenue reached DKK11.5 billion, or about US$1.75 billion, in 2025. That was a slight 1% decline, or DKK116 million, on 2024. Adjusted for inflation and economic growth to 2026 price and GDP levels, the total sits 4.9% below the 2012 baseline. So online casinos gained share within a shrinking pie, not a growing one. According to the regulator, the authority restated past figures to 2026 price levels and aligned them with GDP, which creates discrepancies against earlier reports. Spillemyndigheden also delayed its updated channelisation report until later in 2026, pending data checks. As a result, estimates of unlicensed online activity were excluded from this edition.

KEY FACTS
Market
Denmark, 2025
Online Casino GGR
DKK4.31B (38% share)
YoY Growth
+12.1% (+139% since 2012)
Total Market GGR
DKK11.5B (US$1.75B)
Online Slots Share
82% of online casino GGR
Mobile Share (Online)
73% of online GGR

Segment-by-Segment Breakdown

Online casinos pulled clear of the field as other segments slipped. Monopoly lotteries, including Lotto, Klasselotterier and scratch tickets, took 30% of the market at DKK3.49 billion, down 6.2% on 2024. Sports betting fell 11.5% to DKK2.13 billion, a 19% share. Slot machines contributed DKK1.18 billion, 10% of revenue, down 6.8%. Land-based casinos slid 5.6% to DKK378 million, just 3% of the market. Newly liberalised land-based bingo appeared for the first time, posting a modest DKK30 million. The longer arc is stark. Lottery revenue has fallen 27.7% since 2012. Slot machine revenue is down about 60.5% over the same span. The pandemic deepened the land-based decline between 2020 and 2022.

Segment2025 GGRShare
Online casinosDKK4.31B38%
Monopoly lotteriesDKK3.49B30%
Sports bettingDKK2.13B19%
Slot machinesDKK1.18B10%
Land-based casinosDKK378M3%
Land-based bingoDKK30M<1%

Mobile and Slots Drive Online Casinos

Slots and smartphones powered the online casino surge. Online slots alone made up 82% of online casino GGR, at DKK3.54 billion. Roulette and blackjack each took roughly 6%, at DKK246 million and DKK267 million. Mobile was the dominant channel. In 2025, 73% of all online gambling revenue came through mobile devices, up from just 27% in 2012. Within online casinos specifically, 69% of revenue originated on mobile. Online gambling overall reached 73% of total Danish GGR, climbing from 70% in 2024 and only 33% in 2012. The trend mirrors a global shift we tracked in our report on the online casino market in 2026, where mobile-first design became a baseline. The slots dominance also echoes patterns seen across Asian-facing operators in our best Pragmatic Play slots guide.

Denmark’s pattern is a useful benchmark for regulated Asian markets. A mature, well-channelised market still sees online casinos and mobile slots dominate, even as total spending stays flat — a sign the shift is about how players engage, not how much they spend.

Licensing and Operator Spread

Spillemyndigheden had issued 1,970 licences across all categories by the end of 2025. That included 41 online casino licences, three of them temporary permits capped at DKK1 million in GGR. Betting licences numbered 27, two of them revenue-limited. The regulator also issued around 277 permits for physical slot operations, covering 23,172 machines nationwide. Twelve land-based bingo licences followed the market’s 1 January 2025 liberalisation. Four monopoly holders keep exclusive rights to the major commercial lotteries. The report flagged a wide gap between operators. According to the authority, most licensees reported GGR under DKK25 million, while several leading firms each cleared DKK100 million. The market also drew fresh entrants, with supplier Digitain announcing its Danish arrival in May. Details on Denmark’s licensing framework sit with the Danish Gambling Authority.

Problem Gambling Concerns Persist

The online shift carried a social cost. Denmark’s voluntary exclusion register, ROFUS, grew to 68,026 individuals in 2025, adding roughly 12,000 since the end of 2024. Men made up 79% of registrants, and 69% were under 40. The StopSpillet helpline logged a record 727 enquiries, its highest since launching in 2019. Players themselves made 57% of those calls, with relatives accounting for 40%. Among player callers, 45% reported gambling before age 18. Problem gambling was most often linked to online casino, at 62%, followed by online betting at 22%. The average severity score reached 5.61 on a 0-to-9 scale, indicating moderate to severe harm. According to the data, the segment driving market growth is also the one most tied to reported harm.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is now the largest gambling segment in Denmark?

Online casinos became Denmark’s largest gambling segment in 2025, overtaking lotteries for the first time since the 2012 liberalisation. Online casino gross gaming revenue reached DKK4.31 billion, a 38% market share, up 12.1% year-on-year. The figures come from regulator Spillemyndigheden’s annual market review.

How big is the Danish gambling market?

Denmark’s total gross gambling revenue reached DKK11.5 billion, about US$1.75 billion, in 2025. That was a slight 1% decline on 2024. Adjusted to 2026 price and GDP levels, the market sits 4.9% below its 2012 baseline, meaning online casinos gained share within a flat overall market.

What drives Danish online casino revenue?

Online slots drive most Danish online casino revenue, making up 82% of the segment at DKK3.54 billion. Roulette and blackjack each account for about 6%. Mobile is the dominant channel, generating 69% of online casino revenue and 73% of all online gambling revenue in 2025.

How many gambling licences has Denmark issued?

Spillemyndigheden had issued 1,970 licences across all categories by the end of 2025. These included 41 online casino licences and 27 betting licences. The regulator also authorised about 277 physical slot permits covering 23,172 machines, plus 12 land-based bingo licences following the January 2025 liberalisation.

Did problem gambling rise in Denmark?

Yes. Denmark’s voluntary exclusion register ROFUS grew to 68,026 people in 2025, up about 12,000 in a year. The StopSpillet helpline logged a record 727 enquiries. Problem gambling was most often linked to online casino, at 62% of player callers, with an average severity score of 5.61 out of 9.

Why were unlicensed market figures excluded?

Spillemyndigheden deferred its updated channelisation report until later in 2026, pending further data verification. As a result, estimates of unlicensed online market activity were excluded from this edition of the annual review. The authority also restated historical figures to 2026 price and GDP levels, creating discrepancies with earlier reports.

This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

Kyle Kevin
Kyle Kevin
Kyle is an iGaming writer with over two years of experience covering online casinos, sports betting, slot providers, and gaming regulation across Asia. Based in the Philippines, Kyle specializes in breaking down complex casino industry news into clear, actionable content for Casino players. His work on CasinoBait.com focuses on the Southeast Asian gaming market.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Why Trust
Asia
Primary
Market
5+
Years
iGaming
100%
Editorial
Independent
License verified against PAGCOR, MGA & Curacao records
Payout reliability checked before every listing
Reviewed for Asian payment methods & local markets
No paid rankings — affiliate deals never influence ratings
Updated June 2026 — reviewed monthly

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Slot Machine Tax Face £460m UK Tax Rise Under Burnham

A thinktank says doubling UK slot machine duty to 40% could raise up to £458m a year, with 43% public backing. Industry calls it "fantasy economics."

Casino Poker: Does It Earn Its Floor Space?

Casino poker can post a 50% margin yet still lose floor space to slots. Inside the profit-per-square-foot debate across Macau, Australia and Asia.

Poker Hall of Fame: Full List of Inductees

The Poker Hall of Fame honours the game's greats since 1979, from Wild Bill Hickok to Phil Ivey. See the full list of inductees and how players qualify.

How PhilWeb Won the Philippine Gaming Shakeout

PhilWeb grew revenue 30% as rivals fell after the e-wallet delinking. Its managed services model turned the Philippine gaming compliance squeeze into growth.