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The industry remains unusually unperturbed by a planned royal decree in Spain that seeks to make online gambling deposit limits universal, instead of applying per operator, as they do now.
The Spanish government has called for feedback regarding a potential modification to Royal Decree 1614/2011, which currently governs deposit limits.
The possible modification to the deposit system will 鈥渋ntroduce an economic limit for the total amount of deposits that each participant can make on all gambling accounts associated with user registrations held with any of the operators鈥.
Under the current system, deposit limits are set for each individual operator.
Spain鈥檚 Directorate General for the Regulation of Gambling (DGOJ) outlined that the new deposit system would be managed as a single system, and that 鈥渙perators will have to connect their deposit limit control and management systems鈥.
However, unlike other royal decrees 鈥 such as the one on safer gambling 鈥 which have rocked the industry, this latest move was greeted with cautious optimism.
Currently, there is no legislation attached to the royal decree, only a call for public opinion.
鈥淭hey just want to hear the industry,鈥 said Santiago Asensi, a gaming lawyer and founder of Asensi Abogados, who encouraged the audience at the Gaming in Spain webinar to take advantage of that very opportunity.
The window for feedback is open until April 13. After the consultation, Asensi expects that there will be a published text and another call for feedback.
鈥淒oes this royal decree fit with the government's vision of gambling in Spain? I think it does. It doesn鈥檛 surprise anyone.
鈥淗owever, no further comments can be made at this moment because there is no legislative text to comment on. I cannot tell you whether it is good or bad. Right now, the only thing the DGOJ wants is to listen to opinions,鈥 said Asensi.
During the pandemic, Sweden limited deposits on online casinos, but the Swedish Gambling Authority (Spelinspektionen) labelled a nationwide, multi-operator system untenable.
At the time, there were concerns that any centralised register would be public, and would therefore pose a security risk to private information.
Meanwhile, Germany has faced multiple lawsuits over its planned centralised deposit limits, which is still to come into effect despite its presence in law.
The country鈥檚 largest bookmaker, Tipico, challenged the 鈧1,000 monthly deposit limit in April 2022, saying at the time that it 鈥渟ignificantly interferes with the individual freedom rights of consumers without being able to verifiably increase player protection鈥.
In Spain鈥檚 case, Asensi was circumspect: 鈥淚 think it's a good idea for those cases where gambling is problematic. In any case, the deposit limits should be established depending on the economic capacity of each individual,鈥 he concluded.


