Malta's gambling license is losing its power

timtim211

Member
So apparently a senior EU legal adviser recently questioned a Maltese rule that basically protects MGA-licensed casinos from being challenged by other EU countries. If that protection goes away, individual countries could start blocking Malta-licensed operators way more aggressively than they do now.

This is worth paying attention to. The MGA license is the backbone of European online gambling meaning the majority of casinos we play at daily run on it. Operators have built entire business models around it. If the CJEU rules against Malta, players could lose access to platforms.

Nothing has been decided yet, but this one could have consequences. Is it a genuine threat to how we know online gambling in Europe?
 
This is actually huge if it goes through. Most of the casinos I use are MGA licensed and I never really thought about what happens if that stops being enough. Would they need to get separate licenses in every country? That sounds like a nightmare for operators.
 
Been following this for a while. A lot of EU countries have been looking for ways to push back against Malta-licensed operators for years especially Germany and the Netherlands. This could give them the legal tools to do it.
 
Honestly I think it's overblown. The MGA isn't going anywhere and even if this provision gets challenged there are ways around it. Operators will adapt like they always do.
 
The part that worries me most is losing access to platforms overnight. That has happened before in certain markets and it's a mess. You log in one day and the casino is just gone.
 
Good. About time the MGA got some pushback. Some of the casinos they license are borderline dodgy and the Malta stamp has been used as a free pass in Europe for too long imo.
 
If countries start blocking MGA casinos it's just going to push players toward unlicensed sites. Regulators never think that far ahead.
 
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