adolphscott760

adolphscott760

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Sweden Resets Gambling Fees for Inspectorate's Sweep Of 2026 Changes

A new licensing routine for betting companies in Sweden will work from 1 March 2026, managed by the Gambling Inspectorate of Spelinspektionen.
Authorised by the Riksdag, the reform resets guidance fees for certified gaming operators (B2C) and innovation and video games providers (B2B)
A brand-new fee structure consists of a headline yearly charge of SEK 240,000 (EUR21,000) per B2C licence and SEK 16,500 (EUR1,450) for betting software application licenses. The updated framework is formalised under guideline SIFS 2026:1, changing the existing fee regulation SIFS 2024:4.
The modification does not alter what gaming activities are permitted in Sweden, but enables the expense of regulative supervision under the Gambling Act 2018 to reflect deepening oversight demands undertaken by Spelinspektionen.
An essential structural modification is that supervision fees will be charged per licence rather than per business group.
As a result, operators holding both an industrial online gambling establishment licence and a wagering licence will be required to pay separate annual fees of SEK 240,000 (EUR21,000) for each licence held.
For B2B licences, SIFS 2026:1 establishes a rolling 12-month guidance duration starting from the date a licence or software permit is granted, with subsequent 12-month durations looking for as long as the authorisation stays in force.
Should a licence run for less than a full year, fees may be determined on a pro-rata basis, subject to a minimum charge equal to one twelfth of the yearly quantity.
Supervision must be invoiced and paid ahead of time. However, where a licence remains active due to a court ruling or legal continuation, Spelinspektionen might invoice the relevant fee retrospectively. The regulator also retains discretion to decrease or waive costs in extraordinary circumstances.
The modified licence charge structure will support Spelinspektionen as it oversees a broad set of reforms to Sweden's online gambling structure.
System change in 2026
From 1 April 2026, Spelinspektionen and the Ministry of Finance will carry out a "complete restriction on credit-funded betting transactions", forbiding licensed operators from processing payments linked to charge card, loans, overdrafts or buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) items. The procedure is deemed as the most detailed restriction on credit-based gaming deals introduced by a European state.

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