Spelinspektionen proposes new regulations for Spelpaus

The Swedish Gambling Authority has begun a consultation on potential changes to regulation regarding self-exclusion tool, Spelpaus.

Spelinspektionen proposes new regulations for Spelpaus

Key points:

– The changes relate to more stringent identification obligations for licencees

– Proposals add more opportunities for operators to notice that players should be suspended

– Investigations have shown current regulations to be ineffective

Spelinspektionen, the Swedish Gambling Authority, has asked for comments on potential new regulations that would seek to strengthen Sweden’s self-exclusion tool, Spelpause.

Central to the proposal are alterations to how gambling licensees in the country use specific connection credentials for individual players such as Actor IDs and API keys.

The changes would mean that operators who are registering players will have to use more rigorous checks using these IDs and keys to be certain that they are not on the self-exclusion register.

They would also have to verify the player using the API that corresponds with the action that the operator is carrying out, whether that’s registration, logging in and marketing.

This adds more opportunities during the customer journey for the operator to recognise if a player should be excluded.

It would also stop that excluded player from receiving direct marketing while they are registered on Spelpaus.

Good to know: These documents are signed off by Camilla Rosenberg, who has since departed the regulator for a role in the Swedish Ministry of Finance 

This proposal more clearly defines the exact detail of checks, whereas previously they were more vague, merely saying that some checks had to be made.

Investigations revealed that some licensees were using limited information to check against Spelpaus and some not at all, meaning some players who had suspended themselves with the tool would not find it effective.

The Swedish Gambling Authority recognises that changes would have costs for licensees, though it deems that those costs would not “be burdensome for the licensees.”

The proposal suggests that the changes would come into force on 1 August 2026, though the request for comments asks that all submissions be entered before 24 September 2024.

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OnlineLegal & RegulatoryResponsible Gambling
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Rory Calland
Journalist

Rory Calland is a journalist and Staff Writer at Gambling Insider, having joined the publication in June 2025. Based in the United Kingdom, he covers breaking news, industry developments and market trends across the global gambling and iGaming sectors.

At Gambling Insider, Rory reports on key commercial, regulatory and financial stories affecting operators, suppliers and stakeholders, producing timely analysis and exclusive coverage for the brand’s professional B2B audience. He has also showcased his reporting on notable industry developments such as major funding rounds, regulatory movements and market expansion.

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