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EGBA Calls for Support for Landmark European Safer Gambling Standard

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The European Gaming and Betting Association (EGBA) urged the delegates of national standardisation bodies to approve a landmark European standard on markers of harm in online gambling in the voting process at the European Committee for Standardisation (CEN). The vote, closing on 25 September 2025, represents the culmination of a multi-year collaborative effort that began with EGBA’s original proposal to CEN – the official EU standardisation body – in 2022.

The European standard on markers of harm aims to establish a list of behavioural indicators that, when analysed together, can signal risky or problematic gambling behaviour. These markers – such as changes in speed, time and duration of play – are essential tools for enabling early intervention and harm prevention in the online gambling environment.

A Collaborative European Effort

This standardisation initiative exemplifies the collaborative approach that safer gambling requires. Since development began, the CEN process has brought together experts from across Europe, including academics, gambling regulators, operators, harm prevention professionals and other key stakeholders through their national standardisation delegations. The process has already secured significant support from key stakeholders, including the Gambling Regulators European Forum (GREF).

Addressing a Critical Gap

Currently, while many organisations, including gambling operators, use markers of harm in their safer gambling efforts, there is no commonly agreed framework defining which behaviours constitute markers of harm. This standardisation initiative aims to resolve that critical gap by creating a unified, evidence-based list of behavioural indicators grounded in the latest research and scientific expertise. The standard will enable earlier and more consistent detection of risky play across operators and borders, and help raise the bar on player protection industry-wide.

“The vote represents a milestone moment for safer gambling in Europe. This EGBA-proposed initiative demonstrates precisely the kind of collaboration we need more of – bringing together stakeholders to share knowledge and experiences to create something for the common good. We call on national delegates to approve the important standard, which will contribute to a better understanding of problem gambling behaviour and support more effective harm prevention across Europe,” said Maarten Haijer, Secretary General of EGBA.

If approved, the finalised standard is expected to be published by CEN by the beginning of 2026 at the latest. The standard will be voluntary in nature and online gambling regulators will remain free to decide whether they wish to incorporate it into their national safer gambling frameworks.

The post EGBA Calls for Support for Landmark European Safer Gambling Standard appeared first on European Gaming Industry News.

George Miller began his career in content marketing before joining the HIPTHER team in 2016 as an Editor and Content Manager. His ability to distill complex regulatory data into newsworthy B2B content led to his appointment as Head of Content in 2017.…

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