Italy’s Gambling Reform Faces Its Communication Test
According to reporting by SBC News, Italy is reassessing how gambling operators can communicate with consumers after its online licensing reset. The debate shifts attention from licensing mechanics to a harder question: can a tightly controlled legal market compete if licensed brands remain difficult for players to identify?
Italy relaunched its online gambling framework in November 2025, with ADM awarding 52 online concessions to 46 operators. The reform ended the long-running skin model, moved operators toward a single official website per licence, and generated roughly €364m-365m in licence revenue. ADM and MEF had positioned the reset as the basis for a more transparent online sector, with projections suggesting online gambling GGR could exceed €5.5bn by 2026.
For operators, the challenge is no longer only securing a licence. Public visibility affects acquisition, brand trust and player migration from unlicensed platforms. If consumers cannot easily identify ADM-approved brands or understand the protections attached to regulated products, channelisation becomes harder to achieve, regardless of how robust the licensing system looks on paper.
For regulators, the issue is where to draw the line. Any review of communication rules will need to preserve responsible gambling safeguards while giving licensed operators enough room to explain who they are and why regulated play is different. The discussion may reopen sponsorship and media revenue debates, but the core question is simpler: can Italy promote the legal market without returning to uncontrolled gambling advertising?
Italy has rebuilt the framework for legal online gambling. Its next test is whether that market can become visible enough to outperform the unlicensed sector it was designed to contain.




