The Belgian Kansspelcommissie (KSC) has released its 2024 financial report, revealing a 4.5% year-on-year decline in total Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR). This marks the first time the Belgian market has contracted since the post-pandemic recovery, with the online segment, previously the industry’s primary growth engine, failing to offset losses in land-based sectors.
According to the KSC’s comprehensive audit of licensee filings, the total market GGR fell to €1.39 billion in 2024, down from €1.46 billion in 2023. While the National Lottery remained stable, the private licensed sector across Class A, B, and F licences saw significant downward pressure, particularly in the highly regulated online casino and slot categories.

Market Analysis: Strategic Drivers of the 2024 Revenue Decline
The contraction in the Belgian market is not an isolated fiscal event but rather the cumulative result of intensifying regulatory constraints and shifting consumer habits. For operators and investors, the 2024 data highlights a decoupling of player activity and revenue yield under a strict “duty of care” regime.
- Online Casino Vulnerability: Revenue from online Class A+ licences (casinos) dropped by 6.2%, signalling that the saturation point for digital slots may have been reached under current stake and time limits.
- Sports Betting Volatility: Despite a major international football tournament in 2024, Class F+ online betting revenue saw a marginal 2.1% decrease, suggesting that high-volume “VIP” play is being successfully curtailed by affordability checks.
- Land-Based Erosion: Physical gaming halls (Class B) and cafes (Class C) continued their long-term decline, with GGR falling by an average of 5.8% across the land-based estate.
- Compliance Overheads: The implementation of enhanced duty of care protocols has increased the cost of player acquisition and retention, further squeezing net margins.
Regulatory Tightening and Fiscal Contribution Trends
The KSC report emphasises that the decline in GGR has directly impacted the state’s fiscal intake from the sector. However, the Belgian government has moved to mitigate this through administrative adjustments. This trend is expected to continue following the Royal Decree on 2026 gaming contributions, which recalibrates the financial obligations of licensees to fund the regulator’s oversight activities.
The data shows that while the number of active player accounts remained relatively consistent, the average spend per player dropped by approximately 7.4%. This suggests that the KSC’s focus on “preventive protection”, including the mandatory €500 weekly deposit limit, is effectively capping individual expenditure, even if it results in a lower total market valuation.
Segment Performance: Class A vs. Class B
The disparity between licence classes remains a point of concern for the regulator. Class A licenses (casinos) reported a combined GGR of €312 million, while the larger Class B network (gaming halls) struggled with a €158 million total. The report notes that “cross-channel cannibalisation” is increasing, as players move from physical gaming halls to online platforms, though the digital growth was insufficient to prevent the overall market dip.
Future Outlook for Belgium Market: Stabilisation or Further Contraction?
As Belgium enters the mid-point of 2026, the industry is bracing for further structural changes. With the legal age for all gambling activities now firmly set at 21 and a total ban on gambling advertising in effect across most media channels, the KSC anticipates that 2025 data will likely show another year of stagnant or negative growth.
For operators, the focus has shifted from aggressive market share acquisition to operational efficiency and high-level compliance. The 2024 financial report serves as a benchmark for a “post-growth” Belgian market, where regulatory excellence is now a prerequisite for commercial survival.