EvenBet Gains Five-Year Danish Supplier Licence as B2B Rules Tighten
EvenBet Gaming has received a five-year B2B supplier licence from Denmark’s gambling regulator, Spillemyndigheden. The licence allows the company to provide its poker software, online casino platform, and games, including roulette, baccarat, blackjack, punto banco, bingo, and slots, to Danish-licensed operators.
Timing matters because Denmark now makes supplier compliance central to operator risk management. Since January 2025, game suppliers need their own licence to work with Danish-licensed betting and casino operators. Operators can no longer treat supplier approval as a last-minute check.
EvenBet said the approval followed checks covering RNG certification, system security, and business procedures. For operators, that makes the licence useful beyond access alone. It gives compliance teams another pre-cleared supplier option at a time when Danish rules put more responsibility on the full supply chain.
The commercial case is also clear. Denmark generated DKK 11bn (€1.47bn) in gambling gross revenue in 2024, according to figures referenced by the company. It is not the biggest European market by scale, but it offers something many suppliers now value more: clear rules, predictable oversight, and long-term licence visibility.
EvenBet’s Danish licence strengthens its presence in Europe’s regulated markets. Operators get a ready-to-use supplier, which simplifies compliance and speeds up approval. It also lets EvenBet push poker alongside casino games, giving operators more variety and less reliance on bonus-driven offers. This directly affects how operators plan and manage their supplier choices in Denmark.
TGJ Take
EvenBet’s Danish licence makes it easier for operators to add a fully approved supplier without extra compliance work. Small and mid-size operators can now include poker and casino content with less risk. For other suppliers, it shows that Denmark won’t accept unlicensed partners. Operators should consider EvenBet first when planning their supplier lineup, and competitors need to act quickly to secure their own licences. This approval is now a practical advantage, not just a legal requirement.