VIE 17 DE MAYO DE 2024 - 08:35hs.
Total revenue of €227.4m

Portugal set new record for its online gambling market in Q4

The Portuguese online gambling sector has set a new record for revenue, with Q4’s €227.4m rising 5.6% from the previous record in Q3 of €215.3m. As reported by the Gaming Regulation and Inspection Service, the growth was once again steered by a second successive record quarter of iGaming revenue, which reached €154.4m, up from €133.4m in Q3.

Revenue for Q4 of 2023 was 5.6% higher than the previous Portugal record of €215.4m, set in Q3. It was also 16.4% ahead of the €195.3m posted in the fourth quarter of 2022.

Of all revenue, €154.5m was attributed to online casino games, an increase of 40.7% from the previous year. This also represented another new record for Portugal.

Consumers spent €3.84bn playing online casino games in Q4, up by 28.7% year-on-year and another all-time high for the market. Slots drew 83.0% of all these bets, with French roulette at 6.9% and blackjack 4.7%. Other spending was spread across dice games and poker.

In contrast to growth in online casino segment was another fall in sports betting revenue. For Q4, revenue here amounted to €72.8m, down 14.8% from €85.4 in Portugal in 2022.

However, there was some good news for this market, with player spending rising by 16.0% to €532.1m. This was also higher than any other quarter in 2023 by some distance.

As for what consumers in Portugal are betting on, football was the most popular sport with 74.7% of all wagers. Basketball accounted for 10.8% of bets, tennis 9.7% and other sports 4.8%.

The number of new online gambling accounts also increased in Q4. During the quarter, some 319,500 consumers opened a new account in Portugal, compared to 237,600 in the previous year. By the end of Q4, some 4.2 million online accounts were active in the country.

Accompanying this rise in new player accounts was self-exclusion from online gambling. For Q4, this figure reached 215,000, up 18,400 from Q3 and some 63,200 more than in Q4 of 2022.

In addition, authorities in Portugal ordered 23 illegal websites to close during the quarter. 

Source: iGB / GMB