Revenue for September was DKK533 million (£62 million/€74 million/$81 million), data from Denmark regulator Spillemyndigheden shows. This falls short of DKK569 million last year and is also 3.2% less than August’s total.
Online casino gaming remains the primary source of revenue in Denmark by some distance. For September, revenue topped DKK288 million, up 12.1% from the previous year but short of DKK299 million in August.
Some 77.1% of all online casino revenue came from slot machines. Blackjack and roulette each accounted for 6.7% of revenue in this sector, poker 3.6%, bingo 3.1% and other games 2.7%.
However, as was the case in August, revenue fell across all other verticals and channels in Denmark. Sports betting saw the biggest decline, with September’s DKK144 million haul 21.7% lower than last year. Of this, 69.2% came from mobile, 15.6% desktop and 15.2% retail shops.
Physical slot machine revenue dropped by 4.2% year-on-year DKK92 million. Machines inside gaming halls generated 79.2% of all machine revenue, while restaurant-based machines drew 20.8%.
The remaining DKK29 million in revenue came from land-based casinos, down 9.4% from September 2023.
Separately, Spillemyndigheden published data for various responsible gambling measures in Denmark. At the end of September, 53,043 people had registered with the ROFUS national self-exclusion scheme.
Males accounted for 77.6% of those registered with ROFUS and females 22.4%. Of those who have signed up, 66.0% opted for permanent exclusion, 16.2% six-month suspension, 11.3% three months and 6.4% one month.
As for StopSpillet, a national service providing advice and guidance to those concerned over their gambling habits, the regulator noted 37 calls during September.
In September, Spillemyndigheden revealed that people aged 18-25 are most likely to use StopSpillet. This was certainly the case in September, during which more than one third of calls came from people in this age group.