VNLOK, the trade association for licensed online gambling providers in the Netherlands, has published the country’s first Responsible Play Monitor covering operator conduct in 2025.
The report was presented in The Hague on 18 June and represents the first broad attempt by the sector to document player protection measures in one place.
VNLOK Director Rosemarijn Dral, who was appointed to the position in May, said: “This is an important beginning, not an end point. We want to gain better insight into which interventions are most effective and share that knowledge with regulators and care partners.”
The monitor covers VNLOK members and acknowledges it remains a work in progress, though the data offers a rare window into day-to-day safer gambling controls inside the regulated Dutch market.
Licensed operators collectively implemented almost 1.8 million responsible gambling interventions throughout 2025, spanning a wide range of approaches from soft nudges to formal exclusions.
The vast majority of those interventions were classified as light-touch measures, with more than 1.2 million pop-up messages sent to players based on their individual gambling behaviour.
A single player could receive more than one message during the year, meaning the figure reflects total interventions rather than the number of unique players reached.
These lighter interventions are designed to prompt players to reflect on their behaviour before problems become more difficult to address or reverse.
Operators also deployed stronger protective actions, helping players set or reduce deposit limits on 21,000 occasions and conducting 75,391 affordability checks across the period.
Players were directed toward professional help services 10,847 times, while operators placed temporary self-exclusions on their own platforms 60,170 times as a precautionary measure.
In 288 cases, players were reported for involuntary registration in Cruks, the Dutch central exclusion register that bars players across the entire licensed market.
VNLOK noted that the gap between platform-level exclusions and Cruks registrations reflects the higher administrative threshold required to force a national listing compared to a site-level block.
The monitor is expected to become more uniform and comparable across future editions, which will likely require operators to maintain cleaner internal data and more consistent reporting standards.
The publication also strengthens the industry’s case against unlicensed gambling sites, which operate entirely outside the monitoring, intervention, and reporting obligations that apply to legal operators.

