Swedish gambling regulator fines Yeti Casino operator
Spelinspektionen says L&L Europe Limited breached responsibility regulations.
Sweden.- The Swedish gambling regulator Spelinspektionen has issued a reprimand and a SEK 80,000 (€7,500) fine against L&L Europe Limited for responsibility failings. The regulator said it reviewed L&L Europe’s websites and found breaches of the company’s duty to provide certain information to consumers.
The review found that required information was missing from all of the operator’s Sweden-facing websites to varying degrees. The licensee’s telephone number and email address were missing from home pages, and several websites also lacked information about the risks that may be associated with gambling.
The review covered six gaming sites: www.casinocasino.com, www.funcasino.com, www.hypercasino.com, www.nobonuscasino.com, www.racecasino.com and www.yeticasino.com. The company registration number, telephone number and email address were missing from all six as was information about the licenxe period and about Spelinspektionen as the supervisory authority
Information about the risks that may be associated with gambling for money was missing on five of the websites and contact details for an independent helpline for gambling problems was missing from the homepage of the website www.racecasino.com.
The regulator also found that although logos linking to self-test, deposit limitation and suspension options appeared at the top of the sites, they were not placed in a locked field.
L&L Europe has since addressed all deficiencies, but the Spelinspektionen ruled that a fine was appropriate for systemic breaches of sections 7 and 8 of its regulations and general advice (LIFS 2018:5) on commercial online gaming and betting and section 17 of its regulations and general advice (LIFS 2018:2) on gambling responsibility.
The sanction fee was set in relation to the licensee’s turnover in the preceding financial year. L&L Europe stated that the company’s net turnover for the financial year 2024 amounted to SEK 12.8m.
Earlier this month, Spelinspektionen banned Claymore Malta from providing games in Sweden. The regulator said it initiated a supervisory case against the company after suspicions arose that the website ibet.com was providing games aimed at the Swedish market without the necessary licence.
It inspected the site from December 1 to December 8 2025 and found that the Swedish country code is preselected when registering on the website from a Swedish IP address. It also found marketing through Swedish-speaking content creators on video streaming platforms and via Swedish-speaking websites aimed at Swedish consumers.