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Google Blocked 270 Million Gambling Ads in 2025 , What Germany Gains From It

9. Juni 20268 Minby Lisa Lustich
Redaktionell geprüft von Lisa LustichLetzte Prüfung:
Bildschirm mit Suchleiste und schwebenden roten Sperrsymbolen, Symbolbild zum Google-Transparenzbericht 2025 über blockierte Glücksspiel-Anzeigen

Google's 2025 transparency report counts 270.7 million removed gambling ads. We look at the numbers from a German angle and show why the GGL keeps pushing.

Google's latest transparency report, out early June 2026, says they blocked or removed 270.7 million gambling and gaming ads in 2025. This broke their own rules. iGamingToday.com has it right: that puts gambling ads ninth for banned categories. Think about that. Well ahead of tobacco (98m) or even weapons (147m). Google took down 8.3 billion ads total in 2025. That's basically one for every person on Earth. It beggars belief.

Looking at this from Germany, the numbers are a mixed bag. On one side, Google definitely got tougher on German gambling ads. Since August 2023, only GGL-licensed operators are allowed. Good. My gut says 12–15% of those 270 million blocked ads came from the German-speaking market. But then, Google also admitted in the same report that 9.7 million policy violations happened on publisher pages. These are sites running Google ads, promoting or linking to illegal gambling themselves. Naughty.

The GGL weighed in on June 6, 2026. They welcomed the Google numbers, sure, but with a big dose of caution. They pointed out their own authority issued 1,847 orders against illegal advertising on search and display platforms in 2025. That includes 387 aimed straight at Google Ireland. What's more, in 31 cases, the GGL actually went to court at VG Halle. Only then did Google pull the ads. So, the authority wants a direct link. An automated exchange of block lists, like the Italian ADM system, would be perfect.

The pressure is building across Europe. iGamingToday reported in May 2026 that Brazil's Ministry of Justice jumped in. They wrote to Google Brazil and Apple. They want formal action against illegal betting ads in apps and search. Over here, the European Commission is scrutinizing Google and Meta. Under the Digital Services Act, are they doing enough about gambling advertising? A DSA risk assessment is due this autumn, 2026. Keep your eyes peeled.

For German players, this all means two things. First, if you search "best online casino," "casino bonus," or "slots without limit," since mid-2024, you'll pretty much only see GGL-licensed operators in the paid ads. That's a huge step up from 2021/22. Back then, Curaçao brands ruled the roost. Second, the organic results, the non-paid ones, still show tons of black-market affiliates. Google's ad filter doesn't touch those. Only algorithmic quality signals, or us reporting spam by hand, can knock them down a peg.

Affiliates like Lustich.de, we thrive on this tougher enforcement. We only promote GGL-licensed casinos and sportsbooks, thank you very much. Zero Google Ads rejections in the last 18 months. We're squeaky clean. Other affiliate platforms, the ones pushing Curaçao or Anjouan casinos in German? They've been hammered by mass account suspensions since mid-2024. A real and growing business risk, for that grey-zone affiliate crowd. A shame, not a shame.

My take? Google's 270-million headline. Sounds impressive. It's not enough. State oversight is still key. I mean, as long as organic search and social platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Telegram keep pushing black-market content, the GGL will keep getting pressure. They'll have to issue more orders, more fines. For players, the rule is simple. Check the GGL whitelist. *Always*. Before you even think about registering. A single click on gluecksspielbehoerde.de. It can save you thousands of euros. And a whole lot of legal hassle later. Trust me on this one.

Sources & further reading

Gambling can be addictive. Please play responsibly. Help and counselling at 0800 1 372 700 (BZgA, free & anonymous).

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