The Directorate-General for the Regulation of Gambling (Dirección General de Ordenación del Juego: DGOJ) deals with complaints made by participants against nationwide gambling operators.
Prior to that, users registered with any licensed online gambling operator in Spain are entitled to contact that operator's customer service department, following its complaints procedure, to obtain explanations regarding the operator’s decisions and the justification for them (the measure taken, its scope, the grounds for it and the contract term on which the operator has based it, etc.) and request whatever they consider appropriate. If they do not agree with the response received or do not receive an answer within one month, they may lodge a complaint against the operator with the DGOJ.
A complaint is a communication which a player addresses to the DGOJ, on account of a conflict or disagreement with a licensed gambling operator of which that player is user, in which the player states the circumstances giving rise to it and requests a solution.
Who can make a complaint and why?
Any person participating in online gambling and/or national lotteries may lodge a complaint with the DGOJ regarding the actions or omissions of nationwide licensed gambling operators which affect that person’s interests.
What are nationwide “licensed gambling operators”? Those persons or entities which have obtained a licence or authorisation from the DGOJ to carry on gambling activities and any other persons or entities designated by law to run lotteries, where the activity is carried on and marketed nationwide.
Remember that you can check that an online gambling operator is licensed on the DGOJ website, where you can also check that the online gambling operator you are using has the "Safe Gambling" mark, created by the DGOJ to be used solely by those gambling operators which have a national licence, granted by the DGOJ, to carry on gambling activities and which provides a guarantee that the gambling is regulated, supervised and controlled by the DGOJ, ensures that the gambling is fair, that the legal operators are reliable and that they comply with all the requirements relating to solvency, responsibility and control imposed by national gambling legislation, in this case Law 13/2011, of 27 May, and its
may NOT by lodged with the DGOJ in the following circumstances:
Complaints must be lodged in writing and must include the following:
There are two ways of lodging a complaint:
Processing of complaints by the authorities
Once the complaint has been received and registered by the DGOJ, it can be processed as follows:
The Directorate-General for the Regulation of Gambling (Dirección General de Ordenación del Juego: DGOJ) is entrusted with ensuring compliance with state legislation relating to gambling and controlling its application, to which end, it has the legal authority to carry out inspections and to impose sanctions for any offences it finds. If you have evidence or material which may prove that an action represents a breach of Law 13/2011, of 27 May, on the regulation of gambling, you can submit a report making the DGOJ aware of that fact.
A report is a communication which a player addresses to the DGOJ to inform it about circumstances which may constitute an administrative offence due to the alleged breach of Law 13/2011, of 27 May, on the regulation of gambling, without intending to obtain a solution, compensation or payment of damages in particular.
In particular, carrying on and marketing online gambling in Spain through a .com domain, or through a company which has not obtained the relevant licence in Spain, are activities which are considered “illegal gambling”, in accordance with the provisions of Law 13/2011, of 27 May, on the regulation of gambling, and, therefore, are reportable circumstances.
Based on such a communication, the authorities may initiate an investigation and checking phase in relation to the circumstances reported, which could involve initiating infringement proceedings.
The aim of those investigations, in this case, is fundamentally to protect and defend the public interest and the rights of all players, not those of a specific citizen or group of citizens, to prevent such irregular conduct from occurring again. The investigation into the report is not intended to restore the interests or rights of the person submitting the report , which may have been affected by an alleged administrative offence, even where the reported circumstances ultimately result in a sanction.
Anyone may file a report relating to gambling, even where the circumstances and conduct in question do not affect that person directly.
The fundamental aim of a report is to make the competent authority aware of such circumstances as are considered harmful to the interests of players, to prevent them from continuing to occur and affecting other people.
The person submitting the report is not an interested party in the infringement proceedings which may follow the phase of investigating and checking the reported circumstances. That person may not, therefore, appear in the the proceedings, nor have access to the case file or any preliminary proceedings which may take place.
Reports must submitted in writing and must include the following:
Means of submitting the complaint:
Processing of the report by the authorities
Once the report has been received and registered by the DGOJ, it can be processed as follows: