Revenue for the three months to 30 September climbed to €405m (£361.5m), which also represented a 25% increase from Q2.
The ps, released by the country’s gambling regulator L’Autorité nationale des jeux (ANJ), also included a 29% rise in the number of active player accounts.
Online sports betting saw a 6% increase in revenue to €228m, with football representing the majority of that total, despite the country’s domestic football leagues being cancelled in April.
Poker turnover stood at €90m, a 36% increase from the same period in 2019. Horse racing betting, meanwhile, represented €87m of total revenue, a 32% year-on-year increase.
ANJ described the results as a “spectacular recovery,” but chairwoman Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin has warned that licensees must improve their player protection measures during the country’s most recent lockdown, which is expected to last until at least 1 December.
“This online gambling market recovery must be accompanied by greater accountability from operators,” said Falque-Pierrotin.
“Indeed, unlike the first lockdown, the sports and horse betting gambling offer is widely available; and this situation can constitute a breeding ground for the development of excessive or risky practices for people weakened by this unprecedented context.”
Amounts wagered in sports betting rose 49% to €1.62bn, with football alone accounting for €1.03bn, including the €31m wagered on the 2019/20 Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Bayern Munich.
Tennis followed with €229m wagered, while basketball represented €154m of the total.