
Operators are becoming part of regulatory enforcement
Operators are embedded in regulatory infrastructure and are responsible for monitoring, reporting, and player protection.Brazil has formally introduced the National Policy for the Prevention and Confrontation of the Manipulation of Sports Results (PNPEMR), established on April 2, 2026. .This policy is designed to combat rising match-fixing incidents by creating a structured "regulation, prevention, monitoring, and repression" framework to protect sports integrity in Brazil. Portugal’s Gaming Regulation and Inspection Service (SRIJ) has introduced a centralized online self-exclusion system, effective April 8, designed to enhance player protection by enabling users to restrict access to all licensed online gambling platforms in the country
Regional regulatory consolidation is emerging
Fragmented markets are aligning. Cross-border cooperation will improve regulatory consistency and limit opportunities for regulatory arbitrage. Seven countries formed the Balkan Gaming Federation (BGF) to coordinate regulation, combat illegal gambling, and strengthen the region’s position in Europe.
New verticals are entering the regulated space
The definition of iGaming is expanding. Regulators are formalizing hybrid models that previously operated in grey areas.Gibraltar has licensed its first prediction markets operator, granting Predict Street Ltd a betting intermediary licence under the territory’s 2005 Gambling Act, Minister for Justice, Trade and Industry Nigel Feetham confirmed this. The licence was issued, with the platform scheduled to launch on 9 April. Advertising and player protection rules are tightening
User acquisition is increasingly restricted. Compliance in marketing and responsible gaming is now critical. Australia announced strict advertising restrictions, including bans during live sports. Enforcement is intensifying and becoming more digital
Governments are increasing enforcement through technology. Digital control systems make it more difficult to operate outside regulated frameworks. India blocked over 8,300 gambling websites. Turkey conducted enforcement operations, resulting in hundreds of arrests. Ukraine has moved the licensing of gambling businesses entirely into the digital space, cutting out paperwork, queues, and in‑person visits.
Tax systems are evolving and becoming more complex
Operators must adapt to multi-layered, evolving fiscal regimes that directly impact profitability. Malta announced a 2026 tax reform that could extend VAT to online betting, effective 1 October 2026. Estonia continues to address the consequences of a tax loophole affecting state revenues.
Some jurisdictions are exiting offshore models entirely
The offshore model is declining as governments increasingly prefer fully controlled, locally regulated markets. The Philippines announced the complete shutdown of offshore gaming operators (POGOs).
The industry is moving toward greater transparency, stricter oversight, and deeper integration with state systems. Regulation is tightening, enforcement is expanding, and new opportunities will arise for operators who can adapt quickly.
If your current structure relies on outdated models, now is the time to reconsider your approach.
Legal Pilot supports your compliance, market entry, and safe operation in this evolving regulatory environment.