Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced sweeping restrictions on gambling advertising across television, radio, online platforms, and sporting venues on April 2.
The new rules take effect from January 2027 and aim to reduce children's exposure to betting promotions during live sports broadcasts and everyday media.
Australia's Per-Capita Gambling Losses Drive Reform
Australia has the highest per capita gambling losses globally. In the 2022-2023 fiscal year, Australians lost $31.5 billion on gambling, averaging roughly $1,527 per person.
The country holds less than 0.5% of the world's population, yet accounts for nearly 20% of its poker machines.
Under the new measures, gambling ads will be fully banned during live sport broadcasts on TV between 6 am and 8:30 pm.
Outside live sport, a cap of three ads per hour applies during the same window. Celebrities and athletes can no longer appear in gambling promotions.
Online gambling ads will only be permitted when users are logged in, verified as over 18 and given an opt-out option. Radio ads face bans during school drop-off and pick-up hours.
"We're cutting gambling ads on TV, radio, online and on the field," Albanese articulated.
However, the reforms fall short of the full phased ban recommended by the 2023 Murphy parliamentary inquiry.
Donation Scrutiny and Prediction Market Implications
Australian Electoral Commission filings show gambling companies continued donating to both major parties during reform delays.
Sportsbet gave $88,000 to Labor on June 26, 2024, weeks before the government shelved a proposed blanket ad ban.
Tabcorp contributed $60,500 and Responsible Wagering Australia added $66,000 to federal Labor that same financial year.
Meanwhile, crypto-based prediction platform Polymarket remains banned and ISP-blocked in Australia since August 2025.
The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) classified it as an unlicensed interactive gambling service.
This follows an investigation that found the platform had paid TikTok and Instagram influencers to target Australian bettors during the 2025 federal election.
US-regulated prediction exchange Kalshi has self-restricted Australian users from accessing its platform, citing compliance with local gambling laws.
Neither platform is directly affected by the new advertising rules, which target licensed domestic operators like Sportsbet and Tabcorp.
The advertising restrictions represent one piece of Australia's broader gambling regulation puzzle. Prediction markets remain firmly in ACMA's crosshairs under existing legislation.
Meanwhile, the new ad rules focus on reducing the visibility of traditional sports betting in mainstream media.
Read original story Australia Cracks Down on Gambling Ads as Prediction Markets Like Polymarket Remain Blocked by Lockridge Okoth at beincrypto.com
latest_posts
- 1
Change Your Skincare: 10 Inventive Magnificence Gadgets - 2
How to watch Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest: Start time, TV channel, performers and more - 3
Email Promoting Instruments for Compelling Efforts - 4
'An incredible privilege and responsibility': Artemis 2's Christina Koch is ready to become the 1st woman to fly around the moon - 5
Defense Minister Katz moves to extend IDF service to 36 months
Thousands of genomes reveal the wild wolf genes in most dogs’ DNA
How to sound like an astronaut as you follow the first human moon mission in more than half a century
The most effective method to Shake Hands During a Pandemic: Wellbeing Tips and Behavior
'All's Fair,' Ryan Murphy's new show starring Kim Kardashian, hit with scathing reviews: 'A girlboss fever dream'
Smuggler who called migrants 'chickens' jailed
6 Trail blazing Bicycles for Rough terrain Undertakings
An 'explosion' of solo-agers are struggling with rising costs and little support: 'I'm flying without a net'
‘It’s Israeli policy’: Report reveals abuse of Palestinians in prisons
Fiber is something most people could use more of. But experts advise caution with 'fibermaxxing'












