Brazil
Rio de Janeiro State Shows the Greatest Interest in Real-Money Gambling in Brazil
The state of Rio de Janeiro has a disproportionally high number of real-money gamblers when you compare the percentage of players from the state making up the market share of total players in Brazil, against the population of the state of Rio de Janeiro.
Research by ENV Media, a performance-based media agency working in the iGaming industry, found that 14% of all real money gamblers in Brazil currently reside in the State of Rio de Janeiro. Yet the Brazilian 2022 census revealed that just roughly 7.9% of Brazil’s total population lives in the state of Rio de Janeiro. In other words, residents of the state of Rio de Janeiro make up almost twice the number of real-money gamblers in Brazil than the numbers relating to the state’s population suggest they should.
Break Down of Brazil’sd Most Populous States
With a population of 16,054, 524, Rio de Janeiro is the third biggest state in Brazil by population, behind Minas Gerais (20,538,718) and Sao Paulo (44,420, 459). According to the latest Brazilian Census carried out in 2022 by the Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica, Brazil’s current population is 203,062, 512. That makes it the seventh most populated country in the world, one above Bangladesh and one below Nigeria.
| Top 10 States | Population | % of Population | Player Share |
| São Paulo | 44,420,459 | 21.80% | 24% |
| Minas Gerais | 20,538,718 | 10.10% | 5% |
| Rio de Janeiro | 16,054,524 | 7.90% | 14% |
| Bahia | 14,136,417 | 6.90% | 6% |
| Paraná | 11,443,208 | 5.60% | 5% |
| Rio Grande do Sul | 10,880,506 | 5.30% | 7% |
| Pernambuco | 9,058,155 | 4.40% | 5% |
| Ceara | 8,791,688 | 4.30% | 6% |
| Pará | 8,116,132 | 4% | 2% |
| Santa Catarina | 7,609,601 | 3.70% | 3% |
| Goiás | 7,055,228 | 3.40% | 5% |
What about the Other States?
When focusing just on the top 10 most populous states in Brazil, which between them account for 77.4% of the total Brazilian population, there are some other eye-catching conclusions. Like the state of Rio de Janeiro, the state of Sao Paulo also accounts for a higher share of real-money gambling taking place in licensed online casinos based in Brazil when compared to the percentage of the overall population. But in this case, the difference is far smaller.
The state of Sao Paulo hosts 21.8% of Brazilian inhabitants and accounts for 24% of real-money players in Brazil, by far the state that houses the greatest number of gamblers in Brazil. The states of Rio Grande do Sul, Pernambuco, Ceara and Goiás all also accounted for a bigger share of the Brazilian gambling market than the share of the Brazilian population that they make up.
Goiás for example, hosts just 3.4% of Brazilians, yet players from that state make up 5% of Brazilian players who play for real cash. On the other hand, people from the states of Santa Catarina, Pará, Paraná and Bahia were in the opposite camp. In all four cases, the proportion of the Brazilian population they made up was less than the proportion they made up of the Brazilian gambling market.
Minas Gerais Residents Keep their Money in their Pockets
But the biggest discrepancy of all is related to the state of Minas Gerais. With a state population of 20,538, 718 as per 2022 numbers, it makes up 10.1% of the total Brazilian population. Yet the ENV research shows that residents of the state make up just 5% of real-money Brazilian gamblers.
That suggests that the state of Minas Gerais, whose cities include Belo Horizonte, Uberlandia, Contage and Juiz de Forma, is yet to embrace real-money gambling at the same rate as those from other Brazilian states.
Brazil
RubyPlay expands Brazilian presence through partnership with Esportes da Sorte
RubyPlay goes live with Esportes da Sorte, the flagship Esportes Gaming Brasil Group brand, to elevate player engagement across Brazil’s regulated market
RubyPlay, a studio-based content ecosystem, has strengthened its position in Brazil after partnering with leading online casino operator, Esportes da Sorte.
The launch features a selection of RubyPlay’s most popular titles, including Mad Hit® Diamonds and Mad Hit® Mr Coin. Content from Koala Games, RubyPlay’s market-focused studio with a strong focus on the Brazilian market, has also gone live with Esportes da Sorte, including Voltage Blitz® Rapid, 3 Big Barrels® Buffalo, and Voltage Blitz® Vortex.
The launch with the tier 1 operator forms part of RubyPlay’s wider expansion strategy in Brazil’s regulated market and is part of a broader go-live across the Esportes Gaming Brasil group, which includes additional launches with group brands LOTTU and OnaBet.
RubyPlay has established a strong track record of delivering high-performing, localised content tailored to Brazilian player preferences, driving engagement and delivering value for its partners.
By combining RubyPlay’s distinctive Latin American game design expertise with Esportes da Sorte’s strong market presence, the partnership is set to deliver a compelling entertainment experience to a broad audience of online players across Brazil’s rapidly growing market.
Dima Reiderman, CCO at RubyPlay, said: Brazil is a central part of our growth strategy, and working alongside an influential operator like Esportes da Sorte marks an important milestone in our growth strategy.
“Their firm regional presence, paired with our localised, high-performing content, creates a powerful proposition that we believe will resonate strongly with players.”
Hugo Baungartner, CBO at Esportes da Sorte, added: “We are committed to offering our players engaging, high-quality gaming experiences, and partnering with RubyPlay represents an important step forward in that journey.
RubyPlay’s strong focus on Brazil and its investment in truly localised content make them a highly valuable partner, giving us confidence in the long-term success of this collaboration and in our continued growth within the regulated market.”
The post RubyPlay expands Brazilian presence through partnership with Esportes da Sorte appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Brazil
Brazil: Regulation, market dynamics and tax pressure shape a new phase for iGaming
The past week has clearly highlighted how the Brazilian iGaming and sports betting market is moving into a more structured, institutionalized and, at the same time, more demanding phase.
Decisions by the federal government, official data released by the Ministry of Finance, and private initiatives focused on regulatory intelligence point to an ecosystem that is leaving behind its experimental stage and entering a cycle of regulated consolidation.
More than isolated developments, recent events reveal a shift in posture by both public authorities and market participants.
Brazil is no longer treating the sector merely as a new source of tax revenue, but increasingly as an industry that requires governance, legal predictability, systemic oversight and clearly defined enforcement mechanisms.
This approach repositions the country on the international radar, bringing it closer to more mature jurisdictions and raising the level of responsibility for all stakeholders involved.
At the same time, the rapid expansion in the number of authorized operators, the broadening of the regulatory scope beyond B2C activities, and the advancement of the tax debate are creating a more competitive and selective environment.
Operating in Brazil continues to offer scale and growth potential, but it now requires strategic planning, robust compliance capabilities and continuous monitoring of the political and regulatory landscape.
The themes that defined the week help illustrate how Brazil is laying the foundations for its new phase in iGaming — one in which growth, institutional control, market intelligence and tax pressure move in parallel and begin to define who is truly prepared to remain and compete in the medium and long term.
Regulation moves beyond operators
One of the most relevant developments of the week was the launch of a public consultation by the Ministry of Finance to discuss regulatory requirements applicable to suppliers within the betting and iGaming sector.
The initiative is being led by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting (SPA), the body responsible for implementing and supervising the regulated market, currently operating under the Ministry headed by Fernando Haddad.
Until now, Brazil’s regulatory process has been heavily focused on B2C operators.
With the new consultation, the scope expands to encompass the entire value chain that supports the ecosystem, including technology providers, gaming platforms, aggregators, betting systems, payment methods, KYC, AML, anti-fraud and compliance solutions.
In practical terms, the government is signaling its intention to establish minimum operating criteria, technical responsibilities and compliance standards for suppliers as well, reducing grey areas and operational risks.
The proposal
The proposal follows the logic adopted in more mature regulated markets, where oversight is not limited to consumer-facing offerings but extends to the technological and financial infrastructure behind the operation.
For supplier companies, this represents a significant structural shift.
In addition to increasing adaptation and compliance costs, regulation is likely to redefine commercial relationships, requiring closer alignment between licensed operators and their technology partners.
At the same time, it creates a more predictable environment, with clearer rules and lower exposure to regulatory risk in the medium and long term.
The move also reinforces a clear political message: Brazil does not intend to build its regulated market with a purely permissive or revenue-driven approach.
The expansion of the regulatory scope indicates a strategy of systemic control, aimed at sustainability, operational integrity and greater institutional credibility in the eyes of investors and international bodies.
Official operator list confirms accelerated expansion in Brazil
The publication by the Ministry of Finance of an official list of 184 platforms authorized to operate in Brazil’s regulated online betting market confirms the speed at which the sector has expanded since the new legal framework came into force.
The list, released by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting (SPA), includes operators deemed eligible to operate in the country under the rules established by the federal government.
The figure is striking not only for its size, but for what it represents in terms of competitiveness and market maturity.
In just a few months, Brazil has moved from a largely unregulated landscape to a formally structured ecosystem, with authorization criteria, compliance requirements and centralized supervision.
According to the Ministry of Finance itself, the publication of the list aims to provide market transparency, guide consumers and signal which companies meet the legal requirements to operate while the licensing process is finalized.
It also serves as a tool to organize the sector at a time of transition from an informal market to a fully regulated model.
As the ecosystem becomes increasingly crowded, simply holding a license ceases to be a competitive advantage and becomes a minimum condition for remaining in the market.
Competition is likely to shift toward factors such as operational efficiency, financial robustness, brand positioning, cultural adaptation to the local audience and the ability to operate within a more stringent regulatory environment.
For international operators, the list also serves as a barometer of global appetite for the Brazilian market, now viewed as one of the most promising — and simultaneously most challenging — among newly regulated jurisdictions.
The full list of authorized platforms is available on the official federal government website.
Data and Intelligence take center stage
Oddsgate launches “Brasil On Track”, a strategic platform for Brazil’s regulated iGaming market
Oddsgate has announced the launch of “Brasil On Track”, a strategic platform designed to help operators and ecosystem participants navigate Brazil’s regulated iGaming market.
The initiative was presented on February 5, 2026, at a time when Brazilian regulation marks its first year under Law 14.790/2023, which introduced greater legal clarity, a defined tax structure and compliance requirements for the sector.
“Brasil On Track provides real-time monitoring of regulatory milestones, market indicators and operational requirements, connecting legal updates to direct business impact and linking directly to official sources,” Oddsgate stated in its launch announcement.
The platform was designed to transform regulatory complexity and legal obligations into a continuous, accessible intelligence framework.
Its features include:
- live tracking of regulatory updates and pending legislation; an operational map translating legal changes into practical compliance actions
- market intelligence on player demographics and key performance indicators
- visibility into tax structures, licensing stages and market entry requirements; and specific focus areas covering KYC (Know Your Customer), AML (Anti-Money Laundering), self-exclusion tools, consumer protection and responsible gaming.
According to Oddsgate’s Director of Regulatory Affairs, Valter Delfraro Jr., Law 14.790/2023 marked a milestone that “ended years of uncertainty and provided legal security and operational clarity.”
He emphasized that this new phase places Brazil’s gaming sector on equal footing with mature markets, increasing international competitiveness and attracting global investors.
“We have transformed regulation into a practical, ongoing guide to operating in Brazil with less risk and greater clarity,” added Wagner Fernandes, Oddsgate’s Chief Marketing Officer, noting that the platform is designed to equip teams entering, expanding or optimizing operations in the country.
The launch of “Brasil On Track” comes amid a rapidly evolving regulatory environment in Brazil, where, according to official data from the Ministry of Finance, the sector generated approximately BRL 36 billion in gross gaming revenue between January and September 2025, with BRL 3.3 billion collected in federal taxes during the same period — highlighting the scale and dynamism of the national market.
The arrival of this tool reflects a growing demand for structured market intelligence, indicating that operators and suppliers are seeking not only news and updates.
But solutions capable of integrating regulatory data with real-time operational and strategic insights.
Taxation moves to the center of the debate
While regulation advances and the market becomes more organized, the tax debate has emerged as one of the most sensitive issues of the moment, both for the government and for industry participants.
The possibility of a total tax burden of up to 42% on iGaming and sports betting is no longer merely theoretical; it is being actively discussed with direct political and economic implications — including in exchanges between Finance Minister Fernando Haddad and industry representatives.
Commenting on proposals to increase taxation, Pietro Cardia, legal director of the National Association of Games and Lotteries (ANJL), warned that tax hikes above international standards could undermine the economic performance of companies operating legally and compliantly in Brazil.
João Fraga, CEO of payment solutions provider Paag, highlighted that tax changes in such a young market could directly impact business strategies, particularly less than a year after operations began under the new regulatory framework.
Organized industry groups have also publicly reinforced the need to balance tax collection with the sector’s ability to compete in a market where illegal operators remain strong.
Organizations such as the Brazilian Institute for Responsible Gaming (IBJR) stress that if tax policy focuses solely on revenue generation without a parallel strengthening of enforcement against unlicensed operators, regulated players may lose ground to the informal market, increasing risk and eroding fiscal revenues.
This discussion returns to the center of the agenda at a time when the Ministry of Finance and the National Congress are debating broader fiscal adjustments in the country — debates in which betting taxation has been explicitly mentioned as part of wider revenue-raising proposals.
The weight of this tax burden is being assessed not only in numerical terms, but also in terms of its impact on investment in product development, technology, compliance and consumer protection, placing operators and suppliers in a dilemma that goes beyond a simple cost calculation.
A larger, clearer — and more demanding market
The week’s developments point to a common denominator: Brazil is rapidly moving toward a more structured, but also more rigorous, regulated market. There is greater legal clarity, stronger institutional control and increased competition, but also higher costs and far less room for improvisation.
For those monitoring Brazil as part of an international strategy, the moment calls for careful analysis. The country continues to offer scale and potential, but now demands regulatory maturity, fiscal planning and a long-term perspective.
The consolidation of iGaming in Brazil is entering a decisive phase.
The combination of broader regulation, growth in the number of operators, professionalization of market intelligence and rising tax pressure is shaping a more predictable — and at the same time more selective — environment.
Brazil is definitively leaving behind the status of a disorganized emerging market and operating under clearer rules and constant oversight.
For companies viewing Brazil as part of a global strategy, this is a moment that requires measured reading and well-calibrated decisions.
Scale potential remains high, but so do entry and operating costs, along with the need for compliance, efficiency and differentiation.
The market is likely to continue growing, but in a more rational manner, favoring players prepared to operate in a regulated, competitive and increasingly tax-intensive environment.
The post Brazil: Regulation, market dynamics and tax pressure shape a new phase for iGaming appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
Brasil
Brasil en foco: Regulación, mercado y presión fiscal moldean la nueva fase del iGaming
La última semana evidenció de manera muy concreta cómo el mercado brasileño de iGaming y apuestas deportivas avanza hacia una etapa más estructurada, institucionalizada y, al mismo tiempo, más exigente.
Decisiones del gobierno federal, datos oficiales publicados por el Ministerio de Hacienda e iniciativas privadas orientadas a la inteligencia regulatoria apuntan a un ecosistema que deja atrás la fase de experimentación y entra en un ciclo de consolidación regulada.
Más que movimientos puntuales, los acontecimientos recientes revelan un cambio de postura tanto del poder público como del propio mercado.
Brasil comienza a tratar al sector no solo como una nueva fuente de recaudación, sino como una industria que exige gobernanza, previsibilidad jurídica, control sistémico y mecanismos claros de supervisión.
Este enfoque reposiciona al país en el radar internacional, acercándolo a jurisdicciones más maduras y elevando el nivel de responsabilidad para todos los actores involucrados.
Al mismo tiempo, la rápida expansión del número de operadores autorizados, la ampliación del alcance regulatorio más allá del B2C y el avance del debate fiscal crean un entorno más competitivo y selectivo.
Operar en Brasil sigue ofreciendo escala y potencial de crecimiento, pero ahora exige planificación estratégica, capacidad de compliance y una lectura constante del entorno político y regulatorio.
Los temas que marcaron la semana ayudan a comprender cómo Brasil está sentando las bases de su nueva fase en el iGaming:
Una etapa en la que crecimiento, control institucional, inteligencia de mercado y presión fiscal avanzan en paralelo y comienzan a definir quiénes están realmente preparados para permanecer y competir a medio y largo plazo.
La regulación avanza más allá de los operadores
Uno de los movimientos más relevantes de la semana fue la apertura de una consulta pública por parte del Ministerio de Hacienda para debatir requisitos regulatorios aplicables a los proveedores del sector de apuestas e iGaming.
La iniciativa está liderada por la Secretaría de Premios y Apuestas (SPA), organismo responsable de la implementación y supervisión del mercado regulado, actualmente dependiente del ministerio encabezado por Fernando Haddad.
Hasta ahora, el proceso regulatorio brasileño había estado fuertemente concentrado en los operadores B2C.
Con la nueva consulta, el foco se amplía a toda la cadena que sostiene el ecosistema, incluyendo proveedores tecnológicos, plataformas de juego, agregadores, sistemas de apuestas, medios de pago y soluciones de KYC, AML, antifraude y compliance.
En la práctica, el gobierno señala su intención de establecer criterios mínimos de actuación, responsabilidades técnicas y estándares de conformidad también para los proveedores, reduciendo zonas grises y riesgos operativos.
La propuesta sigue la lógica de mercados regulados más maduros, donde el control no se limita a la oferta al consumidor final, sino que alcanza los bastidores tecnológicos y financieros de la operación.
Para las empresas proveedoras, este movimiento representa un cambio estructural relevante.
Además de aumentar los costes de adaptación y cumplimiento normativo, la regulación tiende a redefinir las relaciones comerciales, exigiendo un mayor alineamiento entre operadores licenciados y socios tecnológicos.
Al mismo tiempo, crea un entorno más previsible, con reglas claras y menor exposición a riesgos regulatorios a medio y largo plazo.
Este avance refuerza también un mensaje político claro: Brasil no pretende construir su mercado regulado únicamente con un enfoque recaudatorio o permisivo.
La ampliación del alcance regulatorio indica una estrategia de control sistémico, orientada a la sostenibilidad, la integridad operativa y una mayor credibilidad institucional ante inversores y organismos internacionales.
La lista oficial de operadores confirma una expansión acelerada en Brasil
La publicación, por parte del Ministerio de Hacienda, de una lista oficial con 184 plataformas autorizadas a operar en el mercado regulado brasileño de apuestas online confirma la velocidad a la que se ha expandido el sector desde la entrada en vigor del nuevo marco legal.
La relación, divulgada por la Secretaría de Premios y Apuestas (SPA), reúne a los operadores considerados aptos para actuar en el país bajo las normas establecidas por el gobierno federal.
La cifra llama la atención no solo por su volumen, sino por lo que representa en términos de competitividad y madurez del mercado.
En pocos meses, Brasil pasó de un escenario ampliamente desregulado a un ecosistema formalmente estructurado, con criterios de autorización, exigencias de compliance y supervisión centralizada.
Según el propio Ministerio de Hacienda, la publicación de la lista busca dar transparencia al mercado, orientar a los consumidores y señalar qué empresas cumplen los requisitos legales para operar hasta la finalización definitiva del proceso de licenciamiento.
Se trata también de una herramienta de ordenamiento del sector en un momento de transición entre el mercado informal y el modelo plenamente regulado.
En un ecosistema cada vez más poblado, el simple hecho de estar licenciado deja de ser una ventaja competitiva y pasa a ser una condición mínima de permanencia.
La competencia tiende a concentrarse en factores como eficiencia operativa, solidez financiera, posicionamiento de marca, adaptación cultural al público local y capacidad de operar dentro de un entorno regulatorio más estricto.
Para los operadores internacionales, la lista funciona además como un termómetro del apetito global por el mercado brasileño, hoy considerado uno de los más prometedores —y al mismo tiempo más desafiantes— entre las nuevas jurisdicciones reguladas.
La lista completa de plataformas autorizadas puede consultarse en el sitio oficial del gobierno federal.
Datos e inteligencia ganan protagonismo
Oddsgate lanza “Brasil On Track”, una plataforma estratégica para el mercado regulado de iGaming en Brasil
Oddsgate anunció el lanzamiento de la plataforma “Brasil On Track”, una solución estratégica desarrollada para ayudar a operadores y participantes del ecosistema a navegar el mercado regulado de iGaming en Brasil.
La iniciativa fue presentada el 5 de febrero de 2026 y llega en un momento en que la regulación brasileña completa su primer año bajo la Ley 14.790/2023, que aportó mayor claridad jurídica, estructura fiscal y requisitos de conformidad para el sector.
“Brasil On Track ofrece monitoreo en tiempo real de hitos regulatorios, indicadores de mercado y requisitos operativos, conectando las actualizaciones legales con su impacto directo en los negocios y vinculándolas a fuentes oficiales”, señala el comunicado de lanzamiento de Oddsgate.
La plataforma fue concebida para transformar la complejidad regulatoria y las exigencias legales en una base de consulta continua y accesible.
Incluye funcionalidades como
- seguimiento en vivo de actualizaciones regulatorias y proyectos de ley en curso; un mapa operativo que traduce cambios legales en acciones prácticas de compliance
- información de mercado sobre demografía de jugadores e indicadores clave
- visibilidad sobre estructuras tributarias, etapas de licenciamiento y requisitos de entrada al mercado; y focos específicos en KYC, AML, herramientas de autoexclusión, protección al consumidor y juego responsable.
Según el Director de Asuntos Regulatorios de Oddsgate, Valter Delfraro Jr., la Ley 14.790/2023 representó un hito que “puso fin a años de incertidumbre y proporcionó seguridad jurídica y claridad operativa”. Destacó que esta nueva fase posiciona al sector brasileño del juego a la par de mercados maduros, aumentando su competitividad internacional y atrayendo inversores globales.
“Transformamos la regulación en una guía práctica y continua para operar en Brasil con menos riesgo y mayor claridad”, añadió Wagner Fernandes, Chief Marketing Officer de Oddsgate, subrayando que la plataforma está diseñada para apoyar a equipos que ingresan, expanden u optimizan operaciones en el país.
El lanzamiento de “Brasil On Track” se produce en un contexto de rápida evolución regulatoria, en el que, según datos oficiales del Ministerio de Hacienda, el sector generó cerca de R$ 36.000 millones en ingresos brutos de juego entre enero y septiembre de 2025, con R$ 3.300 millones recaudados en impuestos federales en el mismo período, evidenciando la escala y el dinamismo del mercado nacional.
La llegada de esta herramienta refleja una demanda creciente de inteligencia de mercado estructurada, indicando que operadores y proveedores ya no buscan solo noticias y actualizaciones, sino soluciones capaces de integrar datos regulatorios con insights operativos y estratégicos en tiempo real.
La tributación entra en el centro del debate
Si por un lado la regulación avanza y el mercado se organiza, por otro la discusión fiscal se convierte en uno de los temas más sensibles del momento, tanto para el gobierno como para los actores del sector.
La posibilidad de una carga tributaria total de hasta el 42% sobre el iGaming y las apuestas deportivas no es solo un escenario teórico, sino un debate con impacto directo en el plano político y económico nacional.
Eso incluye interacciones entre el Ministro de Hacienda, Fernando Haddad, y representantes de la industria.
En declaraciones relacionadas con propuestas de aumento impositivo, Pietro Cardia, director jurídico de la Asociación Nacional de Juegos y Loterías (ANJL), advirtió que cargas fiscales por encima de los estándares internacionales pueden perjudicar el desempeño económico de empresas que operan de forma legal y compliant en Brasil.
Por su parte, João Fraga, CEO de la empresa de soluciones de pago Paag, señaló que cambios tributarios en un mercado aún joven pueden impactar directamente las estrategias de negocio, especialmente a menos de un año del inicio de operaciones bajo el nuevo marco regulatorio.
El sector organizado también ha reforzado públicamente la necesidad de equilibrar la recaudación con la capacidad de competir en un mercado donde aún existe una fuerte competencia ilegal.
Entidades como el Brazilian Institute for Responsible Gaming (IBJR) advierten que, si el enfoque fiscal se concentra únicamente en la recaudación sin un fortalecimiento paralelo de la fiscalización contra operadores no licenciados, los actores regulados podrían perder espacio frente al mercado informal, aumentando el riesgo y la erosión de ingresos fiscales.
Este debate vuelve al centro de la agenda en un momento en que el Ministerio de Hacienda y el Congreso Nacional discuten ajustes fiscales más amplios, en los que la tributación de las apuestas ya ha sido mencionada explícitamente como parte de estrategias de recaudación.
Un mercado más grande, más claro — y más exigente
Los acontecimientos de la semana apuntan a un denominador común: Brasil avanza rápidamente hacia un mercado regulado más estructurado, pero también más riguroso.
Hay mayor claridad jurídica, más control institucional y mayor competencia, pero también costes más elevados y menos margen para la improvisación.
Para quienes observan el país como parte de una estrategia internacional, el momento exige una lectura cuidadosa. Brasil sigue ofreciendo escala y potencial, pero demanda madurez regulatoria, planificación fiscal y una visión de largo plazo.
La consolidación del iGaming en Brasil entra en una fase decisiva. La combinación de una regulación más amplia, el crecimiento del número de operadores, la profesionalización de la inteligencia de mercado y el aumento de la presión fiscal dibuja un escenario más previsible —y al mismo tiempo más selectivo.
El país deja definitivamente atrás la condición de mercado emergente desorganizado y pasa a operar bajo reglas más claras y una supervisión constante.
Para las empresas que consideran a Brasil dentro de su estrategia internacional, el momento requiere decisiones bien calibradas.
El potencial de escala sigue siendo elevado, pero aumentan los costes de entrada y operación, así como la necesidad de compliance, eficiencia y diferenciación.
La tendencia apunta a un crecimiento continuo, pero más racional, favoreciendo a los actores preparados para competir en un entorno regulado, competitivo y fiscalmente más exigente.
The post Brasil en foco: Regulación, mercado y presión fiscal moldean la nueva fase del iGaming appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.
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