Connect with us

Latest News

Videoslots hits 9,000 games landmark with latest launch

Published

on

Reading Time: < 1 minute

 

Operator reaches milestone with new Pragmatic Play game

Videoslots has reaffirmed its position as the leading online casino with the release of its 9,000th game.

The launch of Mammoth Gold Megaways by long-time partner Pragmatic Play has bolstered Videoslots’ already comprehensive portfolio, allowing it to provide customers with the industry’s widest range of titles from some of its biggest names.

Videoslots announced the launch of its 8,000th title in August 2022, meaning it has only taken five months to release 1,000 additional games.

The huge choice and variety leaves a number of Videoslots’ rivals in the shade, ensuring it retains the honour of being the world’s largest online casino.

Key agreements and partnerships with some of the industry’s leading studios has added an exciting new path for Videoslots to venture down, with 10,000 games now firmly in its sights.

Henrik Enesund, Head of Casino at Videoslots, said: “Reaching 9,000 games is a big milestone for us, and it shows the continuous hard work that everyone at Videoslots is putting in. It is fitting that the 9,000th game launch is from Pragmatic Play, with whom we have a longstanding partnership.

“However, we will not stop at 9,000 and we will continue to add more games to our ever-expanding library of slots, table games, scratch cards and more.”

A spokesperson for Pragmatic Play said: “We’d like to extend our warmest congratulations to Videoslots for hitting such an impressive milestone. 9,000 games is a fantastic achievement, and we’re delighted that many of our top performing titles are included in its library of slots, with Mammoth Gold Megaways™ being the landmark hit.

“We’ve collaborated for a long time and look forward to providing even more player-favourite slots to Videoslots for the years to come!”

Powered by WPeMatico

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Brazil

Betsul to take 1,000 bettors to “Fight Music Show 8” activation

Published

on

betsul-to-take-1,000-bettors-to-“fight-music-show-8”-activation

As an official sponsor of the event, the brand will run activations featuring a punch machine and giveaways

Between betting, adrenaline, and major fights, Betsul is preparing another experience designed to place its customers at the center of “Fight Music Show 8” (FMS 8).

As an official sponsor of the event, the company,  a reference in online betting since 2019,  has launched a special promotion that will take customers to one of the most anticipated nights in the sports entertainment calendar.

To participate, users must place a minimum bet of R$100 on one of the official fight card matches and complete their ticket by the 27th.

The promotion is valid for the first 500 participants, who will receive a pair of tickets for FMS 8, taking place on May 30 at Mercado Livre Arena Pacaembu in São Paulo.

In addition, Betsul will be present at the event with interactive activations, including a punch machine and giveaways throughout the program.

“We want to make our customers’ journey increasingly special. FMS combines entertainment, sport, and digital influence in a format that speaks directly to our audience.

In addition to the promotion and on-site activations, Betsul will be the only betting house offering odds for the fights, delivering a more complete and engaging experience,” said Mateus Rosa, Marketing Manager at the company.

This marks the second consecutive edition in which Betsul sponsors Fight Music Show, reinforcing its strategy of closer engagement with major sports entertainment events in Brazil.

The brand will also feature three ambassadors and influencers participating in the event: Kleber Bambam, Nego do Borel, and Fernanda Lacerda (Mendigata).

About Betsul

Regulated in the betting market, Betsul was founded in 2019 and was the first betting operator in Brazil to receive the RA1000 seal from Reclame Aqui.

The company offers 24/7 customer support and promotes responsible gaming initiatives.

By registering on the site, users aged 18+ gain access to a wide range of sports, competitions, casinos, live casino games, e-sports, and instant games.

Learn more at Betsul. Authorization: SPA/MF Ordinance No. 255/2025

The post Betsul to take 1,000 bettors to “Fight Music Show 8” activation appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

Continue Reading

BC

Apuestas en Brasil bajo fricciones legislativas y cambios regulatorios

Published

on

apuestas-en-brasil-bajo-fricciones-legislativas-y-cambios-regulatorios

El ecosistema brasileño de iGaming, juegos online y apuestas deportivas de cuota fija atraviesa una fase crítica en la que los datos fiscales y los estudios de impacto social están redefiniendo activamente el discurso político federal.

Mientras el Congreso Nacional intensifica la fiscalización sobre las notables discrepancias entre las estimaciones de gasto del Banco Central y la recaudación tributaria federal real, las autoridades regulatorias se preparan para el regreso de los principales foros institucionales de la industria a la capital del país.

Al mismo tiempo, delicadas batallas constitucionales sobre restricciones regionales unilaterales a la publicidad avanzan directamente hacia el Supremo Tribunal Federal, poniendo a prueba los límites entre la soberanía estatal y federal.

En paralelo, el Poder Ejecutivo está implementando exhaustivos planes interinstitucionales para proteger la integridad estructural del deporte profesional frente a la amenaza persistente de redes transnacionales de manipulación de resultados.

El Congreso cuestiona datos de R$ 9 mil millones en recaudación tributaria

La Comisión de Finanzas y Tributación de la Cámara de Diputados convocó oficialmente una audiencia pública extraordinaria en el Plenario 4 para evaluar la debatida relación entre la recaudación federal proveniente de las casas de apuestas deportivas online y sus impactos socioeconómicos más amplios sobre la sociedad brasileña.

La reunión parlamentaria de alto nivel fue programada tras solicitudes conjuntas presentadas por el diputado Paulo Guedes y la diputada Marussa Boldrim (Republicanos-GO).

Ambos parlamentarios buscaron esclarecer las crecientes preocupaciones sobre fallas estructurales en el cálculo, la recaudación y la distribución pública final de los recursos tributarios derivados del sector del juego digital.

La audiencia se convirtió en un importante escenario de confrontación entre distintos datos, reuniendo a representantes clave de la Receita Federal, de la Confederación Nacional del Comercio (CNC) y del sector privado de operadores representado por la Asociación Brasileña de Juegos y Loterías (Abrajogo).

Los participantes presentaron narrativas profundamente contrastantes sobre la tributación total de la industria, la verdadera naturaleza del endeudamiento familiar y la facturación real de las plataformas licenciadas, evidenciando una profunda brecha de comunicación entre los monitores macroeconómicos y la realidad de la industria.

Receita Federal presenta desempeño de 2025

Gustavo Andrade Manrique, subsecretario de Recaudación, Registro y Atención al Cliente de la Receita Federal, participó como representante oficial del Ministerio de Hacienda.

Manrique ofreció un amplio contexto institucional sobre la trayectoria histórica y regulatoria de las apuestas de cuota fija en Brasil.

Recordó a la comisión que, aunque la modalidad fue creada técnicamente por la Ley 13.756 en 2018 bajo otra administración, permaneció durante años en un limbo regulatorio.

Solo fue plenamente operacionalizada mediante las actualizaciones legislativas integrales aprobadas entre 2023 y 2024, tras la promulgación de la Medida Provisoria 1.182 y su posterior conversión en ley.

Esto permitió a la Secretaría de Premios y Apuestas (SPA-MF) emitir autorizaciones formales para entidades corporativas en conformidad.

“Durante el año calendario 2025, el primer año fiscal completo de operaciones federales estructuradas, registramos una recaudación definitiva de R$ 9 mil millones proveniente directamente de empresas autorizadas por la Secretaría de Premios y Apuestas”, informó oficialmente Manrique al panel de diputados.

“Además, observando el actual ejercicio fiscal 2026, el monto total recaudado por el Tesoro federal hasta finales de abril asciende a R$ 3,1 mil millones.”

El subsecretario enfatizó que, según las directrices legales vigentes, estos fondos están destinados estrictamente a sectores públicos esenciales, incluidos salud pública, infraestructura turística y seguridad pública federal.

En cuanto a métricas de fiscalización, Manrique reveló que la Receita Federal ejecutó una operación de auditoría altamente focalizada y basada en datos durante el segundo semestre de 2025.

Al cruzar registros bancarios con informes de ingresos declarados, la autoridad tributaria identificó con éxito a 22 operadores autorizados que no habían pagado correctamente sus impuestos.

Esta evasión localizada generó una deuda tributaria acumulada de R$ 111 millones.

Manrique confirmó que, tras la emisión formal de notificaciones administrativas, los 22 operadores regularizaron completamente su situación ante el Tesoro, evitando suspensiones severas de licencia.

Reiteró que el Fisco mantiene mecanismos continuos de monitoreo en tiempo real para incorporar operadores clandestinos al mercado legal, principalmente para mitigar riesgos graves de delitos financieros transnacionales como lavado de dinero y financiamiento del terrorismo.

A pesar de elogiar los índices de cumplimiento de los operadores licenciados, Manrique formuló duras críticas estructurales sobre cómo se aplica actualmente el Impuesto sobre la Renta a los premios de los jugadores.

El Ministerio de Hacienda había propuesto originalmente que el impuesto retenido del 15% fuera descontado automáticamente en el momento exacto en que el jugador solicita un retiro.

Sin embargo, el Congreso Nacional modificó este esquema durante el debate legislativo, estableciendo que el impuesto fuera calculado y declarado de forma anual.

El subsecretario argumentó que, dado que la tabla progresiva anual establece un umbral de exención cercano a R$ 30.000 por año, solo un porcentaje extremadamente pequeño de apostadores recreativos alcanza ese nivel imponible en un período de 12 meses.

Según él, este compromiso legislativo reduce drásticamente la recaudación efectiva del Estado, dejando de captar enormes ingresos potenciales provenientes del 97% de los fondos que regresan a las billeteras de los jugadores en forma de premios.

La CNC vincula las apuestas con altos niveles de morosidad

Fábio Bentes, economista jefe de la Confederación Nacional del Comercio (CNC), contrarrestó el optimismo fiscal del Estado presentando los resultados empíricos de un complejo estudio econométrico realizado por la entidad.

El estudio de la CNC monitoreó el endeudamiento de los hogares brasileños y sus hábitos de consumo durante un período de varios años entre enero de 2023 y marzo de 2026, utilizando técnicas de modelado de datos que la confederación perfecciona desde 2010.

Bentes destacó que el rápido crecimiento de las apuestas online es un fenómeno tecnológico internacional impulsado por la penetración de smartphones y no es exclusivo de Brasil.

Para aislar el impacto específico y directo de las apuestas digitales sobre el presupuesto familiar promedio, la CNC utilizó datos anonimizados del Banco Central de Brasil, que indicaban un crecimiento explosivo de aproximadamente 500% en transferencias hacia plataformas de juego durante los últimos tres años.

El modelo econométrico aplicó variables de control rígidas, incluyendo fortaleza del mercado laboral regional, expansión del crédito al consumo e índices básicos de inflación, para evitar atribuir incorrectamente cambios macroeconómicos generales al iGaming.

El análisis final no concluyó que el aumento general del número de brasileños endeudados haya sido provocado exclusivamente por las apuestas online.

Sin embargo, el modelo sí aisló una correlación altamente severa y estadísticamente innegable respecto a la “morosidad severa” (inadimplência severa), definida por Bentes como la situación desesperada en la que un hogar pierde completamente la capacidad financiera de cumplir sus deudas sistémicas.

“Cuando analizamos específicamente los parámetros de morosidad severa, podemos afirmar con seguridad que existe un efecto causal directo”, explicó Bentes a la comisión.

“Según nuestras proyecciones matemáticas, por cada aumento del 10% en el gasto financiero de un hogar en plataformas de apuestas online, existe un incremento correspondiente de 0,12 puntos porcentuales en los índices de morosidad severa.”

El estudio también identificó un impacto operacional significativo sobre los plazos generales de crédito.

Por cada aumento del 10% en transferencias relacionadas con apuestas, el tiempo promedio de retraso en el pago de cuentas domésticas aumenta casi medio día (0,45 días).

La CNC estima que esta reasignación de capital privó al comercio minorista brasileño de R$ 4 mil millones en consumo durante el período analizado, equivalente, según Bentes, a “perder dos temporadas completas de compras navideñas para el comercio minorista”.

Crucialmente, los datos demostraron que estos efectos negativos son mucho más intensos entre hogares de bajos ingresos y públicos jóvenes, que frecuentemente arriesgan recursos esenciales en juegos digitales de alta volatilidad.

A la luz de estos hallazgos, la CNC manifestó una posición institucional favorable a la explotación legal inmediata de opciones tradicionales de juego físico, como casinos presenciales, resorts integrados y salas de bingo, mientras exhortó al gobierno federal a actuar con extrema cautela respecto al entorno digital.

Bentes argumentó que los establecimientos físicos generan empleo local masivo, requieren grandes inversiones inmobiliarias y permiten una fiscalización inmediata y transparente por parte del Estado.

Las plataformas digitales, en contraste, operan con una presencia física mínima y representan objetivos mucho más difíciles para el monitoreo social y financiero.

La industria cuestiona las estimaciones del Banco Central

El sector privado respondió con firmeza a los supuestos presentados por políticos y representantes del comercio.

Witoldo Hendrich, presidente de la Asociación Brasileña de Juegos y Loterías (Abrajogo), participó en el debate parlamentario por videoconferencia debido a problemas de salud, mientras que Ana Bárbara, directora de Relaciones Gubernamentales de la entidad, condujo la defensa técnica directamente desde el plenario.

Hendrich criticó lo que describió como un persistente “problema de comunicación” entre la industria del iGaming, el público general y las autoridades federales, lo que deriva en propuestas legislativas distorsionadas.

El presidente de Abrajogo cuestionó directamente la metodología de los estudios de consumo presentados por la CNC, argumentando que los economistas externos confunden el volumen total de transacciones con gasto real irreversible del consumidor.

“De cada R$ 100 apostados en un sistema regulado, aproximadamente R$ 96 o R$ 97 regresan a los jugadores en forma de premios”, afirmó Hendrich.

“Por lo tanto, el volumen bruto de transacciones es un parámetro completamente equivocado para medir el impacto financiero del sector.”

Añadió que el mercado regulado representa solo cerca del 50% de la actividad total en Brasil, mientras que el resto opera en la ilegalidad a través de plataformas offshore.

Abrajogo detalla la estructura fiscal del sector

Ana Bárbara presentó una explicación detallada de la estructura económica del sector para aclarar las dudas de los legisladores.

Partiendo de un ejemplo base de R$ 100, explicó que el retorno promedio al jugador (RTP) es del 97%, lo que deja un margen bruto de apenas 3% para los operadores.

Sobre ese margen se aplican múltiples impuestos, incluyendo la tasa específica del 15% sobre el GGR y los tributos corporativos estándar como IRPJ, CSLL, PIS y Cofins.

“En términos prácticos, la carga fiscal efectiva del sector regulado es de aproximadamente 32% sobre sus ingresos reales”, explicó.

La ejecutiva señaló que la facturación real del sector regulado en 2025 fue de R$ 36 mil millones, con una recaudación tributaria de R$ 9 mil millones.

Legisladores cuestionan impactos socioeconómicos

A pesar de las explicaciones técnicas, las resistencias políticas continuaron.

El diputado Merlong Solano cuestionó el equilibrio entre recaudación fiscal y los costos sociales asociados al juego problemático, incluyendo salud mental y sobreendeudamiento.

El diputado Luiz Carlos Hauly adoptó una postura más dura, calificando la expansión de las apuestas online como una “tragedia para las familias brasileñas” y proponiendo su prohibición total.

Otros parlamentarios exigieron mayor transparencia de datos por parte del Banco Central y del Ministerio de Hacienda, así como claridad sobre la operativa del sistema de exclusión de jugadores en programas de renegociación de deudas.

Inconsistencias en datos generan pedido formal de información

El punto de mayor tensión se produjo cuando el diputado Paulo Guedes señaló discrepancias entre los datos del Banco Central y las cifras oficiales de recaudación.

Según sus cálculos, si los brasileños mueven cerca de R$ 360 mil millones al año en apuestas, la recaudación debería ser significativamente mayor.

Ante la falta de consenso, la comisión aprobó por unanimidad un pedido formal de información al Ministerio de Hacienda, la SPA-MF y el Banco Central.

Se convocará una nueva audiencia una vez que los datos oficiales sean entregados.

BiS Brasília 2026 confirmado para junio

En paralelo al debate político, el sector continúa con su agenda institucional.

El BiS Brasília 2026 fue confirmado para los días 2 y 3 de junio en el Royal Tulip Brasília Alvorada, reuniendo a operadores, reguladores y proveedores tecnológicos.

El evento abordará temas como AML, regulación, integridad, protección al jugador y relaciones institucionales, con el objetivo de fortalecer el diálogo entre el sector público y privado en Brasil.

ANJL impugna prohibición de publicidad en Río Grande do Sul

La Asociación Nacional de Juegos y Loterías (ANJL) presentó una Acción Directa de Inconstitucionalidad (ADI 7971) ante el Supremo Tribunal Federal contra la Ley 16.508/2026 del estado de Rio Grande do Sul.

La norma prohíbe la publicidad de loterías y apuestas en el estado, además de imponer restricciones a patrocinios y emisiones publicitarias en radio, televisión y plataformas digitales.

La ANJL sostiene que la ley invade competencias exclusivas de la Unión y genera inseguridad jurídica para operadores y medios de comunicación, además de debilitar la capacidad de diferenciar el mercado regulado del ilegal.

El caso está ahora bajo análisis del STF.

Ministerio del Deporte publica manual contra amaño de partidos

El Ministerio del Deporte lanzó un manual oficial de prevención y combate del amaño de partidos, elaborado en conjunto con organismos federales y fuerzas de seguridad.

El documento establece directrices sobre detección de patrones sospechosos, tipologías de fraude y obligaciones de clubes y operadores para garantizar la integridad deportiva.

La iniciativa busca reforzar la transparencia y la protección del ecosistema deportivo en el país.

The post Apuestas en Brasil bajo fricciones legislativas y cambios regulatorios appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

Continue Reading

Abrajogo

Brazil betting under legislative friction and changing regulations

Published

on

brazil-betting-under-legislative-friction-and-changing-regulations

The Brazilian iGaming, online gaming, and fixed-odds sports betting ecosystem is navigating a critical phase where fiscal data and social impact studies are actively reshaping the federal political discourse.

As the National Congress intensifies its oversight over the noticeable discrepancies between central bank spending estimates and actual federal tax collection, regulatory authorities are preparing for the return of major institutional industry forums to the nation’s capital.

Concurrently, delicate constitutional battles over unilateral regional advertising restrictions are heading directly to the Supreme Federal Court, testing the limits of state versus federal sovereignty.

At the same time, the executive branch is rolling out exhaustive, inter-institutional playbooks to safeguard the structural integrity of professional sports from the persistent threat of cross-border match-fixing syndicates.

Congress disputes R$ 9b tax revenue data

The Chamber of Deputies’ Finance and Taxation Commission officially convened an extraordinary public hearing in Plenary 4 to evaluate the highly debated relationship between federal tax collection on online sports betting houses and its broader socio-economic impacts on Brazilian society.

The high-level parliamentary meeting was formally scheduled following joint procedural requests submitted by Deputy Paulo Guedes and Deputy Marussa Boldrim (Republicanos-GO).

Both parliamentarians sought to clarify escalating concerns regarding structural failures in the calculation, collection, and ultimate public distribution of tax resources derived from the digital gambling sector.

The hearing served as a major confrontational stage for divergent data points, bringing together key representatives from the Federal Revenue Office (Receita Federal), the National Confederation of Commerce (CNC), and the private operators’ sector represented by the Brazilian Gaming and Lottery Association (Abrajogo).

The speakers presented deeply contrasting narratives regarding overall industry taxation, the true nature of household indebtedness, and the real corporate turnover of licensed platforms, highlighting a profound communication gap between macroeconomic monitors and industry realities.

Federal revenue reports 2025 performance

Gustavo Andrade Manrique, the Subsecretary of Collection, Registry, and Customer Service at the Receita Federal, attended as the official representative of the Ministry of Finance.

Manrique provided extensive institutional context regarding the historical and regulatory trajectory of fixed-odds betting in Brazil.

He reminded the commission that while the modality was technically created by Law 13.756 back in 2018 under a previous administration, it remained in a regulatory limbo for years.

It was only fully operationalized through the comprehensive legislative updates passed between 2023 and 2024, following the enactment of Medida Provisória 1.182 and its subsequent conversion into statutory law.

This paved the way for the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting (SPA-MF) to issue formal authorizations for compliant corporate entities.

“During the 2025 calendar year, the very first full fiscal year of structured federal operations, we recorded a definitive tax collection of R$ 9 billion stemming directly from compliant companies authorized by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting,” Manrique officially informed the panel of deputies.

“Furthermore, looking at the current 2026 fiscal year, the total amount collected by the federal treasury up until the end of April stands at R$ 3.1 billion.”

The subsecretary emphasized that according to current statutory guidelines, these massive funds are strictly earmarked for vital public sectors, including national public health initiatives, tourism infrastructure development, and federal public security forces.

Turning to enforcement metrics, Manrique revealed that the Receita Federal executed a highly targeted, data-driven audit operation during the second half of 2025.

By cross-referencing bank transaction records with declared revenue reports, the tax authority successfully identified 22 authorized corporate operators that had failed to remit their exact due taxes.

This localized evasion resulted in an accumulated tax debt of R$ 111 million.

Manrique confirmed that following the formal issuance of administrative compliance notices, all 22 operators fully regularized their standing with the treasury, avoiding severe license suspensions.

He reiterated that the Fisco maintains continuous, real-time monitoring mechanisms to bring underground operators into the legal fold, primarily to mitigate the severe risks of transnational financial crimes such as money laundering and terrorist financing.

Despite praising the compliance rates of licensed operators, Manrique voiced sharp structural criticisms regarding how the individual Income Tax (Imposto de Renda) is currently levied on player prizes.

The Ministry of Finance had originally proposed a dynamic where the 15% withholding tax would be deducted automatically at the exact moment a player requests a payout.

However, the National Congress ultimately altered this framework during the legislative debates, mandating that the tax be calculated and declared on an annual basis.

The subsecretary argued that because the annual progressive tax table sets an exemption threshold of approximately R$ 30,000 per year, only an incredibly small percentage of recreational bettors ever hit that taxable tier within a 12-month window.

This legislative compromise, he argued, drastically diminishes the effective fiscal collection of the state, missing out on massive potential revenue from the 97% of total funds that flow back into player wallets as prizes.

CNC links bets to severe default rates

Fábio Bentes, the Chief Economist of the National Confederation of Commerce (CNC), countered the state’s fiscal optimism by presenting the empirical results of a highly complex econometric study conducted by the entity.

The CNC study tracked Brazilian household debt and purchasing habits over a multi-year period stretching from January 2023 to March 2026, utilizing data modeling techniques that the confederation has consistently refined since 2010.

Bentes noted that the rapid growth of online betting is an international technological phenomenon facilitated by smartphone penetration, and is by no means isolated to Brazil.

To isolate the specific, unvarnished impact of digital betting on the average family budget, the CNC utilized anonymized tracking data published by the Central Bank of Brazil (Banco Central), which indicated an explosive growth of approximately 500% in digital gambling transfers over the past three years.

The econometric model applied rigid control variables, including regional labor market strength, standard consumer credit expansion, and baseline inflation indexes, to ensure that general macroeconomic shifts were not incorrectly attributed to iGaming platforms.

The final analysis did not conclude that the broad, generalized increase in the overall number of indebted Brazilian citizens was driven exclusively by online betting.

However, the econometric model did isolate a highly severe, statistically undeniable correlation when looking specifically at the metric of “severe default” (inadimplência severa), which Bentes defined as the desperate condition where a household has completely lost the financial capacity to honor its outstanding systemic debts.

“When we drill down into the specific parameters of severe default, we can confidently state that a direct causal effect exists,” Bentes explained to the commission.

“According to our mathematical projections, for every 10% increase in a household’s financial expenditure on online betting platforms, there is a corresponding increase of 0.12 percentage points in severe default rates.”

The study also identified a significant operational drag on general credit timelines.

For every 10% growth in gambling-related digital transfers, the average amount of time a consumer delays the payment of standard household bills increases by nearly half a day (0.45 days).

The CNC estimates that this shifting allocation of capital directly starved the traditional Brazilian retail and commerce sector of R$ 4 billion in consumer spending over the analyzed period, which Bentes contextualized as being equivalent to “losing two complete Christmas shopping seasons for the retail sector.”

Crucially, the data proved that these negative socio-economic effects are profoundly more intense among lower-income households and younger demographics, who routinely risk critical subsistence capital on high-volatility digital games.

In light of these findings, the CNC manifested a strong, formal institutional position favoring the immediate legal exploitation of traditional, land-based gaming options, such as physical brick-and-mortar casinos, integrated resorts, and physical bingo halls, while simultaneously urging the federal government to exercise extreme caution regarding the digital betting environment.

Bentes argued that physical establishments are naturally tied to massive local job creation, require heavy infrastructural real estate investments, and allow for immediate, highly transparent physical oversight and auditing by state authorities.

Digital platforms, by contrast, operate with minimal local physical footprints and represent far more elusive targets for social and financial monitoring.

Industry contests central bank estimates

The private sector pushed back aggressively against the assumptions of the politicians and the retail sector.

Witoldo Hendrich, the President of the Brazilian Gaming and Lottery Association (Abrajogo), joined the parliamentary debate via a live videoconference link due to sudden health issues, while Ana Bárbara, the association’s Director of Government Relations, managed the technical defense directly from the plenary floor.

Hendrich criticized what he described as a severe, persistent “communication problem” between the iGaming industry, the general public, and the federal public powers, which routinely leads to flawed legislative proposals.

The president of Abrajogo launched a direct methodological critique against the consumer spending research presented by the CNC and frequently cited by politicians.

He argued that external econometricians routinely fail to understand the core mathematical design of the gaming industry, mistakenly treating total transaction turnover (volume de apostas) as if it were a standard, irreversible consumer expenditure like purchasing a commercial product or subscribing to a digital streaming service.

“Out of every R$ 100 that a player places into a regulated betting system, approximately R$ 96 to R$ 97 is immediately returned to the player base in the form of prizes,” Hendrich stated emphatically.

“Therefore, gross transaction volume is a fundamentally flawed parameter for measuring the financial drain on our society.

This metric works perfectly for analyzing expenditures on a PlayStation or a Netflix subscription, but it is completely deceptive for bets. Our industry does not simply absorb capital; it provides entertainment while continuously returning the vast majority of that capital back to the consumer.”

Hendrich further dropped a significant market estimate, asserting that despite the implementation of federal licensing, the regulated market in Brazil currently represents only about 50% of the true national volume.

The remaining half of the market, he warned, continues to operate entirely in the shadows of illegality, run by unauthorized offshore networks.

The Abrajogo representative cautioned that the R$ 3.1 billion collected by the government in early 2026 represents “only a fraction” of the true fiscal contribution of the sector, as it completely omits the massive corporate income taxes, payroll taxes, and service taxes paid by localized technology providers, marketing agencies, and platform developers that form the wider industry supply chain.

Hendrich revealed to the deputies that in his private consultancy practice, he currently advises far more international gaming companies that chose not to enter the Brazilian regulated market than companies that did.

He explained that a total lack of regulatory predictability, coupled with constant threats from congressmen to retroactively alter the tax framework, is actively scaring away major tier-one global operators.

The president of Abrajogo defended that the only viable path to expanding the state’s fiscal collection is not to raise existing tax rates, but rather to make life easier for the licensed operator.

This strategy would naturally draw consumers away from clandestine channels. Unregulated websites, he noted, host their operations in distant offshore tax havens and process all financial transactions via un-trackable cryptocurrencies, leaving them entirely outside the reach of the Federal Police or the Receita Federal.

Hendrich urged the commission to protect regulatory stability, noting that the industry’s high Return to Player (RTP) rates are a sign of a healthy, highly competitive legal market that stabilizes consumer entertainment.

Abrajogo details structural taxation framework

Following a series of highly tense exchanges where several parliamentarians openly admitted to being completely confused by the overlapping financial percentages, Ana Bárbara requested the floor to provide an official, step-by-step mathematical breakdown of the industry’s balance sheets.

Deputy Paulo Guedes had explicitly noted that he could not comprehend how an industry generating such massive digital transaction volumes could report such tight corporate margins.

“With your permission, I will explain exactly how the internal financial mechanics operate. Let us start with a basic baseline of R$ 100,” Ana Bárbara explained directly to the plenary.

She detailed that the average competitive Return to Player (RTP) maintained by authorized brands in Brazil sits at 97%. While the official ordinances published by the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting technically permit a minimum RTP of 85%, the fierce commercial competition in the country forces platforms to maintain the 97% tier to retain their user base.

“This means that out of an initial R$ 100 pool, R$ 97 automatically flows right back to the citizens as prize payouts.

This is the exact data point that the government’s systems track, and it is precisely why the Receita Federal mistakenly argues that this R$ 97 pool should be subjected to an aggressive 15% instant withholding tax,” she clarified.

Consequently, the real gross margin available to the betting operator—known globally as the Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR)—is restricted to just 3% of the total volume handled.

Ana Bárbara then detailed how the state heavily taxes this remaining 3% slice:

  • Specific betting tax: A mandatory 15% tax directly levied on the GGR under Law 13.756, which features strict social destitutions for education and security. No other commercial sector in Brazil pays this tax.

  • Standard corporate levies: The GGR is then subjected to the standard corporate tax matrix, including the Social Integration Program (PIS), the Contribution for the Financing of Social Security (Cofins), the Social Contribution on Net Income (CSLL), and the Corporate Income Tax (IRPJ).

“While the vast majority of traditional Brazilian corporate sectors face an effective tax burden ranging between 18% and 20%, regulated betting operators are currently paying approximately 32% of everything they actually earn,” Ana Bárbara detailed.

“In simple terms, one-third of the operator’s real revenue goes straight into the government’s coffers.”

To solidify her defense, the director stated that the real, consolidated corporate turnover (faturamento real) for all regulated bets in Brazil throughout 2025 was R$ 36 billion.

Out of that exact corporate revenue pool, R$ 9 billion was paid directly to the federal government in taxes.

The R$ 9 billion figure reported by the Receita Federal did not represent a small fraction of a multi-hundred-billion-dollar pool; it represented nearly one-third of the industry’s total real gross income.

Ana Bárbara added that on top of this federal 32% burden, operators must also pay between 2% and 4% in municipal Service Taxes (ISS) depending on the city where their operational headquarters are physically registered.

Lawmakers question socio-economic costs

Despite the detailed financial accounting, the political resistance within the commission remained intense.

Deputy Merlong Solano directed a series of sharp questions to the panel regarding the ultimate balance between state tax collection and systemic social costs.

Solano questioned whether the R$ 9 billion collected could ever truly compensate the state for the looming public health crisis driven by gambling addiction (ludopatia), escalating clinical anxiety, and severe depression among citizens.

He specifically demanded that the Ministry of Health provide immediate projections regarding the added financial pressure these mental health conditions will exert on the Unified Health System (SUS).

Furthermore, Solano questioned the industry’s economic utility, noting that because online betting is an heavily automated, digital sector, it creates an incredibly low number of direct local jobs compared to traditional brick-and-mortar commerce.

Deputy Luiz Carlos Hauly followed with a fierce, unconditional ideological attack against the digital gaming industry.

Hauly characterized the sudden expansion of betting platforms as a “plague and a tragedy that has collapsed upon the Brazilian family structure.”

He argued that the high velocity and instant feedback loops of online slots and digital sports books are uniquely destructive compared to old-school federal lotteries.

Hauly announced to the plenary that he has officially drafted and filed a comprehensive legislative project designed to entirely repeal the existing regulatory framework and completely ban all forms of online sports betting nationwide.

“The Brazilian state, acting with the clear connivance of this parliament, has utterly failed in its constitutional duty to protect the basic financial and psychological safety of its citizens,” Hauly declared.

Deputy Mauro Benevides took a more administrative stance, demanding that the Central Bank and the Ministry of Finance cease utilizing speculative private market estimates and immediately provide formal, audited, and consolidated data regarding the industry’s real 2025 performance.

Benevides also raised practical concerns regarding how the banking system will technically operationalize the federal ban preventing citizens registered in debt relief programs like “Desenrola Brasil” from placing digital wagers.

The deputy suggested that the restriction period should be legally extended to a mandatory two-year window, ensuring that individuals attempting to reconstruct their credit health are physically blocked from diverting rehabilitation funds into high-risk platforms.

Inconsistent metrics prompt formal state inquiry

The absolute peak of political tension during the extraordinary hearing arrived when Deputy Paulo Guedes pointed out a massive mathematical contradiction between the state’s official figures and the macroeconomic data published by the Central Bank.

Guedes noted that if the Central Bank’s official consumer tracking data is correct, which states that Brazilians transfer approximately R$ 30 billion per month to betting domains, the total annual transaction volume would sit at a staggering R$ 360 billion.

The deputy argued that even if one applies the industry’s tightest margin models, a 15% statutory tax on that scale of transaction volume should easily generate a federal collection exceeding R$ 40 billion per year.

This projection stands in stark, irreconcilable contrast to the R$ 9 billion in tax revenue reported by the Receita Federal for 2025.

“There is a profound, undeniable error in the data being presented to this parliament,” Paulo Guedes asserted.

“We demand to know exactly where this error lies: is the Central Bank overestimating consumer transfers, is the Ministry of Finance underreporting figures, or are we facing a massive, systemic tax evasion scheme run by operators?”

Guedes referenced an investigative journalism report published by The Intercept Brasil, which claimed that due to a total lack of specialized state auditing tools, betting platforms are routinely manipulating the calculation of their Gross Gaming Revenue (GGR), underreporting their real earnings to avoid paying their full fiscal dues.

Faced with this deep statistical divide and a persistent lack of clarity, the members of the Finance and Taxation Commission voted unanimously to protocol a formal, legally binding Request for Information (Requerimento de Informação) addressed directly to the Minister of Finance, the leadership of the Secretariat of Prizes and Betting, and the Governor of the Central Bank.

The document demands the immediate submission of unified, audited financial data sets.

The commission confirmed that a second public hearing will be scheduled as soon as the official government data is received to continue the cross-examination.

“We will return to this debate very soon, bringing all stakeholders back to this room, to ensure the absolute transparency that Brazilian society deserves,” the president of the commission concluded.

BiS Brasília 2026 confirmed for June

While the intense political debate unfolds within the walls of Congress, the strategic corporate planning for the industry continues to accelerate.

The executive committee behind the Brazilian iGaming Summit (BiS) has officially confirmed that the second edition of BiS Brasília will take place on June 2 and 3, 2026.

The high-level business forum has selected the premium convention spaces of the Royal Tulip Brasília Alvorada as its official venue, aiming to position the nation’s capital as the central geographic hub for technical dialogues between the private sector and federal regulators.

The 2026 program has been tightly structured to address the immediate corporate challenges of the newly regulated market, shifting away from general marketing topics to focus deeply on operational resilience, anti-money laundering (AML) compliance, data privacy, and government relations.

The gathering is designed to facilitate direct networking between licensed operators, global B2B technology providers, legal experts, and state lottery directors who are currently shaping regional frameworks.

The academic agenda features a series of highly specialized panels designed to address the exact regulatory anxieties currently being debated in Congress:

  • International cooperation and strategic bridges: Led by international regulatory specialist John Aquilina, this session will analyze real-world case studies from mature European jurisdictions.

    The debate will focus on how Brazil can build institutional relationships with overseas regulators to track illicit financial flows and enforce responsible gaming compliance across international borders.

  • The profile of the Brazilian bettor: Presented by prominent market analyst Thiago Iusim, this data-driven session will dissect localized consumer behavior trends from the first half of 2026.

    The analysis will contrast behavioral data from the legal market against underground metrics, focusing heavily on how operators can deploy automated player protection mechanisms without harming user retention.

BiS Brasília operates as a core component of the prestigious corporate portfolio of the SiGMA Group, one of the world’s absolute leaders in B2B events and business platforms for the gaming, lottery, and digital entertainment sectors.

ANJL challenges Rio Grande do Sul ad ban

The legal friction between regional state initiatives and central federal authority has reached a critical flashpoint.

The National Association of Games and Lotteries (ANJL) has officially filed a high-profile Direct Action of Unconstitutionality (Ação Direta de Inconstitucionalidade – ADI 7971) before the Supreme Federal Court (STF), challenging a highly restrictive regional law enacted by the state government of Rio Grande do Sul.

The lawsuit was formally processed and forwarded to the office of Supreme Court Justice Cármen Lúcia for immediate analysis.

The core of the legal battle is state Law 16.508/2026, which was sanctioned by the Rio Grande do Sul executive on April 24, 2026.

The local statute seeks to impose severe unilateral restrictions on the operations of digital gaming companies within state lines.

Specifically, the provincial law mandates that all betting platforms include massive, highly graphic health warnings regarding gambling addiction and severe financial ruin on all marketing materials.

Furthermore, the law introduces an absolute ban prohibiting betting brands from sponsoring any local sporting or cultural events within the state’s territory.

Most damaging to media networks, the state law implements a complete broadcasting ban on all sports betting commercials across traditional television, radio, live streaming, and video-on-demand platforms between the hours of 6:00 AM and 9:00 PM.

Non-compliant corporations face heavy localized administrative fines, asset seizures, and immediate digital domain blocking within state borders.

The constitutional defense of federal supremacy

In the formal petition submitted to the Supreme Court, signed by senior constitutional lawyers Pietro Cardia Lorenzoni and Bernardo Cavalcanti Freire, the ANJL argues that the state government of Rio Grande do Sul has committed a blatant violation of the federal constitution by overstepping its legislative boundaries.

The association maintains that under the constitutional architecture of Brazil, fixed-odds betting has already been fully codified as a legitimate national lottery modality under strict federal regulation.

Consequently, individual states possess the administrative power to operate their own local lotteries, but they have absolutely no constitutional authority to legislate on general commercial advertising or national economic sectors.

The ANJL’s legal counsel points out that the local law directly violates multiple sections of Article 22 of the Federal Constitution, which explicitly dictates that the Federal Union holds the absolute, exclusive competence to legislate on civil law, commercial law, propaganda, and national telecommunications policies.

Furthermore, the association argues that the law breaches Articles 170 and 174, which protect the principles of free enterprise, free competition, and a unified national economic order.

The association has requested that Justice Cármen Lúcia immediately grant an urgent preliminary injunction (medida cautelar) to fully suspend the operational effects of Law 16.508/2026 until the plenary of the Supreme Court can deliver a final merit ruling.

The ANJL argues that allowing individual states to unilaterally fracture the national marketing landscape creates extreme legal insecurity for operators that paid R$ 30 million for federal licenses.

The association concludes that if these chaotic regional bans are allowed to stand, consumers will find it impossible to differentiate between legal, federally monitored websites and dangerous offshore black-market domains, ultimately causing a severe increase in unregulated gambling.

Ministry of Sport issues match-fixing manual

In a decisive move to protect the core sporting asset that drives the entire legal betting economy, the Ministry of Sport has officially published and distributed its first comprehensive Manual for the Prevention and Combate of Sports Match-Fixing.

The highly technical publication was developed by the National Secretariat of Sports Betting and Economic Development of Sport, functioning as a unified operational playbook for sports federations, athletic clubs, law enforcement bodies, and compliance teams.

The manual is the direct operational output of the Inter-institutional Working Group, a specialized task force created by the presidency to link the investigative efforts of the Ministry of Sport, the Ministry of Justice and Public Security, and the Ministry of Finance, alongside direct intelligence feeds from global integrity networks.

The document features an accessible yet deeply technical language, breaking down the complex modern methodologies used by international criminal syndicates to manipulate matches.

The core sections of the federal manual detail:

  • Fraud Typologies: Identifying specific, high-risk micro-events within matches—such as intentional yellow cards, specific numbers of corner kicks, or spot-fixing in lower-tier regional leagues—that are highly vulnerable to manipulation.

  • Suspicious Pattern Analysis: Providing compliance officers with algorithmic metrics to instantly differentiate between organic, high-volume fan betting and highly anomalous, coordinated odd movements driven by syndicates.

  • Traceability and Whistleblowing: Outlining the mandatory legal responsibilities of sports clubs and operators to maintain immutable digital trails, deploy automated monitoring software, and route alerts through centralized federal whistleblowing channels.

Minister of Sport Paulo Henrique Cordeiro stated during the launch ceremony that combating match-fixing requires a permanent, highly integrated preventative posture from all commercial and state actors.

He emphasized that the manual is an essential tool to guarantee that the rapidly growing Brazilian betting ecosystem operates under the strict pillars of transparency, protecting both athletic credibility and the safety of the wider society.

National Sports Betting Secretary Giovanni Rocco added that the publication marks a permanent milestone in the consolidation of public compliance policies, ensuring that Brazil’s regulated market aligns perfectly with the highest international standards of sports integrity.

The post Brazil betting under legislative friction and changing regulations appeared first on Americas iGaming & Sports Betting News.

Continue Reading

Trending

Get it on Google Play

Fresh slot games releases by the top brands of the industry. We provide you with the latest news straight from the entertainment industries.

The platform also hosts industry-relevant webinars, and provides detailed reports, making it a one-stop resource for anyone seeking information about operators, suppliers, regulators, and professional services in the European gaming market. The portal's primary goal is to keep its extensive reader base updated on the latest happenings, trends, and developments within the gaming and gambling sector, with an emphasis on the European market while also covering pertinent global news. It's an indispensable resource for gaming professionals, operators, and enthusiasts alike.

Contact us: [email protected]

Editorial / PR Submissions: [email protected]

Copyright © 2015 - 2024 - Recent Slot Releases is part of HIPTHER Agency. Registered in Romania under Proshirt SRL, Company number: 2134306, EU VAT ID: RO21343605. Office address: Blvd. 1 Decembrie 1918 nr.5, Targu Mures, Romania