Argentina’s government is moving to restrict banks, payment firms and crypto providers from serving unauthorized online gambling platforms as part of a broader crackdown on digital betting.

The government presented a Bill for the Prevention of Gambling and Regulation of Online Gambling to Congress, according to an official notice from the Ministry of Health published on Tuesday. The bill seeks to address gambling addiction by tightening rules on payments, advertising and access to betting platforms.

The legislation directly ties gambling regulation to financial infrastructure, including payment systems and crypto rails, potentially reshaping how unauthorized betting platforms access funding in Argentina.

Crypto and payments face direct restrictions

A central feature of the bill is its treatment of payment infrastructure, which includes traditional banking systems as well as crypto asset service providers. According to the ministry’s statement, the bill would empower authorities to block transactions linked to unauthorized gambling platforms.

“It establishes that financial entities, providers of payment services or virtual assets (cryptocurrencies) are prohibited from offering their services to unauthorized gambling operators,” the announcement states.

The measure would potentially extend compliance obligations to crypto intermediaries such as exchanges and fiat on-ramps, requiring them to identify and block transfers tied to gambling-related wallets or merchant flows. This could affect how users fund offshore betting platforms that rely on crypto deposits as their primary payment method.

The bill would also expand enforcement beyond online betting to any platform facilitating unauthorized betting activity, including a ban on advertising across digital media. Platforms promoting unlicensed operators could face penalties or be required to verify the authorization status of the services they advertise.

Broader crackdown on prediction markets

The new legislation adds to Argentina’s broader push to curb illicit online betting and tighten oversight of digital gambling activity. Local authorities have already taken action against prediction markets — a court instructed Argentina’s national communications and media regulator in March to block access to Polymarket. The case was brought by the Buenos Aires City Lottery, the state-owned entity responsible for regulating gambling in the city.

Restrictions on prediction markets have been emerging across multiple jurisdictions globally, with platforms such as Polymarket and Kalshi facing scrutiny over concerns that event-based trading may constitute unlicensed gambling activity.


Source: Argentina Bill Would Bar Crypto Providers from Serving Unlicensed Gambling Sites