Inside Ukraine’s Aggressive Shift in Gambling Oversight
Ukraine’s newly restructured regulatory apparatus has brought a decade-long freeze on lottery operations to an end, anchoring a broader, highly digitalized enforcement campaign that clawed ₴569 million ($12.8 million) into the state budget during its first twelve months.
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The data, released in an inaugural annual report following a quiet transition from the previous oversight body, KRAIL, points to a heavy reliance on automated surveillance and rapid-response blacklisting to rein in a sprawling market. Working alongside the Ministry of Digital Transformation, the revamped agency, PlayCity, has cleared 250 licenses over the past year.
The revival of the country’s lottery sector emerged as a significant fiscal driver. After more than ten years of suspension, three lottery operators were licensed, contributing roughly ₴72 million in initial fees and generating more than ₴74 million in tax revenues during the opening quarter of 2026 alone. Across the broader market, the state clawed back an estimated ₴14 billion from gambling organizers, alongside ₴2 billion in personal income taxes tied to betting activities.
Much of the agency’s energy, however, has been directed toward policing the periphery of the legal market. Financial penalties issued for regulatory violations surged past ₴988 million, supplemented by an additional ₴80 million targeting non-compliant advertising.
The technical mechanics of how Ukraine intends to enforce these boundaries are becoming clearer. By shortening the bureaucratic timeline required to block unauthorized websites to a single day, the regulator took down more than 4,100 illegal gambling domains and severed over 700 social media accounts hosting unauthorized promotional content.
A newly launched online portal now lets the public flag illegal advertisements directly, feeding into a system where violators face statutory administrative fines of up to ₴5,188,200.
The Infrastructure of Real-Time Tracking
Rather than relying on retroactive auditing, the regulatory framework is shifting toward real-time technical integration. Eleven operators have now been plugged into the State Online Gambling Monitoring system, known as DSOM.
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The platform captures live transaction data across the country’s regulated network, logging wagers, payouts, and returns as they occur. Gennedy Novikov, who directs PlayCity, characterized the initiative as a necessary shift toward infrastructure the state previously lacked, moving toward a data-driven model designed to flag systemic risks before they manifest as broader crises.
This automated approach extends to the agency’s social harm mitigation strategies, particularly regarding the country’s armed forces. In tandem with the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Digital Affairs, the regulator is building automated mechanisms designed to cross-reference user login attempts against military personnel rosters and a newly established database of individuals barred due to gambling addiction. If a match occurs, access to the online service is instantly denied.
The scale of intervention is already substantial; the agency processed more than 3,000 separate requests for gambling restrictions over the course of the year.
Tightening the Regulatory Net
| Metric | Performance / Volume |
| Total Licenses Issued | 250 (11 operators, 3 lotteries, 213 suppliers) |
| Total License Fees Collected | ₴569 million ($12.8 million) |
| Estimated Gambling Organizer Taxes | ₴14 billion |
| Illegal Website Blocks | 4,100+ domains |
| Statutory Fine for Illegal Ads (2026) | ₴5,188,200 |
The state has also ended the moratorium on gambling venue inspections, executing seven scheduled and four unannounced audits over the last few months. This coincided with a return to mandatory reporting requirements, which yielded a self-reported 100% compliance rate among active operators. For the first time, lottery operators have been brought under this identical reporting umbrella.
To handle the administrative volume, a digital licensing track was built directly into the government’s existing Diia portal. This was paired with a total overhaul of licensing terms, finalized through a series of open competitions. Behind the scenes, the legislative groundwork is shifting as well; thirteen government resolutions and ten ministerial orders have been pushed through, standardizing everything from unique player identification codes to physical premises permits.
The next phase of the rollout will test whether this rigid digital framework can hold under pressure. Draft amendments modifying the Tax Code, the Gambling Law, and the Lottery Law have already been sent to the Ukrainian parliament for debate. Moving forward, the agency plans to expand the DSOM tracking architecture to its second phase, fully integrate the military database, and establish a renewed oversight mechanism tailored specifically to online lotteries. For companies on the ground, the era of loose oversight has clearly drawn to a close, replaced by a compliance model that is both technically demanding and financially punitive.
Source: igamingbusiness.com, playcity.gov.ua


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