Brazil is knee-deep in reviewing license requests from betting operators, as the country’s newly regulated market shows no signs of slowing down.
Ministry of Finance Takes the Lead on Licensing
The Ministry of Finance is currently evaluating 25 applications from companies aiming to enter Brazil’s fast-expanding online betting space. Under the new rules, only those who meet a long list of financial, technical, and compliance standards will be approved.
To qualify, operators must show they have solid financial footing, proprietary tech systems, anti-money laundering tools, and real responsible gambling frameworks. These requirements were cemented through Ordinance SPA/MF No. 827, issued in May 2024, which lays the groundwork for how fixed-odds betting will be offered nationwide.
And it’s not cheap to play ball. A five-year license costs R$ 30 million, a sum that regulators say helps weed out unserious players and adds a layer of financial credibility to the market.
All licensing authority sits with the Ministry under Law 14.790, which came into force in December 2023. That law also gives officials the power to supervise operator behavior and hand out penalties.
Clock Ticking for Existing Operators
Officials expect to start handing out approvals by late 2024, though there’s no clear timeline on how many companies will make the cut. One thing is certain: companies already operating in Brazil must secure their licenses before the end of 2024. If they don’t, they’ll face penalties starting January 1, 2025.
Betting in Brazil by the Numbers
Brazil’s appetite for online betting is already massive. In 2025, gross revenue from sports betting and online casino play hit R$ 36 billion. Analysts estimate there are 25 to 30 million active bettors — roughly 12% of the population.
Survey results from TIC.BR 2025 show that 20% of Brazilian adults placed at least one online bet in the last quarter of the year. Among men, that number jumps to 25%; among women, it’s 14%. That works out to roughly 32.5 million people engaging in some form of online betting over a three-month span.
The data comes from nearly 25,000 face-to-face interviews conducted by Ipsos-Ipec. The findings show that most bettors are younger, male, urban, and tend to be more educated with higher-than-average incomes — a profile that distances the market from stereotypes of betting as a lower-income pastime.
Interestingly, Brazil’s user base is already on par with major international markets. For example, Las Vegas had 41 million visitors in 2023, with 78% gambling — about the same number of people who bet online in Brazil last year.
A Tightening Grip on Compliance
Operators aiming to join the legal market face scrutiny across five areas: legal status, tax and labor obligations, integrity standards, financial stability, and technical ability. Approved companies are allowed to run up to three brands in Brazil but must also have a physical presence in the country, including customer service support.
As the industry shifts from gray market chaos to formal regulation, the government’s focus is on creating a transparent, taxable, and consumer-friendly environment. Currently, there are 192 brands operating legally: 82 fully authorized, 85 licensed for online and fixed-odds betting, and three sanctioned via court rulings.
For players, this push toward regulation could mean better protections, more reliable operators, and, potentially, higher standards across the board — assuming the government holds firm on enforcement.










