Is Online Casino Gambling Legal in Australia?

Online casino gambling in Australia sits in a legal grey zone that confuses a lot of players. The short answer is that playing at offshore casino sites is not illegal for Australian residents. The law targets operators, not players.

This page explains how Australian gambling law actually works, what the Interactive Gambling Act means in practice, and what it means for you as a player choosing to use offshore platforms.

This page is based on publicly available legal and regulatory sources including the Interactive Gambling Act 2001 and ACMA information. It does not constitute legal advice.

Jack Lawson

Written by: Jack Lawson

Last updated: 2026-02-19

How the Interactive Gambling Act Works

The Interactive Gambling Act 2001 (IGA) is the primary federal law governing online gambling in Australia. It prohibits operators from providing certain interactive gambling services to Australian residents without the appropriate licence.

Under the IGA, it is illegal for a casino to:

  • Offer real-money online casino games to Australian residents without a licence
  • Target Australian players through advertising or marketing
  • Accept Australian payment methods as part of an unlicensed service

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) enforces these rules. It can issue warnings, request that sites be blocked, and refer operators for prosecution. Enforcement focuses entirely on service providers, not on individual players.

The Operator vs Player Distinction

This is the most important point for Australian players to understand. The IGA makes it illegal to operate certain gambling services in Australia. It does not make it illegal for Australians to use those services.

There is no provision in the IGA that criminalises players for accessing offshore casino sites. ACMA does not pursue individuals for playing at international platforms, and there are no known cases of Australian players being prosecuted for accessing offshore casinos.

The distinction is clear: running an unlicensed casino targeting Australians is prohibited. Playing at one is not.

Offshore Licensing and How It Works

Most online casinos available to Australian players operate under licences issued in offshore jurisdictions such as Curaçao, Malta or Anjouan. These licences allow them to offer services globally under the laws of their home jurisdiction.

Because these operators are not based in Australia and do not hold Australian licences, they fall outside the direct scope of Australian consumer protection laws. The level of oversight and player protection depends entirely on the jurisdiction where the casino is licensed.

Casinos licensed within the EU — such as those holding a Malta Gaming Authority licence — operate under stricter regulatory frameworks with formal complaint procedures and defined player protections.

Casinos licensed outside the EU — such as those operating under a Curaçao licence — are regulated by their home jurisdiction, which typically provides less formal consumer protection. If a dispute arises, you are relying on the operator and their licensor rather than any Australian regulatory body.

What This Means for Australian Players

Playing at an offshore casino puts you outside the Australian regulatory framework. The protections you would have at a locally licensed venue, such as mandatory responsible gambling tools and formal dispute resolution, do not automatically apply.

This makes the choice of operator more important than it would be in a regulated domestic market. Established offshore casinos with a track record of consistent payouts, published terms and certified game providers are a safer starting point than newer or unlicensed platforms.

Quick Reference

Question Answer
Is it illegal to play at offshore casinos? No
Is it illegal to operate an unlicensed casino targeting Australians? Yes
Does ACMA pursue individual players? No
Do Australian consumer protections apply offshore? No
Is Betstop active at offshore casinos? No
Are you responsible for your own play? Yes

Primary Sources