Apple has quietly opened the door to gambling apps on its App Store in Brazil, marking a significant shift in its approach to one of Latin America’s most lucrative emerging betting markets. The tech giant announced this week that apps featuring fixed-odds betting and gambling features can now be distributed in Brazil, provided developers obtain a valid license from the country’s Secretariat of Prizes and Bets, known as SPA.
The move comes as Brazil transitions from what many called a “grey market” era into a fully regulated gambling landscape, a transformation that has been years in the making. While Brazil legalized fixed-odds betting back in 2018 through Law No. 13,756, the full regulatory framework only came into effect on January 1, 2025, creating a structured system for licensing and oversight. Now, with that framework firmly in place, Apple is adjusting its App Store policies to align with Brazil’s new reality.
For developers, the path to getting gambling apps approved on the Brazilian App Store is more bureaucratic than a simple upload. Any app that includes gambling features must be flagged by selecting “Yes” to the gambling question in Apple’s age rating questionnaire within App Store Connect. This automatically sets the app’s Brazil age rating to A18, restricting it to adults only. But the real work comes in the verification process: developers must submit a new app version, not just update existing information, to initiate the license review.
Apple is requiring developers to include their license information in the App Review Information section, enter license details in the Notes field, and attach supporting documents using the file attachment feature. The company emphasized that apps must comply with all Brazilian disclosure and warning requirements, including age restrictions and gambling risk notifications, as mandated by law. For any questions about legal obligations, Apple is directing developers straight to their own legal counsel, essentially washing its hands of the regulatory complexity.
Brazil’s gambling market has exploded in recent months, with 78 licensed operators now running 138 brands as of early 2026. The market is projected to surpass $5 billion this year, driven largely by a mobile gaming community of over 100 million users, most of whom are on Android devices. Google already made a similar move in June 2025, lifting its longstanding ban on real-money gambling apps in the Play Store after Brazil’s regulatory framework solidified. Apple’s announcement now brings parity to iOS users in the country.
The licensing process itself isn’t cheap or simple. Operators must pay a one-time fee of 30 million Brazilian Reals, roughly $5.1 million, for a five-year federal license that covers up to three commercial brands. They’re also required to incorporate a Brazilian company with local headquarters, maintain a minimum financial reserve of 5 million Reals, and ensure at least one director resides in Brazil. Technical requirements include hosting servers in Brazil or approved jurisdictions, implementing strict KYC and AML protocols, and integrating with the government’s Sistema de Gestão de Apostas, a centralized monitoring system that tracks player activity in near real-time.
Payment methods are tightly controlled under Brazil’s new rules. Operators can only accept prepaid methods, PIX (Brazil’s instant payment system), TED bank transfers, and debit cards, while credit cards, cash, checks, cryptocurrency, and foreign wallets are all prohibited. Licensed platforms must also use the “.bet.br” domain, a clear marker of regulatory compliance.
The regulatory shift has forced platforms to abandon the “batch reporting” approach they might use elsewhere, where data is submitted at the end of the month. Instead, Brazil’s Ministry of Finance demands near real-time visibility into betting activity through its monitoring systems. For many operators, compliance with these technical and reporting requirements has proven more challenging than paying the hefty license fee.
Apple’s decision to allow gambling apps reflects the broader maturation of Brazil’s betting ecosystem. The country’s Secretariat of Prizes and Bets has moved from issuing guidance to strict enforcement, already levying fines in 2026 against platforms with weak identity verification protocols. The regulatory environment is no longer permissive; it’s punitive for those who fail to comply.
For Brazilian consumers, the change means legitimate, regulated gambling apps will now be readily available on both major mobile platforms, offering greater consumer protection and transparency than the unregulated alternatives that previously dominated the market. For Apple, it’s a pragmatic acknowledgment that Brazil’s gambling industry isn’t going away, and the company would rather facilitate regulated access than be sidelined in a market poised to generate billions in revenue.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
