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Argentina Orders Nationwide Block on Polymarket Prediction Market

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Yagmur Canel
Content Manager
Updated:
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Argentina has issued a nationwide blocking order against the prediction market platform Polymarket after authorities concluded that the platform was operating without the required local authorisation and resembled an unlicensed online gambling service. The decision, ordered by a Buenos Aires court and implemented with support from telecom regulators, reflects the increasing scrutiny of prediction markets by gambling and communications authorities in the region.

The ruling makes Argentina one of the first countries in Latin America to take such comprehensive action against a crypto‑based prediction market, joining a broader pattern of regulatory resistance seen in multiple jurisdictions globally.

Multiple Argentine flags displayed in a city square.

Court Ruling in Argentina: Nationwide Block on Polymarket Enforcement Measures

A court in Buenos Aires, presided over by Judge Susana Parada, issued the order after reviewing evidence and a formal complaint lodged by the Buenos Aires City Lottery (Lotería de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires – LOTBA), which was supported by the specialised gambling prosecution office. Prosecutors argued that Polymarket lacked any valid licence to operate in Argentina and that its model functioned like a betting venue rather than a permissible forecasting service, particularly due to its wagering structure and lack of age/identity controls.

The nationwide order requires:

  • Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to Polymarket’s website and associated domains
  • Technology platforms such as Apple and Google to remove or restrict the application from their Argentine stores
  • Regulators to ensure enforcement applies to both new and existing users within the country’s territory

Authorities cited concerns such as the absence of identity verification, ease of account creation, and the acceptance of cryptocurrencies and credit cards as facilitating unregulated financial transactions tied to event outcomes.

Polymarket’s Business Model Under Scrutiny: Why It’s Seen as Unlicensed Gambling

Polymarket operates as a prediction market, allowing users to trade contracts on future events, ranging from political outcomes and inflation data to other real‑world scenarios, where prices reflect the probability implied by supply and demand.

However, regulators and prosecutors have increasingly characterised these platforms as resembling gambling or betting systems, especially where:

  • Users can stake real value on outcomes
  • Platforms lack robust age and identity verification
  • Transactions occur without local licensing or oversight
  • Markets are driven by speculation rather than information without proper consumer protections

This regulatory interpretation has led to actions worldwide, with several countries imposing restrictions or viewing prediction markets through a gambling lens.

How Argentina’s Ban Reflects a Growing Trend Against Prediction Markets

Argentina’s move against Polymarket comes amid a global trend of tighter regulation on prediction markets, with authorities in various countries treating such platforms as unlicensed gambling when they facilitate monetary wagers. In Europe, similar concerns have driven platforms into restricted or view-only modes, with regulators emphasising consumer protection and compliance with local gambling laws. This echoes enforcement trends in other jurisdictions where prediction markets have faced restrictions due to regulatory concerns around gambling risk and consumer safeguards.

This broader context highlights the inherent tension between innovation in digital prediction mechanisms and the application of existing gambling regulatory frameworks to emerging models.

Navigating the Challenges of Licensing and Compliance in Latin America

The Argentine decision is likely to reverberate across Latin America’s growing digital wagering landscape:

  • Prediction markets operators may increasingly face jurisdictional challenges where authorities classify services as gambling
  • Regulators may apply similar enforcement tools, such as ISP blocking and app store removals, to curb access to unlicensed platforms
  • Operators may need to evaluate licensing requirements or modify product offerings to align with local law

As regulators consider whether and how to integrate emerging models into existing frameworks, stakeholders will monitor actions like Argentina’s for clues about future enforcement trends.

Regulation & Compliance