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Turkey Ends Digital Anonymity with New Felony Charges for Unlicensed Gambling

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Yagmur Canel
Content Manager
Updated:
Reading Time: 3 minutes

The Turkish government has announced a significant escalation in its battle against unlicensed wagering, with Justice Minister Akın Gürlek confirming new legislative plans to criminalise the act of playing on illegal gambling platforms. Previously, Turkish law primarily targeted operators and intermediaries with criminal sanctions, while players typically faced administrative fines. Under the proposed reforms, individuals caught placing bets on unauthorised sites could now face prison sentences.

This move marks a shift toward a “zero-tolerance” model as the Ministry of Justice and the Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) seek to dismantle the financial infrastructure supporting the multi-billion-dollar underground betting market.

Turkish flag waving with seagulls over Istanbul.

Turkish Penal Code Amendments: Criminal Penalties for Illegal Gambling Players

The core of the new proposal involves amending the existing Law No. 7258, which governs football and other sports betting. By elevating the status of “participation” from a civil offence to a criminal one, the Turkish government aims to create a powerful deterrent for the public.

Minister Gürlek highlighted that the digital nature of modern gambling requires a more aggressive legal stance. The proposed framework includes:

  • Direct Prosecution: Players will no longer just be fined; they will be subject to judicial proceedings that could result in permanent criminal records.
  • Asset Forfeiture: Expanded powers for authorities to freeze and seize funds found in digital wallets or bank accounts linked to illegal betting activity.
  • Intensified Enforcement: A massive nationwide effort designed to protect the “social fabric” and ensure the integrity of the regulated market.

This rigid approach to market protection mirrors efforts in other jurisdictions to define the boundaries of legal play, such as the UK’s illegal gambling taskforce, which similarly focuses on cross-agency cooperation.

MASAK Financial Surveillance: Tracking Illegal Betting Money Laundering in Turkey

The Financial Crimes Investigation Board (MASAK) has been placed on high alert to monitor “suspicious transaction patterns” related to illegal gambling. The challenge of digital evasion remains a global issue; for instance, the KSA’s alert to Meta on  illegal gambling ads recently highlighted how unlicensed operators use social media algorithms to bypass national filters, a tactic Turkish authorities are also fighting to suppress.

MASAK’s current strategy focuses on the following:

  1. Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Transfers: Monitoring high-frequency transfers used to facilitate unlicensed betting deposits.
  2. Crypto-Asset Regulation: Tightening oversight on local cryptocurrency exchanges.
  3. Payment Gateway Audits: Identifying and blocking merchant category codes (MCC) associated with unregulated gaming.

Operation Sibergöz: Striking a Blow to a $100bn Crime Network

In a landmark enforcement action coordinated by the Adana Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office, Turkish authorities have struck a decisive blow against a multi-layered criminal organisation involved in illegal betting, qualified fraud, bribery, and money laundering. The simultaneous operation across 21 provinces targeted 200 suspects and uncovered the staggering scale of the underground economy.

Based on MASAK reports and extensive physical and technical surveillance, investigators determined that approximately ₺100 billion (£2.4 billion) and $2 billion (£1.6 billion) in criminal proceeds were laundered through the financial system. Justice Minister Gürlek  praised the coordination between the Ministries of Justice, Interior, and Treasury and Finance, stating:

The determined stance displayed by our ministries, shoulder to shoulder and in great coordination, is the clearest indicator that we will never compromise against financial crime organisations and illegal betting networks. We will continue our struggle against all kinds of criminal structures that target our citizens’ hard work and future with the same unwavering will.

Turkey’s decision to criminalise players and target these high-volume laundering networks represents one of the harshest stances in the region. For the broader iGaming industry, this signals a “closing of the gates” in a market that was once considered a significant revenue source for offshore operators.

Investors and operators should expect:

  • Increased Geofencing Costs: Platforms must implement robust blocking to avoid Turkish players, as participation now carries severe criminal risks for the user.
  • Payment Disruption: As MASAK increases surveillance on the ₺100bn laundering pipelines, the success rate for offshore deposits is expected to plummet.
  • Shift in Marketing: The criminalisation of players will likely cause a sharp decline in “influencer” marketing for gambling within the country, as the legal risk for the audience has shifted from a fine to potential imprisonment.

 

Regulation & Compliance