The Malta Gaming Authority has told licensees to step up betting monitoring and report suspicious activity during the FIFA World Cup 2026.
In an official notice issued on 5 June 2026, the regulator said it had contacted licensees in collaboration with FIFA ahead of the tournament, which runs from 11 June to 19 July 2026. The message focuses on sports integrity, reporting duties, internal governance, and responsible advertising.
MGA Reminds Licensees of Reporting Obligations
The MGA said licensees must monitor betting activity closely during the tournament and report suspicious transactions without delay through the Suspicious Betting Reporting Mechanism. Those duties fall under Regulation 43 of the Gaming Authorisations and Compliance Directive. The regulator also directed operators to its guidance paper on suspicious betting reporting requirements and sports integrity matters.
For operators, unusual betting movement can’t sit in a queue for later review. If activity raises concern, trading and compliance teams need to escalate it through the correct reporting route. The reminder also follows MGA’s football betting review, which examined wagering trends, player demographics, and player safety protocols linked to Maltese football.
Major Sports Events Create Higher Integrity Risk
The World Cup brings a different operating environment. Volumes rise. Markets move quickly. More casual players arrive, while operators track a wider spread of pre-match, live, outright, player, and prop markets. That creates more noise, and it can make suspicious patterns harder to identify.
The MGA described major sporting events as an elevated risk environment and told licensees to take a proactive, risk-based approach during the tournament period. It also warned that failure to comply with relevant obligations may lead to regulatory action.
Other European regulators have already moved early on tournament-related risks, including through Dutch regulator’s World Cup scrutiny and World Cup betting advertising oversight in France.
Governance and Advertising Also Under Scrutiny
The MGA also pointed to internal governance. Licensees should maintain a Sports Integrity Point of Contact and cooperate with the MGA Sports Integrity Unit and other relevant integrity bodies. Advertising also features in the notice.
The regulator reminded licensees and third parties acting on their behalf, that commercial communications must comply with Malta’s Commercial Communications Regulations. Gambling advertising must remain socially responsible and must not target, or indirectly harm, minors and vulnerable people. That warning fits a wider World Cup pattern, with lawmakers and regulators also looking at World Cup gambling advertising restrictions before tournament’s attention peaks.
Operators Face a World Cup Compliance Test
World Cup 2026 gives operators a major trading period, but the MGA’s message keeps the compliance side close to the commercial one. Licensees need monitoring teams, escalation routes, reporting workflows, integrity contacts, and marketing checks ready before high-volume matchdays begin. The warning leaves little room for delay: suspicious betting activity must be reported without delay, and tournament campaigns still need to meet responsible advertising rules.